Data centre operators want hyyperscale efficiency

IT/Cloud professionals rank network efficiency number one for optimizing data center performance, according to latest research.

  • Tuesday, 26th February 2019 Posted 5 years ago in by Phil Alsop
Data center operators want powerful solutions to optimize the efficiency of the network, Virtual Machines (VMs) and/or containers. They realise that adding servers and CPU power is no longer the optimal path to boost data center performance – according to a new research report spanning medium to large enterprises across China, the USA and UK has been released. The US, UK and China were selected in order to garner a diverse global outlook from three regions where data-center infrastructure is being deployed most aggressively. The report, called Untold Secrets of the Efficient Data Center, is available now from http://bit.ly/2IooSRH.


The report offers a detailed analysis of how today’s data center professionals are addressing the challenge of supporting high-power applications such as artificial intelligence and big data analytics across public, private and hybrid clouds. The study reveals high interest in software-defined virtualization and network optimization strategies. It shows that processor offload and SmartNICs are now the favoured solution for improving data center performance – while deploying more servers is least favoured. Above all it concludes that the network, a key engine of performance to the cloud, needs specific adaptations to keep up with data centers that have ambitions to be cloud-scale.


“The data center is being reinvented” according to Kevin Deierling, VP of Marketing, Mellanox, sponsors of the report. “It’s a real challenge to build a cloud infrastructure that can scale to support demanding applications that can embrace big data, analytics, self-driving cars, and artificial intelligence. The very techniques developed by hyperscale cloud giants are now migrating to the enterprise, where distributed applications now rule. There’s more pressure than ever for networks to perform, and new technologies are beginning to be deployed to make sure that networks don’t become the bottleneck for the cloud. This report provides the most detailed insight into why this matters, and how key players are re-shaping the road map.”


Over 200 director level or higher data center professionals – from the US, UK and China-based cloud, telecommunications and enterprise IT – were screened by country and company size by an independent cloud-based research company to dig deeper into actual working practice and the key trends. There was a lot of interest in SmartNICs – a bare 10% did not know what they were. Their applications included improving the efficiency of VMs and/or containers (56%), virtualizing and sharing flash storage more efficiently (55%), isolating and stopping security threats (47%), accelerating hyperconverged infrastructure (50%), and enabling SDN (54%).”


Other findings include: the recognition that network optimization technologies are a key way to improve DC performance; the potential benefits in upgrading the network include faster application performance (64%), stronger security (59%), greater flexibility (57%), and application reliability (57%); and that 84% of respondents thought network infrastructure was either “very important” or “important” to delivering artificial intelligence and machine learning. Highly efficient utilization of servers and storage topped the list when asked which aspect of hyperscale cloud operations they would most like to emulate. The next tier of results included use of flexible, converged 25/50/100Gb Ethernet networking for everything (19%), automated infrastructure deployment, management and monitoring (17%), and simplified resource provisioning, reporting and billing (15%).


The report also provides further detail on the biggest perceived challenges around virtualization and containers; on developments in data center storage strategy; on the future of Moore’s Law and its strategic relevance for data center strategy; on developing network requirements for data centers; and key technologies to watch, including hyperconverged infrastructure, domain specific processors and application code efficiency. The full report is available now at http://bit.ly/2IooSRH