Data center |
A facility used to house mission critical computer systems and associated components. It generally includes environmental controls (air conditioning, fire suppression, etc.), redundant/backup power supplies and high security.
= Components =
Physical Components
Network Components
Applications *The main purpose of a data center is running the applications that handle the core business and operational data of the organization. Often these applications will be composed of multiple hosts, each running a single component. Common components of such applications are databases, file servers, application servers, and middleware.
= Descriptions =
A data center is a facility used for housing a large amount of electronic equipment, typically computers and Communications equipment. As the name implies, a data center is usually maintained by an organization for the purpose of handling the data necessary for its operations. A bank for example may have a data center, where all its customers account information is maintained and transactions involving this data are carried out. Practically every company that is mid-sized or larger has some kind of data center with the larger companies often having dozens of data centers. Most large cities have many purpose-built data center buildings in secure locations close to telecommunications services. Most colocation centers and Internet peering points are located in these kinds of facilities.
As Data is a crucial aspect of most organizational operations, organizations tend to be very protective of their data. A data center must therefore keep high standards for assuring the integrity and functionality of its hosted computer environment. This is depicted in its physical and logical layout.
During the dot com crash, millions of square meters of general-purpose data centers were built in the hope of filling them with servers for web hosting and application service providers. However this demand never came true.
= Physical Layout =
A data center can occupy one room of a building, one or more floors, or up to the whole building. Most of the equipment is often in the form of 1U servers (so-called pizza boxes ) racked up in 19 inch rack cabinets, which are usually placed in single rows forming corridors between them. This allows people access to the front and rear of each cabinet. Some equipment such as mainframe computers and computer storage devices are often as big as the racks themselves, and are placed alongside them.
The physical environment of the data center is usually under strict control:
= Network Infrastructure =
Communications in data centers today are most often based on computer network running the Internet protocol protocol (computing) suite. Data centers contain a set of Routers and Network switches that transport traffic between the servers and to the outside world. Redundancy is some times provided by getting the the network connetions from multiple vendors.
Some of the servers at the data center are used for running the basic servers, etc.
Network security elements are also usually deployed: firewall (networking), VPN gateways, Intrusion detection systems, etc. Also common are monitoring systems for the network and some of the applications.
= Applications =
The main purpose of a data center is running the applications that handle the core business and operational data of the organization. Such systems may be proprietary and developed internally by the organization, or bought from enterprise software vendors. Such common applications are Enterprise resource planning and Customer relationship management systems.
Often these applications will be composed of multiple hosts, each running a single component. Common components of such applications are Databases, file servers, application servers, and Middleware.
=External Links=
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