More servers, more racks, more UPSes, more users -- the reasons for expanding a datacenter are the same everywhere. Today's datacenter projects, however, have the additional component of modernization. Rebuilding takes place for tighter integration, greener power usage, greater redundancy, and especially more control. Datacenter administrators would control individual dust motes in their racks if they could.
Obviously, there's lots of how-to meat in this space, and we used to discuss it endlessly at InfoWorld's annual edit retreats. But actually working this idea into a hands-on lab story was simply too impractical … until Brian called Oliver one fateful day late in 2006. [Editor's note: That's right, 2006. A significant datacenter update and migration is not an overnight process -- especially when most of a continent and half an ocean separate datacenter and key vendors.]
[ Get the scoop on how we solved our datacenter needs straight from InfoWorld Test Center contributor Brian Chee via our video shorts and related story. ]
It turned out that the University of Hawaii was putting Brian on a project to turn a weathered old server-and-storage room into the SOEST (School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology) College's brand-new datacenter in the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics (HIG). Having the parasitic instinct common to magazine editors, Oliver latched InfoWorld onto the HIG project as deeply and intractably as a tick burrowing into a Labrador's hide.
The goal was simple: Follow the construction of the new HIG datacenter, turning that experience into the golden copy you'll read at the links below. We had a rare opportunity to see a datacenter project from the inside out, and the chance to work with datacenter vendors far and wide to pimp out HIG 319 with some of the glitziest and most functional gear known to datacenter-building man.
To make this project a reality would obviously require Oliver to fly to Honolulu in person for final construction and to do a lot of writing, cable pulling, knee scraping, and recuperating. Especially recuperating.
A datacenter project presents many opportunities to goof up, and we certainly made our share of mistakes. Many of the gotchas were mundane details we thought we had nailed down. Others were last-minute surprises that shouldn't have been. We did get our little project completed, but not on time and certainly not under budget.
Brian Chee is a senior contributing editor at InfoWorld. Curtis Franklin Jr. is senior analyst of the InfoWorld Test Center.
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