Data Center Checklist for Infrastructure Best Practices (SlideShare)

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Data Center Checklist for Infrastructure Best Practices

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Expectations of data centers are focused on the five ‘pillars’

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of availability, cost-effectiveness, flexibility, manageability, and security

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These pillars let us make a data center checklist of best practices for the DC infrastructure

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Availability

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Data centers need to be organized to prevent such problems or at least to detect them at the earliest possible moment, including:

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• Resilient data center design with fire barriers and robust building architecture

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• Multiple connections to power providers, preferably entering the data center at different points

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• Uninterruptible power supply with battery backup and generators in case of power cuts

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• Redundant servers and storage with failover provisions at hardware and software levels

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• Multiple high-speed network links entering and exiting at different points

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• Sufficient air conditioning for all of the equipment being operated in the data center

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• Smoke, fire, humidity and flood detection, including underneath data center raised floors

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Cost-Effectiveness

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Data center operations need to be high-quality, yet also be efficient and avoid unnecessarily high levels of expenditure

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• Tiered data storage according to needs for every day, occasional, or archival use

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• Virtualization to maximize physical server productivity via virtual machines (VMs)

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• Automation of systems administration routines

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• Power and cooling analysis to prevent excessively hot or cold spots from forming

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• Ergonomic shipping and installation facilities, including weather-proof receiving docks

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• Proximity to access routes and fuel storage, while avoiding hazards like airports and oil refineries

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Flexibility

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Even if data center buildings seldom scale physically,

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their internal organization must facilitate scaling in power and storage capacity with new systems,

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as well as handling peak user demands

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• Ability of the data center to accommodate new technology with different power and cooling needs

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• Ease of switching to new operational procedures or ways to meet new safety requirements

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• Modularity in floor layout, electrical and mechanical design to adapt to market requirements

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• Management of requests for very popular information via overflow servers

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Manageability

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‘Lights-out’ operations may be possible, but at the very least,

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data center teams and customers must be kept appraised of performance and possible problems via:

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• Service level agreements with customers, including service response time and escalation paths

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• Overall and specific (per customer for multi-customer DCs) monitoring of service levels

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• Speedy registration and resolution of support requests, trouble tickets, and alarms

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• Coordinated computing equipment refresh process with roadmap for customers

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• Standards compliance and certification now and into the future (e.g. PCI, TIA-942, SAS 70)

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Security

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Both in terms of staff and site safety, and customer data confidentiality,

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security looms large in the data center checklist for infrastructure best practices including:

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• Full compliance with safety regulations including fire exits

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• Physical security with protection of power and networking links, and cable vaults

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• Video surveillance and motion detectors, badges, ‘mantrap’ entrances, data center guards

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• Data encryption, SSL certificates, firewalls and also virtual firewalls (for VMs)

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• Locked cages with ceilings for customer systems, locked cabinets as an option

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• Intrusion detection and prevention systems, behavioral analysis, and alerts to staff

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• Protected and tested data backup and disaster recovery procedures

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• Reliable and complete data destruction procedures (old hard drives, contract terminations)

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This data center checklist is naturally a general one

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Do you have an additional best practice for your own data center?

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Tell us about it in the Comments section below

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