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Content Tagged with infrastructure + Server

Elastic Server On-Demand

A web based service/tool to create/share configured virtual servers

Xen: http://del.icio.us/rss/tag/xen

Sun Fire X4500 Server

By integrating state of the art server and storage technologies, the Sun Fire X4500 Server delivers the remarkable performance of a four-way x64 server and the highest storage density available, with up to 48 TB in 4U of rack space. This system also deliv

zfs: del.icio.us/tag/zfs

Enomalism : Elastic Computing Platform - Virtual Server Management: Home

<sep/>TurboGears-based, apparently) for managing compute clouds and VMs on various virtualization platforms, like Xen, KVM and Amazon EC2. Open source edition. From the makers of ElasticDrive. Lots of hype, but<sep/>

Xen: http://del.icio.us/rss/tag/xen

Nagios is an Open Source host, service and network monitoring program.

"Nagios is a host and service monitor designed to inform you of network problems before your clients, end-users or managers do. The monitoring daemon runs intermittent checks on hosts and services you specify using external "plugins" which return status i

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

Pizza Boxes Are Power Hogs


As everyone knows, you get what you pay for. That maxim certainly holds true for Internet infrastructure, especially when it comes to servers. Over the past few years there has been an explosion of low-cost appliance servers – also known as pizza box servers — and they now account for a formidable portion of the Internet infrastructure. And though cheap in price, they are turning out to be power hogs.

“These servers are cheap to buy but consume a lot of energy and their utilization is pretty low,” said Jonathan Koomey, project scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and consulting professor at Stanford University, who recently conducted a study on the power requirements for servers. “The utilization is below 20 percent and we really need to focus on virtualization to get more from these boxes.”

According to his estimates, volume servers, or the low-end devices that include the pizza box servers, consumed over 50.5 billion kilowatt  hours in 2005, up from 19.7 billion kWh in 2000. That number surely must have increased by now. From 1996 through 2006, the sales of volume servers jumped from 1.41 million units to 7.282 million units, according to information collected by International Data Corp., a market research firm.

“Some of these (pizza box servers) throw up a lot of heat and are power hogs,” said Tim Sullivan, Chief Technology Officer of Internap, a data center and CDN provider, during a call with company’s management earlier today. He said that they are asking clients to better utilize the data center space and putting fewer of these pizza boxes in a more efficient manner.

One of the reasons these pizza box servers are inefficient is because they’re being made to do tasks for which they were not built. Back in the late 1990s, the form factor became popular with the large corporations, and there was plenty of space (and power) in the data centers. However, as web infrastructure needs have increased, so has the number of servers. Even tiny startups are beginning to buy 1,000 of these boxes to just stay in business.

As their numbers increase, and the problems mount, it makes me wonder if we’ll soon see the pendulum swing to the “big iron.” Thoughts, anyone?

Technology-News: GigaOm

Home - OpenSER SIP Server

The second patch release of 1.2.x series is out as version 1.2.2. It preserves full compatibility with 1.2.0 regarding the configuration file. See more details here...

SIP: del.icio.us tag/SIP