Slashdot Mirror


Inside Amazon's Cloud Computing Infrastructure

1sockchuck writes: As Sunday's outage demonstrates, the Amazon Web Services cloud is critical to many of its more than 1 million customers. Data Center Frontier looks at Amazon's cloud infrastructure, and how it builds its data centers. The company's global network includes at least 30 data centers, each typically housing 50,000 to 80,000 servers. "We really like to keep the size to less than 100,000 servers per data center," said Amazon CTO Werner Vogels. Like Google and Facebook, Amazon also builds its own custom server, storage and networking hardware, working with Intel to produce processors that can run at higher clockrates than off-the-shelf gear.

6 of 76 comments (clear)

  1. What Does This Mean by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 4, Interesting

    working with Intel to produce processors that can run at higher clockrates than off-the-shelf gear.

    What does this mean? They have custom chips? Custom mods at the chip fab level? Or are they taking advantage of designed-in features that are locked out for normal chip users? Are they simply over-clocking? Or are there features that can be unlocked with money?

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:What Does This Mean by Spy+Handler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Probably means they buy in bulk, so they get to pick the more overclock-able chips.

      Say, Core i7 xxxx runs at 3.0ghz and i7 yyyy chip runs at 3.4ghz. They make a batch of i7s and test them at 3.4ghz. Some barely pass QC and are sold as retail i7 yyyy. Some fail at 3.4ghz so they're marked as i7 xxxx 3.0ghz. Some pass at 3.4ghz with flying colors, these are the ones overclockers want the most. Retail buyers like us don't get to pick which ones we get when we buy the i7 yyyy, but Amazon might.

    2. Re:What Does This Mean by bobbied · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They are building custom hardware and a lot of it so they get a bit of special treatment from Intel.

      You engineer the thermal paths and better control how you get rid of heat. You tweak the board layout for the best performance of the chipset and CPU and run closer tolerances on voltages and clock frequencies while keeping it small. Buying in bulk also lets you customize the chipset and CPU packaging to get you better performance/watt and higher density by eliminating all the "fluff" stuff you really don't want on the cloud machine. Who needs all those USB controllers, PCI-e busses, and sound cards you find in your average server chassis in a high density server farm that just take up space and suck power? Just give me a couple of NIC's, a SATA connection and a serial console and a way to reset an individual system and I have what I need to stand up an OS and grant somebody external access to it.

      --
      "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  2. Re:I has more better questions by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Funny

    Did they use AWS for translation on this paragraph? How do you have "a lot of scale"? One can scale up or down, but is this like a computer hokey pokey? Scale is a verb!

    Any verb can be nouned.

  3. Re:I has more better questions by lgw · · Score: 5, Funny

    Scale is a verb!

    As I weigh this fish scale on my scale, before cleaning the scale off my kettle, while listening to my neighbor play scales, I wonder about the scale of your intoxication: on a scale of one to potato, how high are you right now? Oh well, I'm off to work: I was hoping for better, but it pays scale.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  4. Re:What AWS outage demonstrates .. by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, it's their second major outage in the ~10 years of AWS. Far better than any in-house IT department I've ever seen.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.