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Features Memory: The Real Data Center Bottleneck
Memory virtualization solves the key barrier to increasing the efficiency of existing network resources
By: Clive Cook
Dec. 10, 2009 04:00 PM
CIOs and IT managers agree that memory is emerging as a critical resource constraint in the data center for both economic and operational reasons. Regardless of density, memory is not a shareable resource across the data center. In fact, new servers are often purchased to increase memory capacity, rather than to add compute power. While storage capacity and CPU performance have advanced geometrically over time, memory density and storage performance have not kept pace. Data center architects refresh servers every few years, over-provision memory and storage, and are forced to bear the costs of the associated space, power and management overhead. The result of this inefficiency has been high data center costs with marginal performance improvement. Memory: Where Are We? The major network vendor built their first-ever blade server with custom developed hardware to support a larger memory footprint (up to 384 GB) for one dual-processor blade. This is significantly larger than the 144 GB maximum that is typical in high-end systems. The dominant server vendor enables individual VMs to use more of the local system memory. Industry Challenges Latency, or the delay in delivering the initial piece of data, is critical to application performance in areas such as manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, energy, and capital markets. As an example, algorithmic traders can execute hundreds of thousands of trades per day. Twenty-five percent of securities trades are now algorithmic trades - trades initiated by computers in response to market conditions or trading in patterns and sequences that generate profits. These trades leverage trade execution speed to make money, and it's a race to performance. The fastest trading desks will profit most. Alongside the significant impact of peak performance is the need for certified messaging. Trading data streams must be certified - reliably stored for record keeping and rollback. Current solutions to the trading message problem are difficult to integrate, expensive, and cannot meet the performance requirements of the algorithmic trading desk. A leading vendor's message bus solution has transaction latencies in the millisecond range, and reaches maximum throughput at close to 5,000 transactions per second. This performance hampers algorithmic trading, and throughput is not enough to meet the peak trading volumes at the opening bell, closing bell, or during market-moving events. Memory Virtualization - Breaking the Memory Barrier Memory virtualization is the key to overcoming physical memory limitations, a common bottleneck in information technology performance. This technology allows servers in the data center to share a common, aggregated pool of memory that lives between the application and operating system. Memory virtualization is logically decoupled from local physical machines and made available to any connected computer as a global network resource. This technology dramatically changes the price and performance model of the data center by bringing the performance benefits of resource virtualization, while reducing infrastructure costs. In addition, it eliminates the need for changes to applications in order to take advantage of the pool. This creates a very large memory resource that is much faster than local or networked storage. Memory virtualization scales across commodity hardware, takes advantage of existing data center equipment, and is implemented without application changes to deliver unmatched transactional throughput. High-performance computing now exists in the enterprise data center on commodity equipment, reducing capital and operational costs. Memory Virtualization in Action - Large Working Data Set Applications For applications with large working data sets, larger than will fit in physical memory, such as those found in high-volume Internet, predictive analytics, HPC and oil and gas, memory virtualization brings faster results and improves end-user experiences. In capital markets, memory virtualization delivers the lowest trade execution latencies, includes certified messaging, and integrates simply as demanded in this competitive market. The associated performance gains relative to traditional storage are huge. NWChem is a computational chemistry application typically deployed in an HPC environment. In a 4 node cluster with a 4 GB / node running NWChem, memory virtualization cut the test run time from 17 minutes down to 6 minutes 15 seconds with no additional hardware, simply by creating an 8 GB cache with 2 GB contributed from each node. Alternatives Fall Short Larger data centers draw more power and require more IT staff and maintenance. For example, a 16-server data center with 32 GB RAM/server costs $190,000 in capital and operational expense over two years. Scaling out that data center to 32 servers would double the cost to $375,000 (see Figure 1). Scaling up the servers to 64GB RAM/server would raise the cost to $279,000 (data center costs based on the cost of scaling up a 16-node cluster from 32GB to 64GB per server, and scaling out a 16-node cluster to 32-nodes, two years operational expense). What does this investment buy you? You get more servers to work on the problem - but performance has not improved significantly because they aren't working together; each server is still working only with its own local memory. By trying to divide and conquer your data set, you've fragmented it. Like fragmented drives, fragmented data sets restrict the flow of data and force data to be replicated across the network. The overhead of drawing data into each server consumes resources that should be focused on one thing - application performance. By sharing memory, data centers require less memory per server because they have access to a much larger pool of virtualized memory. Memory virtualization also enables fewer servers to accomplish the same level of application performance, meaning less rack space, power consumption, and management staff (see Figure 2). Additional cache capacity can be added dynamically with no downtime, and application servers can easily connect to virtualized network memory to share and consume data at any time without re-provisioning. High Availability features eliminate data loss when servers or networks go down by keeping multiple copies of data in the cache and employing persistent writes to comply with certified messaging standards. In the storage area, SAN and NAS have decoupled storage from computing, but storage is not the place for the active working data set. Storage acceleration can only marginally improve application performance because it connects too far down the stack and is not application-aware (understands state). The millisecond latencies of storage requests are unacceptable bottlenecks for business and mission-critical applications. In some cases, data center architects have turned to data grids in the search for performance. Data grids impose a high management overhead and performance load and tend to replicate the working data set, rather than truly share it. These solutions are difficult to integrate, debug, and optimize, and remain tightly coupled to your application, reducing flexibility. Architects who have implemented these solutions complain of the "black box" software to which they have tied their applications' performance and disappointing acceleration results. Conclusion Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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