Cisco Strategy & Directions for the Virtualized Data Center · Presentation_ID ©2009 Cisco...
Transcript of Cisco Strategy & Directions for the Virtualized Data Center · Presentation_ID ©2009 Cisco...
© 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID
Cisco Strategy & Directions for the Virtualized Data Center
Emmanuel SchuppBusiness Development, [email protected]
© 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID © 2009 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID
70% of CIOs said they would increase spending on virtualization even if they
had to cut back on IT spending - Merrill Lynch
Virtualization – CxO view
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Challenges In the Data Center Today
� Underutilized server and storage assets � Power and cooling issues� Rising cost of DC real estate� Increasingly complex provisioning of DC
services
Complex Problems That Require Innovative Solutions � Time-to-customer: lengthy application
deployments � Siloed technology areas and DC teams� Heterogeneous platforms, high complexity,
poor agility
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Four Drivers Behind Virtualization
Operational Flexibility
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One case study we know : Cisco Data Centers
Business Data CenterData Centers Engineering R&D Data Center
Total of 230,000 square feet, 21 MWatts
SJLinksys
RTP
Amsterdam
Scientific Atlanta
WebExCROS
Iron Port
Richardson
46 Data Centers 14 Business, 32 Development
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Improved TCO, Operations, Responsiveness
Server Consolidation� 14,250 servers, 3,780 applications� 20% of existing, 75% of all new server environments virtualized� 2,720 VM’s installed� $22+ Million in cost avoidance and reductions to date� Deployment time reduced from 8-12 weeks to 3 days – Goal is 15 mins
Solaris (2,911)
Linux (7,101)
HP-UX (217)
Windows (4,001)
21% 1%28%
50%
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Business Return on InvestmentCisco IT Experience From Adopting Data Center 3.0
Storage� $70+ million cost avoidance over 4 years� TCO: $0.21/MB � $0.01/MB� Managed storage increased from 25 TB to 600 TB per FTE (lower Opex) � Overall utilization: 20% �68%Server� $20+ Million cost avoidance� 50% existing, 75% new servers virtualized� Deployment: 8 weeks � 3 daysUnified Fabric� 66% Reduction in Cabling: $2M savings� 30% more Compute capacity: $50M savings
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Market Driver: Virtualization� Virtualization is creating a market transition
Servers are becoming fluid objects in the network� Cisco has historically been successful in
capitalizing on market transitionsData, voice and videoUnified fabrics for LAN and SAN
� Cisco is innovating to lead this changeUnified Fabrics was the first step….
“Virtualization is the highest-impact issue changing infrastructure and operations through 2012.”
“It will change how you manage, how and what you buy, how you deploy, how you plan and how you charge. It will also shake up licensing, pricing and component management. Infrastructure is on an inevitable shift from components that are physically integrated by vendors (for example, monolithic servers) or manually integrated by users to logically composed “fabrics” of computing, I/O and storage components.”
Gartner 2008
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A journey on the CISCO DataCenter 3.0 New Infrastructure
IT R
elev
ance
and
Con
trol
DC Architecture Evolution
Data Center 1.0 Data Center 2.0 Data Center 3.0Mainframe Client-Server and
Distributed ComputingService Oriented and Web 2.0 Based
Centralized Decentralized VirtualizedIP RoutingLAN Switching
Security Storage Switching
Blade SwitchingApplication Switching
VM-SwitchingUnified Fabric
UCSCloud
. . .
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Server Virtualization Architecture today Catalyst based
Data Center Aggregation
Block
Network Services Block
Catalyst 4948
Catalyst 6509
Catalyst 6509
SAN BSAN A
EthernetFiber ChannelServer OOB Mgmt.
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Step 1 : Consolidation of Network FabricsNexus platform
Data Center Aggregation
Block
Network Services
Block
Nexus 5000
Nexus 7000
Catalyst®6509
SAN BSAN A
Consolidated Transports
SAN Aggregation
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Step 2: Transparency in the Eye of the BeholderProblems:
Virtual Network Link (VN-Link):• Extends network to the VM • Consistent services • Coordinated, coherent management• Continuum of deployment options
VMotion • VMotion may move VMs across physical ports—policy must follow
• Impossible to view or apply policy to locally switched traffic
• Cannot correlate traffic on physical links—from multiple VMsVLAN
101
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Extending the network to the Virtual MachineVN-Link With the Cisco Nexus 1000V
Cisco Nexus 1000VCisco Nexus 1000VSoftware Based� Industry’s first 3rd-party vNetwork
Distributed Switch for VMware vSphere� Built on Cisco NX-OS� Compatible with all switching
platforms� Maintain vCenter provisioning model
unmodified for server administration; allow network administration of virtual network via familiar Cisco NX-OS CLI
Policy-Based VM ConnectivityPolicyPolicy--Based Based VM ConnectivityVM Connectivity
Mobility of Network & Security PropertiesMobility of Network & Mobility of Network & Security PropertiesSecurity Properties
Non-DisruptiveOperational ModelNonNon--DisruptiveDisruptiveOperational ModelOperational Model
vSphere
NexusNexus1000V1000V
Nexus 1000VNexus 1000V
VMVM VMVM VMVM VMVM
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Step 3 : Consolidation of Server FabricsNexus with UCS
Data Center Aggregation
Block
Network Services
Block
Nexus 7000
Catalyst®6509
SAN BSAN A
SAN Aggregation
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Cisco UCS wowsThe truth is that truly revolutionary products are few and far between. That said, Cisco's Unified Computing System fits the bill.
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November 10, 2009
http://www.infoworld.com/d/hardware/test-center-review-cisco-ucs-wows-603
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Mgmt Server
Server Deployment Today� Over the past 10 years
An evolution of size, not thinkingMore servers & switches than everMore switches per serverManagement applied, not integrated
� An accidental architectureStill a 1980’s PC model
� Result: ComplexityMore points of managementMore difficult to maintain policy coherenceMore difficult to secureMore difficult to scale
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Mgmt Server Mgmt Server� Embed management� Unify fabrics� Optimize virtualization� Remove unnecessary
switches,adapters,management modules
� Less than 1/3rd the support infrastructure
Mgmt Server
Server Deployment Today
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Mgmt Server
Our Solution: Cisco UCS� A single system that encompasses:
Network: Unified fabricCompute: Industry standard x86Virtualization optimized
� Unified management modelDynamic resource provisioning
� Efficient ScaleCisco network scale & servicesFewer servers with more memory
� Lower costFewer servers, switches, adapters, cablesLower power consumptionFewer points of management
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UCS ManagerEmbedded– manages entire system
UCS Fabric Interconnect20 Port 10Gb FCoE40 Port 10Gb FCoE
UCS Fabric ExtenderRemote line card
UCS Blade Server ChassisFlexible bay configurations
UCS Blade ServerIndustry-standard architecture
UCS Virtual AdaptersChoice of multiple adapters
Building Blocks
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A1B1
Disjointed Management
Bare-MetalProvisioning
PatchingSoftware
Distribution
Scripts
ChassisConfigAuditing
Inventory AddressMgmt
UCS Manager ArchitectureExisting Mgmt Architectures
Servers Network
StorageAccess
EmbeddedS/W
EmbeddedDeviceManagement
Multiple Management SolutionsUncoordinated / Complex
Control Plane Integration
Unified Computing System ManagerEmbedded Device Management versus Multiple “Point” Solutions
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Service Profile
Operations Management
Network ManagementServer Administration
Server Identities
ServerPolicies
ResourceAllocation
OnlineTroubleshooting
ServerConnectivity
Storage Management
Cabling CoolingPower Offline Troubleshooting
HardwareSetup DiagnosticsInventory
LUN access
SANTroubleshooting
PerformanceManagement
External Connectivity
vSANs vLANs
Security
QoS
External Connectivity
NetworkTroubleshooting
PerformanceManagement
Storage Policies Network Policies
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Integrated Stateless Computing
SAN LAN
Chassis-1/Blade-5
Chassis-9/Blade-2
Server Name: LS-AUUID: 56 4d cd 3f 59 5b 61…MAC : 08:00:69:02:01:FCWWN: 5080020000075740Boot Order: SAN, LAN
No Attributes tied to and Physical Resource� Not just identity� Seamless server mobility� Within interconnect domain
Dynamic Provisioning� Complete infrastructure repurposing� Integrated with 3rd part tools
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Fabric Manager
SMASH CLPWS-MANIPMI
Cisco CLI...
XML API Industry Standard API
Seamless Management IntegrationFlexible Resource Pool with Open API
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Case for a Unified Data Center
From ad hoc and inconsistent…
…to structured, but siloed, complicated and costly…
…to simple, optimized and automated
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Sample Configuration – 8 BladesLegacy System Unified Computing System
• Blades $45,528 • Blades $45,320 • Adapters $5,992 • Adapters $5,992 Total Blade $51,520 Total Blade $51,312 • Chassis, Fan, PSUs $8,713 • Chassis, Fan, PSUs $4,197 • Networking • Networking• 10Gb Eth Switch $24,398 • Fabric Interconnect $36,592 • 4Gb FC Switch $18,998 • Fabric Extender $3,998 • Management Software $7,000 • Management Software 0Total Infrastructure $59,109 Total Infrastructure $44,787
Infrastructure Savings $14,322 24%
Overall Total $110,629 Overall Total $96,099 Savings $14,530 % 13%
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Sample Configuration – 320 BladesSavings at Scale – 1/3 the Infrastructure Cost
Legacy System Unified Computing System• Blades $1,821,120 • Blades $1,812,800 • Adapters $239,680 • Adapters $239,680 Total Blade $2,060,800 Total Blade $2,052,480 • Chassis, Fan, PSUs $174,260 • Chassis, Fan, PSUs $167,880 • Networking • Networking• 10Gb Eth Switch $487,960 • Fabric Interconnect $138,182 • 4Gb FC Switch $379,960 • Fabric Extender $159,920 • Management Software $554,400 • Management Software 0Total Infrastructure $1,596,580 Total Infrastructure $465,982
Infrastructure Savings $1,130,598 71%
Overall Total $3,657,380 Overall Total $2,518,462 Savings $1,138,918 % 31%
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A single system that unifies�Compute: Industry standard x86�Network: Unified fabric�Virtualization: Control, scale, performance�Storage Access: Wire once for SAN, NAS, iSCSI
Embedded management� Increase scalability without added complexity�Dynamic resource provisioning�Ability to integrate with broad partner ecosystem
Energy efficient � Fewer servers, switches, adapters, cables� Lower power and cooling requirements� Increase compute efficiency by removing I/O and memory bottlenecks
Unified Computing System
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Cisco Systems Data Center 3.0Technology Journey Leading To a Unified Data Center
Unified FabricNexus 5K, 2K-FEX• ToR server access• Wire once infrastructure
• Low-latency lossless• Virtualization aware • Standards-based
Unified ComputingUCS• Industry Standard x86
• Platform for stateless computing and virtualization
• Standards-based
Server Virtualization
VN-Link, Nexus 1K• Virtualization aware access layer
• Compatible with switching platforms
• Combine VM and physical network ops
• Standards-based
1/10GE LosslessEthernetNexus 5K, 2K-FEX• Add Nexus 5k/2k for 1/10GE Ethernet
• Server access switch
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Customer Choice:Dial In to Reduce Costs at Any Stage
Existing Environment
Unified Fabric
Unified FabricUCS C-Series
Unified Computing
Total
Cos
t of O
wners
hipEvery IT organization is unique. Each is in a different place with workloads, environment, budget, and IT investment cycles. Customers have the flexibility and choice to deploy technology at whatever point makes sense for their environment.
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What is Cisco’s SustainableDifferentiation?
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� Build on Cisco’s core competenceNetworks, convergence of data, voice and video, virtualization
� It’s the right time to converge compute and networking with Unified Computing
Cisco is best positioned to enable a new compute model, no legacy and new innovation in network services
� The network is what makes the data center virtual� End to End Data Center solutions
Networks, Compute, Storage Access, Branch and virtualization
� Cisco Advanced Services
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