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Green IT and Data Centers

Green IT and Data Centers. Darshan R. Kapadia Gregor von Laszewski. What is Green IT?. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_computing.

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Green IT and Data Centers

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  1. Green IT and Data Centers Darshan R. Kapadia Gregor von Laszewski

  2. What is Green IT? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_computing Green IT also referred as Green computing is a study and practice of using computing resources in an efficient manner such that its impact on the environment is as less hazardous as possible. The primary goals of Green IT are to make sure that least amount of hazardous materials is used; the computing resources are used efficiently in terms of energy and to promote recyclability

  3. Why is Green IT important? • Home • A typical desktop computer can consume 200-300W of power. • This results in emission of about 220Kg of CO2/annum • Data center • Many processing units (Server), data storage units and network communication units. • As of 2006 the data centers in US used 61 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), or 1.5 percent of total U.S. electricity consumption.

  4. Some Interesting Numbers http://lushtech.com/why_go_green/ The total estimated energy bill for data centersin 2010 is $11.5 billion Data Centers produce 170 million metric tons of CO2 worldwide currently per year. 670 million metric tons of CO2 are expected to be emitted by data centers worldwide annually by 2020. 32 percent of all servers are running at or below 3 percent peak and average utilizations, wasting energy spinning and cooling, and doing virtually no work.

  5. A Typical Google Search Google spends about 0.0003 kWh per search Now , 1 kilo-watt-hour (kWh) of electricity = 7.12 x 10-4 metric tons CO2 = 0.712 kg or 712g of CO2 So for 0.0003 kWh of energy per search, amount of CO2 emitted is about 213mg. The number of Google searches worldwide amounts to 200-500 million per day. So total carbon emitted per day = 500 million x 0.000213 kg per search = 106500kg or 106.5 metric ton Source: http://prsmruti.rediffiland.com/blogs/2009/01/19/How-much-cabondioxide-CO2-emitted.html

  6. Where is power used in Data Centers? • Data center uses large amount of electricity for 3 main components: • IT Equipment • Cooling • Power Delivery

  7. Green GRID An organization for green computing provides the following standard metric for calculating energy efficiency of the data centers: Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) PUE = Total Facility Power/IT Equipment Power

  8. What does PUE mean? • PUE shows the relation between the energy used by IT equipment and energy used by other facilities such as cooling needed for operating the IT equipment. • For example, a PUE of 2.0 indicates that for every watt of IT power, an additional watt is consumed to cool and distribute power to the IT equipment. • At present the PUE of a typical enterprise data center is around between 1 to 3.

  9. Energy and Carbon Calculator http://www.apcmedia.com/salestools/WTOL-7DJLN9_R0_EN.swf Google Energy Calculator for Desktops

  10. Datacenter Carbon Calculator

  11. So what can we do? • There are 2 ways in which the energy used by the data centers can be reduced • One way is to reduce the energy used by other factors such as cooling to maintain the IT equipment. • Other way is to reduce the energy used by the IT equipment .

  12. A Typical Data Center Source : http://www.fluent.com/about/news/newsletters/04v13i2/img/a19i2.jpg

  13. Cooling Cost of Data Center For large data centers cooling cost of the data center contribute to about half of the total energy cost for running the data centers. In data centers if the energy required for cooling is reduced than the total energy cost of data centers reduces.

  14. Why is Cooling cost so high? In data centers, for computing devices there is a cooling system which supplies cold air to their air inlets at a temperature which is below a redline temperature which is specified by the device manufacture. But as the IT equipment operates it throws out hot air from their air outlet which increases the temperature due to recirculation of the hot air back to the IT equipment inlet. So the cooling system is set in such a way that it maintains the temperature which is much below the redline temperature. So the cooling cost increases as lower temperature than required has to be maintained.

  15. Thermal Based Task Scheduling The main intention of these algorithms is to reduce the heat generated by IT equipments. This is done by Thermal Based Task Scheduling. So the tasks are assigned to the nodes in the data center based on temperature.

  16. Thermal Based Task Scheduling 1. Uniform Outlet Profile: This approach is based on the inlet temperature of each computing node. The algorithm assigns more tasks to the node that have a low inlet temperature and fewer tasks to nodes that have high inlet temperature. By this a uniform outlet temperature distribution is achieved. 2. Minimal Computing Energy: In this approach all the tasks are given to the active servers and the idle servers are turned off. 3. Uniform Task: With Uniform Task scheme all nodes are assigned same amount of tasks i.e. uniform workload.

  17. Thermal Based Task Scheduling Thermal based aware task scheduling to solve this problem which is called minimizing the peak inlet temperature within a data center through task assignment (MPIT-TA). This shows how to distribute an incoming task among the servers in order to maximize the supply temperature while respecting the redline temperatures and thus minimize the cooling requirement. MPIT-TA problem takes the heat recirculation in to consideration.

  18. The Other Approach The other way to reduce the energy used by data centers is to reduce the energy used by the IT equipments. This can be achieved through Virtualization.

  19. Virtualization Virtualization refers to having an abstraction of software from the underlying hardware implementation. Virtualization is a form of server consolidation. The process of Virtualization encapsulates the operating system and application in to a Virtual Machine (VM).

  20. Why Virtualization? On an average in a data centers the servers are utilized below 5% of their capacity. The energy consumption of server is not of linear function to the server's utilization. For example an idle server can consume more 40% of the energy consumed by the full utilized server. Also at 10% utilization server used 173 watts of power and at 100% processor utilization server used 276 watts. Thus there is much scope to combine the workloads of the server so that active server is utilized more than 50% . And if the idle or underutilized server are switched off, the total energy saved will be quite large.

  21. Virtualization Technologies • Hypervisor Virtual machine • Hypervisor is software that is capable of hosting multiple virtual machines. Hypervisor software allows operating systems and applications to run on a server shared with number of other operating systems and applications. Hypervisors account for 90% of the virtual machines deployment on Linux. • Aggregated Virtualization • This technology enables distributed computing resources such as processors, memory and input/output processors to be aggregated for use by a single instance of an operating system. • Shared Operating System Virtualization • By Shared Operating System the operation of multiple applications can be done using single instance of an operating system and resources are dynamically allocated to the applications such that it does not affect the operation of other applications.

  22. Virtual Machines Full Virtualization: Virtual machines based on full virtualization feature a Virtualization layer that permits multiple operating system instances to coexist on a single server. The operating systems can also be incompatible. But performance is affected because of the mediating layer. Also there cannot be cooperative resource sharing between the 2 VMs running on the same server. VMware servers are the most popular full Virtualization based VMs. Paravirtualization: In this case the virtualized operating systems instances are modified to be aware of the Virtualization layer. It also allows for memory sharing between the 2 VMs running on the single server.

  23. Case Studies Intel VMware

  24. Intel Case Study [1] Energy-efficient performance for the data center. Intel White Paper.

  25. Intel Case Study [1] Energy-efficient performance for the data center. Intel White Paper.

  26. Conclusion So it can be concluded that we can reduce the energy used by data centers by either cutting down the energy used by the cooling facility in the data centers or by reducing the energy used by the IT equipment in the data centers. Energy used by the cooling facility can be reduced by using thermal aware task scheduling. The energy used by IT equipment can be reduced using Virtualization. As the energy used by the data center decreases the carbon dioxide emissions by data center also decreases proportionally, thus making the data center greener.

  27. References [1] Energy-efficient performance for the data center. Intel White Paper. [2] Green computing. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_computing [3] Reducing data center energy costs with virtualization. VMware White Paper. [4] Report to congress on server and data center energy efficiency. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [5] Annual energy outlook 2007, with projections to 2030, February 2007. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy. [6] Google. Going green at Google. http://www.google.com/corporate/green/datacenters/ [7] Lush Technologies. Why go green? http://lushtech.com/why_go_green/ [8] Andy Rawson, John Pfleuger, TahirCader, and ChristanBelady. Gren grid data center power efficiency metrics: Pue and dcie. Green GRID, 2008. [9] Rob Smoot. Presentation on virtualization: The best initiative for alleviating the power crisis in the data center. [10] Richard Talabar, Tom Brey, and Larry Lamers. Using virtualization to improve data center efficiency. Green GRID White Paper, 2009. [11] Qinghui Tang, Sandeep Kumar S. Gupta, and GeorgiosVarsamopoulos. Energy-efficient thermal-aware task scheduling for homogeneous high-performance computing data centers: A cyber-physical approach, NOVEMBER 2008.

  28. Thank You

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