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Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative (FDCCI) Industry Outreach Forum. Department of Interior Auditorium August 30, 2011 9 AM – 11:30 AM. Welcome. Bernie Mazer CIO Department of the Interior. 2. Objectives. Scott Renda Portfolio Manager - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Department of InteriorAuditorium
August 30, 20119 AM – 11:30 AM
Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative(FDCCI)
Industry Outreach Forum
Welcome
Bernie Mazer
CIO
Department of the Interior
2
Objectives
Scott Renda
Portfolio Manager
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
3
4
Industry Outreach Forum – Agenda
Welcome Bernie Mazer - DOI 9:00 AM
Background and Objective Scott Renda - OMB 9:10 AM
Panel IPreparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation Leveraging Cloud ServicesMigration Planning, and Execution
Jim Steven, USDA
David Harrity, ED David Updike, EPA
9:20 AM
Questions and Answers Kathy Conrad - GSA 10:05 AM
Panel IITools for Tracking and Managing
Inventory Tools for Mapping Applications Energy Efficiency Assessment
Tim Schmidt, DOT
Bruce Downs, DOI Jake Wooley, DOE
10:25 AM
Questions and Answers Kathy Conrad 11:10 AM
Next Steps Zachary Baldwin 11:20 AM
Process Questions and Answers Zachary Baldwin 11:30 AM
Background and Objectives
• FDCCI launched in February 2010
• Integral to the 25 Point Plan to Reform Federal IT
• By 2015, consolidate 800+ data centers. As of July 2011:– 373 data centers planned for closure– 81 already closed
• Agencies addressing numerous challenges as they consolidate
• Seeking industry insight on best practices and proven approaches
Objective: Repository of White Papers available to agencies
5
6
Data Center Consolidation Challenges
• Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
• Leveraging Cloud Services
• Migration Planning, and Execution
• Tools for Tracking and Managing Inventory
• Tools for Mapping Applications
• Energy Efficiency Assessment
Panel I
Moderator - Kathy Conrad, Principal Deputy Associate Administrator, Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, GSA
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Jim Steven, Deputy Associate CIO for Data Centers, USDA
Leveraging Cloud Services
David Harrity, Network Services Branch Chief, Department of Education
Migration Planning, and Execution
David Updike, Acting Director, EPA National Computer Center
7
Panel I
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Jim Steven
Deputy Associate CIO for Data Centers
USDA
8
Selecting the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Primary Site Selection Criteria
• Exposure to Hazards • Natural • Man-Made
• Local Utilities• Available Commercial Power Capacity/Diverse Sources
• Rates
• Bandwidth Availability• Available Capacity to Support Current & Future Needs
(e.g. Lit & Dark Fibre)• Diverse Sources
• Construction/Maintenance Costs
9
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Physical/Personnel Security Evaluation/Enhancements
• CCTV W/ DVR Capabilities• Access Control
Armed GuardsHigh Security Locks/Site Perimeter ControlsBiometrics
• FPS Evaluation Against DOJ Secure Facility Standards
• Minimum Level of Security Clearance Required for Personnel Working in the Data Center
10DRAFT
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Power/Cooling/Infrastructure Evaluation/Enhancements
• Determine Uptime Requirements Based on Intended Use (e.g. Production; DR; App Dev)
• Backup Emergency Power Source for Data Center Loads (including mechanical equipment) with Capacity to Meet Need
• 24 Hour Service Contracts in-place for UPS, Generators, Batteries, HVAC, and Fire Suppression Systems
• Fire Suppression Systems - preferably dry pipe and/or gas• Installation of Alarmed Water Monitoring System within the Data
Center• Re-routing of Water Piping and/or Drains Installed Above the data
Center Space• Plan/Implement Floor Layout (Hot/Cold Aisles)• Available Space Meets Long Term Need
11DRAFT
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Establishment of Systems Processes/Standards
• Guidelines for Server Configuration Hardening• Monthly Vulnerability Scanning Performed on All Systems
and Computing Platforms• Patch Management System In-place to Address
Vulnerabilities• Certification and Accreditation of All Data Center General
Support Systems• Documented Incident Response Processes and
Procedures In-place and Periodically Exercised• Disaster Recovery, Business Continuity and Emergency
Response Plans/Processes Documented and Periodically Tested
12DRAFT
Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Establishment of Management Processes/Standards
• Data Center Service Delivery Model Aligned with IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) Processes
• Service Level Agreements and Performance Reporting Metrics Documented and In-place
• Standard Operating Procedures for Scheduling Maintenance Documented and In-place
• Data Center Costs and Customer Service Benchmarked Against Industry
13DRAFT
Selecting/Preparing the Receiving Data Center for Consolidation
Challenges Encountered
• “Spot” Cooling Problems Related to Denser Computing Loads
• Data Center Efficiency• Deploying Green Technologies• LEED Certification?• Time to Market for Bandwidth Augmentation• Evaluating Utilities for NERC CIP Compliance• Uptime Tier Equivalent - identify costs between tier
levels
14DRAFT
Panel I
Leveraging Cloud Services
David Harrity
Network Services Branch Chief
ED
15
Leveraging Cloud Services
• Using Cloud to accelerate closures• Standardization
– Creating Standard Platforms • Service Models
– Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)– Platform as a Service (PaaS)– Software as a Service (SaaS
• Deployment Models:– Community Cloud– Public Cloud– Private Cloud– Hybrid Cloud
16
Using Cloud to Accelerate Closures
• Value Proposition – Cloud Service Providers develop solutions that drive agencies to accelerate data center closures
• The “Cloud First” policy and FedRAMP programs supports the data center consolidation Initiative
• NIST Cloud Computing Working Group @ http://www.nist.gov/itl/cloud/
• EPA is working with the IT industry to identify ways in which energy efficiency can be measured, documented, and implemented in data centers. EPA has several initiatives currently underway:
» Guiding Principles for Energy Efficiency» ENERGY STAR Rating for Data Centers» ENERGY STAR Data Center Product Specifications
17
Standardization of Cloud Services
• Value Proposition: Cloud Service Providers creating standard platforms for desired Service Models & Deployment Models
• Agencies are driven towards standardization as a means to drive lower costs while increasing compliance with major Federal regulations. Examples may be:– Describe (aka, map) how your offering(s) align to NIST SP 800-53 controls for
FISMA compliance.– Describe how your services map to ITIL v3 & ISO/IEC 2000 for IT Service
Management.– Describe how your services map to COBIT for IT Governance.– Describe your efforts with the Cloud Computing Standards Roadmap WG.
• Visit the NIST Inventory of Standards Relevant to Cloud Computinghttp://collaborate.nist.gov/twiki-cloud-computing/bin/view/CloudComputing/StandardsInventory
• Service Level Agreements – Describe your predefined non-negotiable agreements and negotiated agreements. [NIST SP 800-144]
18
Interoperability of Cloud Services
• Value Proposition –CSP provides agencies with interoperable solutions that allow ingress/egress migration between CSPs
• How Does Your Solution Map to Interoperability Standards:– Open Virtualization Form (OVF)– Open Cloud Computing Interface (OCCI)– Cloud Computing Data Management Interface (CCDMI)– OAuth, SAML, and the host of standards available for providers and
their customers
• Examine Service Providers’ Obligations Upon Contract Termination for Returning and Purging Data
• E-Discovery – Describe how your offering supports E-Discovery including the archival preservation of original metadata
19
Security of Cloud Services
• How Does Your Offering Map to NIST Special Publication 800-53? – This must be done for an agency to authorize a solution, might as well do it
proactively
• How Does Your Offering Map to NIST Special Publication 800-144, Guidelines on Security and Privacy in the Public Cloud Computing
• Examine and Describe How Your Services Map to HIPAA, PCI DSS and SAS 70– When appropriate for a given agency
• Participate in the NIST Cloud Computing Security Working Group
• Leverage the FedRAMP Process to “C&A once” for Iterative Implementation of Cloud Solutions
20
Migrating to the Cloud
• Selection of Apps to Migrate• Identify everything that’s moving (Physical /logical)
– Schedule of events, timeline, load & unload plan
• Identify required resources– People, systems, logistics
• Identify gaps in new location resources– Bandwidth, power, cooling, storage…
• Risk mitigation– Dependencies, interdependencies, criticality
• Identify where it’s going– New facility/rack/slot location
• Develop move sequencing plan
21
Panel I
Migration Planning and Execution
David Updike
Acting Director, EPA National Computer Center
22
Migration & Execution Challenges
• Physical Plant– Managing floor loads expanding data centers and server rooms– Managing network and power cabling services within an expanding data centers– Estimating power and cooling loads for migrating applications– Maximizing power & cooling efficiency in legacy data > 1000 sq feet– Maximizing power & cooling efficiency in server rooms less than 500 sq ft– Racking solutions for co-locating heterogeneous server and storage platforms
• Security Management– Managing physical access controls in a multi-tenant data center– Managing logical access controls and remote server administration in a co-
location data center– Managing FISMA compliance in multi-tenant data center
23
Migration & Execution Challenges
• Network Management– Estimating application network requirements and migration impact (LAN, WAN,
Storage)– Networking architectures to optimize multi-tenant data centers and server rooms– Networking solutions to enable or simplify wide data center consolidation across
WAN
• Storage Management – Data migration strategies for data center consolidation– Storage platform consolidation (MF/Midrange/workgroup)– Integrating heterogeneous storage platforms– Relocating physical storage– Integrating backup and recovery solutions within and across data centers
24
Migration & Execution Challenges
• Hosting Platforms– Mainframe relocation & consolidation– Midrange server relocation & consolidation– Workgroup server relocation & consolidation
• Application Consolidation– GIS application consolidation – Legacy client/server consolidation– Consolidating latency sensitive applications– Consolidating user file services– Consolidating local productivity applications– Assessing cloud readiness Cloud
25
Migration & Execution Challenges
• Data Center Consolidation Project Management– Proven tools, templates & services supporting
• Relocation • Consolidation• Application Migration• Application cloud readiness
• Key attributes for solution candidates– Proven technology and/or service– Real world successful implementation examples
• Large enterprise context • Government or Commercial
– Tangible ROI model– Accessible via GSA schedule or GWACS vehicles
Tools for Mapping Applications
• Critical and Overlooked Step in Migration– Understand dependencies and what will happen if the system is
turned off or moved?• Critical for establishing move groups and developing risk mitigation plans• Understand minimum system requirements
– Other benefits• Documenting System average / peak loads, Storage utilization/requirements,
average / peak number of users, Bandwidth requirements (KB’s per second, per week)
– Critical for evaluating alternative options» Managed hosting, colocation, Cloud…
– All major vendors have tools available• Most are not plug and play. Must be customized
– May plug into existing CMDB ecosystem • Data Center consulting companies usually have custom toolsets
27
Panel I
Questions and Answers
Moderator: Kathy Conrad
Principal Deputy Associate AdministratorOffice of Citizen Services and Innovative
TechnologiesGeneral Services Administration
28
Panel II
Moderator - Kathy Conrad, Principal Deputy Associate Administrator, Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies, GSA
Tools for Tracking and Managing Inventories
Tim Schmidt, CTO, DOT
Tools for Mapping Applications
Bruce Downs, Federal Lead and Program Manager, Data Center Consolidation, DOI
Energy Efficiency Assessment
Jake Wooley, Program Manager, IT Sustainability, OCIO, DOE
29
Panel II
Tools for Tracking and Managing Inventories
Tim Schmidt
CTO
DOT
30
31
Challenges to the Data Center Inventory
• This is a Huge Inventory – It Is Not Pure IT– Multiple infrastructures and types of operations
• Physical infrastructure (power, cooling, electrical, etc.)• Applications infrastructure (servers, OS’s, application software)• Network infrastructure (routers, switches, circuits)
– Multiple operations groups within each agency – Multiple types of data that do not correlate well
• Relationships between the different infrastructure data are difficult to see in static reports and spreadsheets
• There’s No Magic Pill – Integrating inventories with new tools is costly – Some level of manual verification will always be required– Staff must understand strategic link between inventory collection and
consolidating data centers
32
What Do We Need from our Current Inventories for Consolidation Planning?
• Ensure We Can Fulfill Reporting• Understand How to Leverage Current Tools to
Answer Pressing Questions and Inform Strategy
INFRASTRUCTURETYPE
STRATEGY AND PLANNING QUESTIONS
DATA CENTER Per space, how much is current power, cooling putting systems at risk or impacting rack utilization?
Is this a space that should be consolidated sooner, or should it come later? What is cost/benefit?
QUESTIONS FROM INVENTORY DATA
APPLICATIONS Per space, what are the server workloads, what systems are supported, what is/is not virtualized
What can we virtualize, what requires a fork-lift to the receiving data center, are some applications no longer needed?
NETWORK Per application, what is current network utilization; what is network configuration between site, end users
What are required response times, how much bandwidth do we need at receiving data center, what is cost?
33
What Do Agencies Consider as We Think About New Tools for the Future?
• Do Tools Support an Application Mapping Capability? – We understand the importance of application mapping for
conducting successful migrations– However, we may not fully understand the inherent complexities
• How Well Do Tools Integrate Inventory Functions for Data Center, Applications, and Network Infrastructure? – How well do vendors understand our current
environment and how complex would this integration be• What is the Cost/Benefit for Deploying a New Inventory
Tool vs. Staying with Current– How long would it take– What would it cost and how long is the payback period
34
What Is the Best Way to Continue this Dialogue with Individual Agencies?
• First, try to learn as much as possible about our current environment from publicly available documents or other points of contact within your own company
• Be able to demonstrate how your inventory product is different from what we are currently using, or how it complements what we are currently using
• Talk to a practical implementation strategy for your tool in our unique environments
• Provide some ballpark estimate of how much it would cost to implement
• Make sure you have a technical resource on hand to answer substantive questions
Panel II
Tools for Mapping Applications
Bruce Downs
Federal Lead and Program Manager, Data Center Consolidation
DOI
35
Applications/Service Perspective
• Applications Assessment is a Full Life-cycle Requirement
36
Current Processes/Capabilities
• Manual Processes • Many Stakeholders • Labor Intensive• Multiple systems• Manual Errors• Incomplete• Time Delay
37
Objective Processes/Capabilities
• Improve Effectiveness/Efficiency• Automate What Makes Sense• Free Workforce for Other Activities • Leverage Existing Systems, and “Cooperate” with
Installed Base• Short Learning Curve• Low Infrastructure Resource Overhead• Short-Term, Positive Return-on-Investment • Facilitate Sustained Performance Analysis
38
Assessment Overview
39
MODEL ASSESSMENT TOOLRE
SULT
S
Plan of Action
Waiver Process
START DATA COLLECTION ANALYSIS ASSESSMENT DECISIONIMPLEMENTATIO
N
SHOULD CLOUD
SHOULDN’T
CAN’T
SHOULD NON-CLOUD
Decision Support Overview
40
MC1
MC2
MC3
MC4
MC5
PLAN
IMPLEMENT
MAINTAIN
RESOLVE ISSUE
RE-EVALUATE
DOCUMENT ISSUE
MC = Migration Category
BUSINESS
TECHNOLOGY
GOVERNANCE
FUNDING & PROCUREMENT
Mandates & Policy
Bus. Req. & Impact
Risk & Probability
Data Classification
ABCABCABCABC
Tech. Fit & Feasibility
Security Req. & Impact
Lifecycle Stage
Migration Complexity
ABCABCABCABC
Priorities & Comp. Req.
Sys. Complexity Mitigation
Ability to Execute
Auth. to Proceed
ABCABCABCABC
Funds/Budget/ROI/Cost
Migration Urgency
Qualified Cloud Provider
Qualified Non-Cloud Provider
ABCABCABCABC
Dependency Overview
• Document Customer/Application Relationship– Public-User-Program-System Owner-Local Managers
• Technical Dependencies– Data access (Permissions, location, firewalls, ports & protocols…)– Applications Interfaces– Operating Environment (Software & Hardware)– Business Model/Service Delivery Model– CoOP/DR
• Document and meet requirements– Functionality– Access– Capacity– Performance– Security– Legal/Policy
41
Lessons Learned
• Scope of Questions Asked Requires Different Expertise to Answer the Data Call • Includes business, technical, governance, and funding & procurement• Sequencing and multiple access for manual inputs
• Tool Issues Addressed• Successful roll-out requires proper communication and introduction to
the Tool and the Assessment Process; and • Clear documentation of definitions and terminologies, along with
sample examples help in improving Agency-wide feedback consistency.
• Is There a Better Way?
• What Questions Should Be Asked?
42
Panel II
Migration Planning and Execution
Jake Wooley
Program Manager, IT Sustainability, OCIO
DOE
43
44
FDCCI & SSPP: Energy Efficiency is the Common Goal
Current SituationCurrent Situation
What are the Challenges?
Where are the Opportunities?
Comprehensive Approach
Performance Measures
Data Center Energy
• Data Centers Are Energy Intensive Facilities– 10 to 100+ times more energy intensive than other commercial space
– 2.5% of U.S. Electricity consumption in 2011
– Power and cooling constraints in existing facilities
• Data Centers Are Not Exempt from Federal Efficiency Requirements
45
Data Centers are 2 Lines of Business with Different Incentives
46
Actual Energy Usage
ENERGY WASTEIT Infrastructure
Facilities Infrastructure
EnergyNeededvs
PUE = 2.0
$PUE = 1.4
IT InfrastructureIT Systems Performance & Availability
Operational Control of Floor Space
Energy Efficiency NOT an Incentive(if you don’t pay the power bill!)
Facilities InfrastructureUtility Service Provider – Only
Pay the Electric Bill
Little Operational Control(therefore, no way to lower the costs)
Data Center Variability
• Energy / GHG Efficiency vs IT Systems Efficiency
47
Energy / GHG
• Power sources
• Power loses
• Cooling
• CPU Utilization
IT Systems
• Staffing
• Systems consolidation
• Space costs
• Lifecycle replacement
• Facilities vs IT Systems Management
• High-Performance Computingvs Business Automation
We need a comprehensive approach that recognizes differences in purpose yet drives efficiencies.We need a comprehensive approach that recognizes differences in purpose yet drives efficiencies.
Server Load/ComputingOperations
Cooling Equipment
Power Conversion & Distribution
On-site Generation
• High voltage distribution• High efficiency UPS systems• Efficient redundancy strategies• Use of DC power
• Server consolidation• Virtualization• High efficiency power
supplies• Load management
• Better air management• Move to liquid cooling• Optimized chilled-water plants• Use of free cooling• Heat recovery
• On-site generation Including fuel cells and renewable sources
• CHP applications (Waste heat for cooling)
Energy Efficiency Opportunities
48
• 20-40% savings typical• Aggressive strategies can
yield 50+% savings • Extend life and capacity of
infrastructures• But is mine good or bad?
Potential Benefits of Data Center Energy Efficiency
49
Benchmark Energy Performance
• Compare to peers – Wide variation
• Identify best practices and efficiency improvements
• Track performance – Can’t manage what isn’t measured
50
Challenges
• Metering – Measure real-time PUE• Standardize Benchmarking
• Data Center - Profile (DC-Pro) Tools
• Data Center Energy Management• Implement Best Practices (IT & Facilities)• Server Power Management• Certified Data Center Energy Practitioner (DCEP)
• Site Selection• Low Utility Rates• Free-cooling Opportunities
• Modularity• Design for Energy Efficiency Regardless of IT load
51
Challenges
• Use ASHRAE recommended and allowable ranges of temperature and humidity
• Improve air flow – isolate hot & cold aisles• Use Free Cooling
– Outside-Air Economizers – Water-side Economizers– Let’s get rid of chillers in data centers
• Reduce Power Chain Conversions• Select and configure power supplies for greater
efficiency• Procurement
52
4. Panel II
Questions and Answers
Moderator: Kathy Conrad – GSA
53
Next Steps - Zachary Baldwin
Venders Submit White Papers
• Address Topics Presented Using Case Studies
• Length: 5 Page limit
• Due: Sept 1 – Sept 30, 2011
• No Marketing Material
• Email to fdcci@gsa.gov
•White papers will be available to CIO Council and Agency
FDCCI Task Force Members through secure repository;
agencies will follow up directly with vendors as appropriate
54
White Paper
White Paper should consist of the following components:
Section
1. IntroductionHighlight agency high level business needs that will be addressed in your paper.
2. Description of Problem & GoalsBriefly describe the problem and business related goals. Include a case study and actionable steps
3. Description of Approach, Rationale, Results & TimelineThe rationale for your approach, a summary of your approach, and the results with specific and measurable objectives.
4. POC and Vender informationNo Marketing Material
55
Process Questions and Answers
Questions and Answers
Zachary Baldwin – GSA
56
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