When Does Powering Down Servers Make Sense?
snydeq writes "Powering down servers to conserve energy is a controversial practice that, if undertaken wisely, could greatly benefit IT in its quest to rein in energy costs in the datacenter. Though power cycling's long-term effects on server hardware may be mythical, its effects on IT and business operations are certainly real and often detrimental. Yet, development, staging, batch processing, failover — several server environments seem like prime candidates for routine power cycling to reduce datacenter energy consumption. Under what conditions and in what environments does powering down servers seem to make the most economic and operational sense, and what tips do folks have to offer to those considering making use of the practice?"
There are a number of tools and products out there to assist this.
Consider a large (65k+ employees) company that has a several hundred server implementation that they use to process payroll every two weeks. They use a management tool to power them up on Friday, process payroll over the weekend, and shut them down on Monday. The power and cooling cost impact of these several hundred servers *not* running most of the month (6 or so days a month instead of 31) is huge.
Another (and also in use by the same company) strategy is to virtualize the OS instances, spin those up and down as necessary, and then use something like VMWare's VMotion to maximize usage of the physical boxes - and again use another tool to power down unneeded compute capacity.
Welcome to the virtual world...
Lots of prerequisites, but when it works, it's pretty freakin' sweet...
-- "Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?"