Green IT & Virtualization Management Joe Chou Consultant Microsoft Technology Center.
-
Upload
bethanie-day -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
2
Transcript of Green IT & Virtualization Management Joe Chou Consultant Microsoft Technology Center.
Agenda
• Green IT goals• Cooling and Power Consumption• Power Saving on servers• Power Saving on Workstations• Cost Saving
Corporate benefits of “Green IT”• Businesses worldwide can save
$800 billion in annual energy costs by 2020
• Companies can also reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by 15%
• American companies are interested in cost-cutting initiatives, and Europeans are more focused on improving brand image with corporate responsibility—but both factors benefit all types of businesses
Green IT goals• Gartner defines green IT as "optimizing
processes to reduce total resource consumption and waste output.“
• Why Green IT for Enterprises– Save Money– Limited Electric Utilities– Reduce the use of energy, water, and space– Required by law (carbon footprint)– Suggested by IT venders
Actually It's The Energy Cost Which Matters (Not Only In IT)• Do you know what your IT energy costs are?
– Gartner: about 4% – 7% of your IT budget!
• Do you think energy costs will rise or decline?– Germany: +36,6% prize increase in last 6 years– Costs may double over the next 5 years?
“For every $ spent on server hardware, add the same amount
for power and cooling during lifetime!”
• Is “energy” a purchase criteria for your IT?• It might be for your car… but IT?
Average hardware prize vs. energy costs over 3 yearsGartner: Why “Going Green” will become essential for data centers 10/2006
Energy Is Used Everywhere In ITStorage
40 TB =
2,5 – 5,2 KWh
Datacenter server & cooling
PCs and laptops
30 – 300 Wh
Department server~400 Wh
Printer6%
NetworkDevices
7%
Gartner: Conceptualizing 'Green' IT and Data Center Power and Cooling Issues, 9/2007
Now the situation is• Data center managers
now must prioritize investment in efficient power and cooling systems to lower the total cost of operating (TCO) of their facilities.
Datacenters Are One Of The Biggest Areas To Save Energy And Money• In US: 60 billion KWh (1,5% of total US electricity)
or more than all US color TVs!
• Consumption growing at 12% annually– 40% of energy needs from banks
already IT relatedUS Env. Protection Agency (EPA) report 8/2007Green IT, Swiss Innovation Outlook, IBM Switzerland
There Are Best Practices To Help You With Your Datacenter Optimization• Optimized Datacenter Design includes
– Floor layout, hot-/cold-aisle configurations– Clean up cables, empty spaces (“air holes”) – Scalable and energy efficient power-, lighting- cooling
equipment (humidifier really needed?)– (Dynamic) heat-map
• Adjusted at changes
http://download.microsoft.com/download/a/7/b/a7b72ab1-ca17-4589-923a-83b0ff57be6d/Energy-Efficiency-Best-Practices-in-Microsoft-Data-Center-Operations-CeBIT.doc
Power Saving on servers
• Go virtualization– Replaced several small server boxes with one more
powerful server box– Transfer everything in several small server boxes into
some image OS in a more powerful server box– Go clustering for the powerful server box if HA is a
concern• MSDN and TechNet servers are all virtualized
Virtualization Green• Environmental Impact
• Energy costs to go over 50 % of the total IT budget for a typical data center
• daily power consumption of a typical datacenter = monthly power consumption of thousands of homes
• 61 billion kilowatt hours going toward data centre energy consumption
• 10-15 more power plants needed by 2011 to keep up with data centre power consumption
• x86 hardware consumes ~80% of the normal workload power even when idle
• Virtualization Promise
Virtualization can reduce energy usage by 90% Virtualizing 100 servers eliminates estimated 500K lb CO2 (annual emissions) 95% or over 30M servers are still to be virtualized
First Step: Avoid Unnecessarities• 10%-30% of servers do a little bit more than
nothing (Uptime Institute, USA)
– Use Microsoft System Center to reduce number of running servers
• Operations Manager 2007 informs you about performance monitoring over time
• Configuration Manager 2007 informs you about installed hardware and software and the software usage (eventually via CAL tracking)
• Same might be true for other (IT) equipment (Routers, Switches)
Virtualization Solution Accelerators
Page 15
ASSESS
PLAN
DESIGNDEPLOY
OPERATE
Microsoft Assessment andPlanning (tool + guidance)
Infrastructure Planning and Design Series (guidance)
Windows Server 2008Security Guide (guidance)
Microsoft Deployment(tool + guidance)
Offline Virtual Machine Servicing Tool
(tool + guidance)
Server consolidation?Virtualization?Windows migration?
MAP Tool User(IT Pro/Partner)
MAP for Evaluation
Data Center
MAP
Report Generation for Different Migration Scenarios
Assess your customer’s environment and recommend the right technologies
PC-by-PC Level
Hardware and Device Data• System resources• Experience after upgrades• Deployment blockers• Device compatibility
Current Status of OS
MAP – Report output in Excel
Second Step: Consolidate• Consolidate your servers where possible
– Consolidate file and print servers– Use Application virtualization for terminal server – Migrate to Exchange 2007 and
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007– Microsoft Assessment & Planning 3.0 is the key– Consolidate SQL servers
Third Step: Use Right Hardware
• “Right size”your hardware– System Center Capacity Planner tells you what
hardware you need to run • Exchange 2007• Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS)• SC Operations Manager 2007 SP1
– There are additional tools for SQL, ISA…
Server Virtualization
Application VirtualizationDesktop
Virtualization
Presentation Virtualization
Management
Centralized Desktop
Hyper-V® Server
Fourth Step: Virtualization
Virtual Machine Hosts
Physical Infrastructure
Virtual Machine Manager agents
deployed to virtual machine hosts
Performance data collected to
identify consolidation candidates
Physical servers converted to
virtual machines
Performance data collected from VM hosts for intelligent
placement
Intelligent placement of each VM on optimal host
Physical machines retired
or repurposed
Prioritized report of consolidation candidates
How To Start: Consolidation Via Virtualization
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
DC + EXCH IIS × 2 DC + (EXCH × 2)
Watt
s Physical
Virtual
What Can Be Achieved?
CPU 46%
PCI Cards 17%
SCSI
HDD 12%
Mobo, 8GB
RAM18%
Other7%
Processor power management represents the best opportunity today
Source: Intel Server Products Power Budget Analysis Toolhttp://www.intel.com/support/motherboards/server/sb/cs-016976.htm
CPU 46%
Fifth Step: Optimize Your Server OS
How To Start: OS Power Profiles
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Watt
s (%
of
max
imum
)
Workload (% of maximum throughput)
Windows Server 2003 Windows Server 2008
Windows Server 2003 Versus 2008
How System Center Configuration Manager Can Help You (1)• Identify the correct OS version
– Deploy Windows Server 2003 SP2 – Upgrade to Windows Server 2008
• Check for AMD drivers on Windows Server 2003 machines and right bios version– Deploy driver if needed– Use Dell, HP, IBM extensions for bios update
• Run the test script to see what’s possible– Collect information via HW inventory
Savings Summary For Servers• Efficient (dynamic) hardware is the key• Activate free Windows software features• Now do the math…
– 2 Mio Server shipped in Q2-07 ~ 8 Mio/year– Assume 50% runs on Windows – If each of them would save 10% (~400 Wh)
~1,4 TWh savings per year! (Simply by releasing a new server OS)
This does NOT include additional savings for cooling etc!
But Don't Stop At Your Servers!
Vendor information, average about several models
Do your PCs run 24 by 7? If so, why?
Device Off (W) Sleep (W) Idle (w) Use (w)
Business PC 2-3 (8) 3-4 (8) 45-60 80-120
Regular PC 2,5-5 3-4 (8) 50-60 -300
Laptops <1 <1 15-30 20-50
High end graphic cards 50-80 200-240
Power Consumption of workstations
• Fan• CPU working time• Hard Disk IO• Memory IO• Network Transaction• Monitor
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
DC + EXCH IIS × 2 DC + (EXCH × 2)
Max. processor state 100%
Max. processor state 50%
Windows Vista And Server 2008 Allow More Granular Fine Tuning
Power saving on Workstations• Windows Vista is Microsoft’s most well managed
operating system to provide energy-efficiency• TCO savings is a compelling reason for deploying
Windows Vista.• Define the computer usage scenarios then setup
power saving models.
Microsoft Assessment Configuration Pack for ENERGY STAR Power Management for SC ConfigMgr 2007This Configuration Pack uses these ENERGY STAR defined efficiency levels and recommendations as follows:
Have computers enter system standby or hibernate after 30 to 60 minutes of inactivity. Have monitors enter sleep mode after 5 to 20 minutes of inactivity. Create a warning notification if screen savers are not disabled. If one is enabled, the wait timeout period should be less than the monitor sleep setting.
This Configuration Pack applies only to desktop and notebook computers that are running Windows XP or Windows Vista operating systems.
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=C8324323-2159-4E49-988C-3505653EAA26&displaylang=en
Let's Do The Math For Your PCsIdle (W) Sleep(W) Savings (W)
Mean of PC Pentium IV 67,3 3,3 64,0
Mean of 17” CRT monitors 61,2 1,8 59,4
Mean of 17” LCD monitors 35,3 2,3 33,0
Power draw in KWh Power draw / year (idle)
Power draw / year (sleep)
Savings per year (sleep vs. idle)
P4 with CRT 791,56 31,42 760,14
P4 with LCD 632,02 34,5 597,52
Total hours a year: 24h x 365 = 8,760 hOperating hours a year: 10h x 5 x 52 weeks = 2,600 hNonuse hours per year: 8,760 h – 2,600 h = 6,160 h
Potential energy savings Idle vs. sleep:
With $0.20 / KWh, the savings are $152 or $119.5 / PC / year
•For 500 PCs: $76,000 / $59,750•For 1,000 PCs: $152,000 / $119,500
Savings with monitor / LCD
Summary (5 Steps To The $100 Tables)
• Shutdown systems you don’t need (server) or when you don’t need them (PCs)
• Use the right hardware for your needs:– Laptops vs. Office PCs vs. “gaming” PCs
• Consolidate server on 64bit platform• Virtualize if consolidation won’t work• Use Windows power features
It's Easier With System CenterServer Management Suite Enterprise includes• SC Operations Manager
(to find “unused” server)• SC Virtual Machine Manager
(for consolidating & virtualizing)• SC Configuration Manager
(for enabling power profiles )(for DCM reporting & asset information)
• SC Capacity Planner (for hardware right-sizing)
Green IT - 10 things you can do1. Enable Windows Power Management >30% energy reduction2. Replace older hardware/CRT with EnergyStar PCs3. Deploy Windows Server 2008 10% savings on same workload; 58%
less power for the same task compared to Linux4. Virtualization Avg CPU utilization < 15%5. Look at energy bills <20% of IT Professionals are accountable for, or
even know, energy consumption6. Do a thermal scan of data centers7. Telework, remote meetings through Unified Communications8. Plan, Analyze, Monitor your Environmental Sustainability efforts using
BI9. Empower your employees10.Start today
Managing Dynamic IT
Microsoft delivers end-to-end Virtualization solutions……System Center provides the tools for integrated Infrastructure Management
"Virtualization without good management is more dangerous than not using virtualization in the first place" Thomas Bittman, Gartner
Call to ActionReady Your Team
Plan to learn about the Microsoft virtualization solutions that align with your needs.
Perform MAP Analysis
Use the MAP tool to analyze your IT infrastructure and determine the level of impact that virtualization would have on your IT shop.
Build the Business Case
Use the ROI Tool to calculate the financial value of implementing virtualization and to compare Microsoft’s solution to other alternatives.
ResourcesWhite Papers
Processor Power Management in Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/pnppwr/powermgmt/ProcPowerMgmt.mspx
How to Enable Processor Power Management in Windows Server 2003http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/pnppwr/powermgmt/w2k3_ProcPower.mspx
Windows Vista Energy Conservationhttp://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/pnppwr/powermgmt/VistaEnergyConserv.mspx
Best practices for datacenters
http://download.microsoft.com/download/a/7/b/a7b72ab1-ca17-4589-923a-83b0ff57be6d/Energy-Efficiency-Best-Practices-in-Microsoft-Data-Center-Operations-CeBIT.doc
What Microsoft is doinghttp://www.microsoft.com/environment
The Green Grid organizationhttp://www.thegreengrid.org
© 2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.
The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after
the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
Hold on….
The Final Stage Of Energy Savings: Windows Mobile Devices
• Windows Mobile Devices are excellent for– Emails, meetings, tasks and contacts– Run business applications like CRM or SQL– GPS and Pocket Streets
• Fully managed with System Center– Secured by device encryption and AD policies
• Just a fraction of energy compared to laptopsDevice Email Notes Messaging Idle
Laptop 15,2 W 14,2 W 14,2 W 14 W
PDA 1,4 W 1,3 W 1,3 W 1,2 W
Energy Consumption in Mobile Devices: Why Future Systems Need Requirements-Aware Energy Scale-Down; HP Labs, Palo Alto, CA, USA