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Ryerson's virtual savings

Ryerson's virtual savings

By:   On: 08 May 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

When the university ran out of data centre space and cooling capacity, it replaced its infrastructure with virtual servers on blades. Find out how much power the school saves -- and why perhaps one in three enterprise servers isn't in use at all

In late 2006, Ryerson University simply ran out of data centre.

Constantly adding new initiatives – and servers to support them – the Toronto school’s two data centres ran out of space. But there was more to it than that.

“In terms of space, and in respect to cooling the data centre, we were at capacity,” says Eran Frank, manager of the school’s technical support group. “It was almost impossible to cool down such a tight space.” There was also the issue of powering the more than 100 Intel servers and providing a bigger UPS.

Senior IT management began negotiating for more space with its vice-president, but Frank pitched another idea. He’d been following virtualization technology since 2004. By 2006, when VMware [Nasdaq: VMW] released Virtual Infrastructure 3, he felt it was mature enough for him to risk his reputation on.

“Instead of getting bigger, we got smaller,” Frank says.

Now the university runs some 20 blades in two chassis — identical environments in each data centre, replicated in real-time. The school can run 10 or 11 virtual servers on each blade, or 150 virtual servers in a single rack. The school pulled between 70 and 80 Intel servers out of its data centres.

Blades jam a lot of computing power into a small footprint – and generate much more heat in that smaller space. But, counters Frank, it’s certainly not as much as 100 Intel servers. And in terms of power draw, there’s no comparison between two chassis with four power supplies each and 100 servers with two PSUs each.

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In fact, according to the virtualization readiness assessment done on Ryerson’s 100-server data centre environment of 2006, the school will slash power and cooling costs by 80 per cent, saving $246,000.

Josh Leslie, director of alliances with VMware, says the company hasn’t done any studies comparing projected and actual savings. But, he says, the formula is obvious: fewer servers equals lower power consumption.


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