Data centres need to address the rise of complex digital infrastructure

Despite progress with efficiency gains, the rate of outages remains high as operators struggle with change and complexity.

  • Wednesday, 8th August 2018 Posted 6 years ago in by Phil Alsop
Uptime Institute has published the findings of its eighth annual Data Center Survey, which examines key trends and developments shaping today’s IT infrastructure industry.

The results reveal how operators are grappling with new challenges, including the business case and cost of hybrid IT approaches, and provides an overview of the major trends shaping IT infrastructure delivery and strategy globally, ranging from climate-change preparedness and edge computing approaches to outages, energy efficiency, rack density, and staffing trends.

 

Annually, Uptime Institute conducts the most comprehensive global survey about the Data Center industry. This year the survey was conducted between February and May, 2018, and includes responses from nearly 1000 data center operators and IT practitioners affiliated with enterprise and service provider facilities in more than 50 countries worldwide.

 

“The rapid growth in the implementation of cloud and hybrid IT approaches has ushered in a period of great change creating technology, organizational and management complexity,” said Andy Lawrence, Executive Director of Research at Uptime Institute. “And these new challenges are many times unlike anything previously seen in the industry at this magnitude. It’s a perfect storm.”

 

As the results revealed, data center operators have, by and large, succeeded in lowering energy waste–the average PUE, the industry's most common infrastructure efficiency metric, was reported at a record average of approximately 1.58 (although year/year improvements are decreasing). In alarming contrast, the survey results also revealed that both the rate of outage occurrences and the severity of each outage has increased from those reported just a year ago.

 

“Today, operators are grappling with new challenges, including increased complexity and high interdependency of systems and data centers,” continued Andy Lawrence. “Looking ahead, many are expecting to deploy significant new hybrid and edge computing capacity, which will support new services, but will add an additional layer of complexity in doing so.”

·         Many survey respondents struggle to assess the business case and effectiveness of their hybrid IT architectures (defined as any mix of on-premises data center capacity and off-premises resources such as colocation, cloud, hosting and XaaS). Only about half are confident they understand the true costs and risk/performance tradeoffs of their chosen approach.

·         While nearly two-thirds of respondents (61%) said having workloads spread across on-site, colocation, and cloud deployments has made their overall IT more resilient, this was not supported by the evidence: The number of respondents that experienced an IT downtime incident or severe service degradation in the past year (31%) increased over 2017's survey (by about 25%). And in the past three years, almost half (48%) of our 2018 survey respondents had an outage in their own site or service provider.

·         More than 80% of respondents said their outage(s) were preventable – leading causes of downtimes consisted of human error, power outages, network failure, configuration errors and third-party provider outages.

The survey data also showed that crucial to the growth of the distributed digital infrastructure is the implementation of highly distributed and/or edge computing, enabling more efficient operations through automation, real time data analysis and artificial intelligence (and machine-learning) control associated with remotely-managed facilities. More than 40% of respondents stated they expect their organization will require edge computing capabilities, which was defined as “requirements that will necessitate processing data closer to the source of its generation/use”.

  

“Edge computing is exciting because of the improved performance and scale it can offer to next generation technologies like artificial intelligence, the internet of things and even autonomous driving applications. We expect to see substantial growth in the edge over the next few years,” added Andy Lawrence, “Edge has the ability to keep building upon each set of application improvements and the advances of previous versions, which will cause rapid improvement in capability development and implementation.”