| Service and solution: | Data Centre |
|---|
| Partners: | CA, Cisco, NetApp |
|---|
| Sector: | Education |
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Click here to view the Loughborough
University Video
A new hybrid cloud solution implemented at
Loughborough University mitigates massive cost of data centre
rebuild, and connects the University to Logicalis UK's hosted cloud
service, the first of its kind connected to JANET (the UK’s
education and research network).
The Client
Loughborough University is one of the
country’s leading universities, with a reputation for excellence in
teaching and research, strong links with business and industry and
unrivalled sporting achievement. Loughborough is the UK’s premier
university for sport and has perhaps the best integrated sports
development environment in the world. It is the Official
Preparation Camp Headquarters for Team GB prior to the London 2012
Olympic Games.
The Challenge
Loughborough was faced with a situation common to several
universities – its 40-year-old data centre, built with Computer
Board money in the 1970s, was at the end of its life and badly in
need of replacing.
Dr Phil Richards, Director of IT at
Loughborough University, comments, “Our data centre was built and
designed 40 years ago. It has served us well, but is showing its
age through a poor PUE (Power Utilisation Efficiency) rating and
limited capacity. We were open to innovation from the IT sector to
bring us the most cost-effective and creative ways to build a more
holistic and scalable IT architecture that would grow with us for
the long-term."
The Solution
The university originally thought in terms of simply rebuilding
and refurbishing the old data centre: refurbishing space for 40-50
racks of equipment but cooling it in a better, greener manner. To
that end it began an EU competitive dialogue tender process,
looking for an infrastructure partner that would work with the
university on three projects – refreshing the university LAN,
providing a VoIP system to replace the existing telephony, and the
data centre. “We were able to let suppliers open our eyes to the
alternatives to a big refurbishment project,” says Phil.
The supplier selected for the data centre
service was Logicalis, chosen for its cooperative cloud offering
and because at the time it was in the late stages of connecting to
JANET. Thus Loughborough now has a data centre service that is
modular, economical, green, and fully resilient at the local level
with the option of hosting services remotely at Logicalis’s data
centre.
Using the latest and greenest technology has
enabled Loughborough to avoid the need for a multi-million pound
refurbishment project by building a hybrid cloud – a generic term
for a combination of local and remote data centres using cloud
technology.
Locally, the new Loughborough data centre is
housed in two ‘mini-pods’ – the term used by Phil Richards,
Loughborough’s IT Director, for modular containers holding chilled
racks with enclosed cooling systems – housed at either end of
campus. The mini-pods are modular and easily extendible, and part
of the design brief was that the local cloud be completely
symmetrical so that any service can run from one half or the other.
Hence, one mini-pod can be switched off for servicing and users
won’t notice any change in the service they receive. At the same
time, the system was to be part of a bigger whole that featured
remote data centre capacity.
Phil Richards says that the cooperative cloud
removes the distinction between a private remote hosted cloud (for
example a university with services running on their racks in a
third party’s data centre) and the public cloud (for example Google
Mail, where your mailbox lives somewhere on a rack in a massive
data centre: a solution that is cheaper because of economies of
scale but risky with issues concerning security, data protection
and so on). The Logicalis cooperative cloud is the first solution
available over JANET that does this, with cloud capacity in rack
space that is dynamically reprovisioned: that is, allocated in an
optimised way according to need and usage..
The Outcome
Local or remote?
Whether to run a particular service locally or
remotely, says Phil, comes down simply to price.
“The cooperative cloud from Logicalis lets you
move services from local to remote and back again without buying in
more infrastructure. Local capacity should see us through the next
2-3 years at least. Beyond that it comes down to price. The local
cloud has an elastic design so if it’s cheaper to run locally, we
can buy extra minipods to bolt alongside the existing ones. If by
that stage the cloud market has become more efficient so that it’s
cheaper to run things externally, we will do that. We might never
have to buy another new bit of tin at Loughborough.”
“I can’t predict when it will become cheaper
to run entirely off the cloud but I believe it will happen, and as
soon as it does, I will be able to look at the pricing options; as
long as the quality of service is equivalent I will move the
service to run remotely and save the university money. We have the
flexibility either to grow local capacity or to go remote, based
purely on cost parameters, but in either case we have avoided the
need for a multi-million pound building refurbishment project.
That’s a good strategy for any university faced with the choice of
what to do with a 40-year-old data centre that has had a good
innings but is overdue for retirement!”
New for old
A full old-style refurbishment could
cost £2-3m in mechanical and electrical work alone before buying a
single disc or server. The development of blade servers and
virtualisation now means servers can be packed into a much smaller
space: each blade can run many logical servers. To meet the current
and future needs of the university, Loughborough didn’t need a big
building project at all – it just needed half a dozen racks.
Buy-in
A wide variety of people from around campus
were involved in the competitive dialogue process, says Phil: not
just members of IT services but also IT staff based in academic
departments, 3-4 senior members and heads of departments, and the
Chief Operating Officer all came to the dialogue sessions.
“If we had just gone to the IT committee with
a proposal not to refurbish but to buy two minipods and put
services up on the cloud, it would have been seen as risky and
wouldn’t have worked. However, competitive dialogue, and a wide
audience within the university, has built shared understanding
about why this was a better way forward. This helped us get buy-in
for the strategy from all levels, right around the university.”
Advice
Phil’s advice to universities facing the same
situation as Loughborough is to ask: “given advances in
miniaturisation and virtualisation, do you really need all that
rack space on campus? Think from the outset how you can combine
local capacity with options to go to the cloud as part of your
design concept. Even if you don’t place a single service remotely
in the first three years, there will come a time when it’s cheaper
to go remote and you will know how you’re going to do it. If you’re
worried about buy-in, consider competitive dialogue. It takes
longer and is harder work but it has clear benefits.”
Click here to view the Loughborough
University Video
Testimonial
"We were open to innovation from the IT sector to bring us the most cost-effective and creative ways to build a more holistic and scalable IT architecture that would grow with us for the long-term."
Phil Richards, Director of IT