Top use cases for remote data centre management with DCIM software

Top use cases for remote data centre management with DCIM software

Data centre managers are under more pressure than ever and need tools to provide complete visibility across the whole facility. Herman Chan, President at Sunbird Software, tells us why infrastructure teams should consider DCIM software to help them achieve their core objectives of improving uptime, utilisation and productivity. 

The COVID-19 pandemic has driven all interaction with the outside world online, causing a dramatic spike in the utilisation of server compute, storage and network resources, and data centre managers have been tasked to continue providing the services the world desperately needs, quickly expanding capacity while also maintaining uptime and high availability.  

To make this even more challenging, public health guidelines and shelter-in-place orders have required data centre managers to reduce the number of people in the data centre to the bare minimum. In this ‘new normal’, remote data centre management tools have provided total visibility into global data centre footprints from anywhere at any time. 

Even before the pandemic, remote data centre management was a trending topic due to trends such as moving to colocation or implementing Edge Computing, where many remote sites need to be centrally managed. With COVID-19, remote data centre management is now an absolute necessity to maintain uptime and Business Continuity while reducing the staff required to go on-site.  

Data centre professionals now need to leverage a wide range of technologies in their remote data centre management toolkit such as intelligent PDUs, KVM over IP switches, serial console servers, baseboard management controllers, cloud monitoring, IT systems monitoring, IT service management (ITSM), building management (BMS) and electrical power management (EPMS). But to complete the remote data centre management toolkit and bridge information across organisational domains, all data centre managers must-have Data Centre Infrastructure Management (DCIM) software.  

DCIM enables data centre managers to centrally manage all their resources and capacities in a single pane of glass to maintain uptime, improve efficiency of capacity utilisation and increase productivity of people. 

Consider the following use cases for remote data centre management with DCIM software: 

  • Remotely plan space, power and connectivity. DCIM software provides a virtual visual instance of your data centre in 3D with colour-coded floor map overlay reports displaying real time data such as cabinet space, budgeted and actual power, plus network and power port availability to help you easily identify the ideal location to deploy assets. Similarly, ‘what-if’ analysis helps you understand the potential impact of additions and decommissions in your data centre. With this information at your fingertips, you can identify stranded space and power capacity to defer capital expenditures or understand if additional resources are necessary in order to meet demand. Plus, a comprehensive DCIM solution with an Auto Power Budget feature will unlock precious rack capacity as each individual server make/model instance is assigned a unique power budget value that’s automatically set from real-time outlet-measured readings from intelligent rack PDUs-your devices’ exact loads under your compute stress in your environment. 
  • Direct technicians to complete changes accurately. With limited on-site hands at data centres and colocation sites, accurate and productive remote direction of technicians on where to go and what to do can be a difficult process without the right tool. Without a single source of truth of all assets across all locations, you will not have confidence that you are directing technicians to the correct location to make the correct changes. DCIM software enables remote planning and initiation of clear work orders and instructions for remote hands. Cabinet elevation views provide the exact U position of your assets and device views while high-fidelity front and back images show technicians exactly where the data and power ports are located to ensure that connections are made correctly. DCIM ensures that work activity is done accurately the first time, reducing the need for additional trips to the data centre and mitigating the number one cause of downtime: human error. 
  • Remotely monitor power and environment sensors across multiple locations. Managing multiple remote sites with their own power and cooling systems is easy with DCIM. An enterprise dashboard displays real-time power and environmental health, trends, events and alerts for all sites in a single pane of glass with the ability to drill down for more granular cabinet-level metrics. Advanced warning of issues such as hot spot formation, power capacity limitations, and loss of redundancy allows you to take action to prevent downtime. DCIM software combined with remote power control on intelligent rack PDUs lets you switch devices on or off or power cycle them without the need for an on-site technician to reboot servers and restore them to service. 
  • Remotely manage all assets and connections across the entire data centre deployment. As data centres become more complex and distributed, more data centre managers are tasked to remotely manage multiple sites and business applications. In a modern data centre environment, maintaining an accurate inventory of all your assets across all sites requires a tool that provides real-time views of all your physical data centre infrastructure. DCIM provides business intelligence and analytics on metrics such as asset count by location, hosts per application and asset cost by location which helps you understand which applications require the most resources and where you can increase efficiency. DCIM also lets you easily understand how assets are physically connected via visual circuit traces to help you avoid overloaded circuits, decrease latency, perform impact analysis and quickly troubleshoot connections to reduce downtime. 
  • Improve collaboration and productivity of remote workers. With most data centre employees now working from home, it’s more important than ever for data centre teams to break down organisational silos and share a single source of truth via common views of dashboards and reports that are updated and visible in real time. A modern, second-generation DCIM solution will enable data-driven collaboration of remote workers with business intelligence dashboards that can be created, edited and securely shared with respect to granular, role-based access controls. You can manage consistent KPIs across your functional teams with preconfigured widgets and reports for every data centre scenario. Categorise all assets in your data centre and easily save and share asset and site views with the various groups in your organisation, whether server, network, storage or infrastructure teams, ensuring a common approach and process for remote management of all equipment.  
  • Ensure physical security of data centres. DCIM software has user reporting, audit logs, physical cabinet lock management and surveillance feeds to allow you to monitor and manage who has access to different areas of your data centre.  You can even remotely unlock cabinet doors for remote hands to service equipment while keeping an eye on them with remote in-rack camera feeds.  

The ‘new normal’ may present a unique set of challenges, but the objectives remain the same: improve uptime, utilisation and productivity. Now more than ever, data centre professionals need a complete remote data centre management toolkit with DCIM to bridge information across organisational domains including operations, facilities and IT, and have the information they need to manage all physical, virtual and logical data centre assets; quickly plan and provision new equipment; accurately make changes as needed; improve data centre design; increase operational efficiency and confidently plan capacity for future growth while increasing utilisation of existing assets.  

Click below to share this article

Browse our latest issue

Intelligent CIO Europe

View Magazine Archive