Page 27 - Telecom Reseller JanFeb 2014
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Telecom Reseller 27
February/March 2014
AUDIN
A
How real is cloud data center 
sustainability?
BTy Gary Audin
promoting that they have Uptime Institute 
he advent of cloud services offered Tier III conformance but never had the 
through data centers begs the ques- Institute certify that this was true. The stan- 
tion, “How reliable are the cloud
dards for Tier I through IV as specified by 
services?” The cloud service data centers the Uptime Institute have unfortunately been 
can be configured many ways, from non- used as generic terms leading to assumption 
redundant to fully redundant operation. The made by enterprises that the data centers 
non-redundant is the least reliable while the satisfy the Institute’s requirements but have 
fully redundant is expected to be the most never been certified by the Institute.
reliable but also the most expense to imple- Reliability numbers do not include
ment and operate. Are you sure that the Even with the best infrastructure design, 
operators of cloud data centers are provid- there will events that will reduce the reli- 
ing useful or misleading information about ability of a data center such as:
their sustainability?
• Power failure
At least one company has been caught
• Operator errors
• Malicious behavior and attacks
• Fire
• Flood
• Storms/hurricanes
You need to understand that in most 
cases, the service interruptions caused by 
the above are not counted against the reli- 
ability computations by the data center 
operators. Leaving out these unpredictable 
events is reasonable but the reliability com- 
putations will produce higher reliability 
numbers than may be the real experience.
The Uptime Institute
The Uptime Institute defines the ser- 
vice sustainability levels for data centers 
from Tier I through IV. The document 
description on their website states, “The 
Uptime Institute has released the latest 
version of the Tier Standard: Operational 
Sustainability effective 1 April 2013.
The Owners Advisory Committee con- 
sists of those organizations that have suc- 
cessfully achieved Tier Certification. The 
changes to the Standard reflect the experi- 
ence of those organizations completing cer- 
tification and the experience of the Uptime 
Institute.... The current Gold, Silver, and 
Bronze Operational Sustainability ratings 
are still applicable for Certification. Uptime 
Institute’s Tier Standard: Operational Sustainability establishes the behaviours and 
risks beyond the Tier Classification System 
(I, II, III, IV) that impact long-term data 
center performance. This Standard unifies 
the site management behaviours with the 
Tier functionality of the site infrastructure in 
order to achieve the organization’s business 
objectives or mission imperatives.”
Tier I through IV configurations
A white paper “Tier Classifications 
Define Infrastructure Performance” 
describes the Uptime Institutes Tier struc- tures. None of the Tier descriptions provide 
Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) and 
Mean Time to Repair (MTTR) numbers, 
only how well the configuration is designed. 
This means that a Tier IV configuration is 
more reliable than a Tier I configuration but 
there are no metrics to compare how much 
better a Tier IV configuration operates.
Tier I is the least reliable data center 
infrastructure. It consists of a non-redun- 
dant computer/server configuration with a 
single non-redundant network serving the 
computers/servers.
Tier II has redundant capacity com- 
puter/servers but is still restricted to a 
single non-redundant network serving the 
computers/servers. It is designed to be 
more reliable than a Tier I configuration.
Tier III configurations are the most 
commonly mentioned and awarded when describing a data center configuration. It has 
redundant equipment with more than one 
network serving the equipment. It is normal 
that only one network is operating with a 
second network operating in standby mode.
See AUDIN, page 30






