DocumentCode
1605860
Title
The need for speed and stability in data center power capping
Author
Bhattacharya, Arka A. ; Culler, David ; Kansal, Aman ; Govindan, Sriram ; Sankar, Sriram
Author_Institution
Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear
2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
10
Abstract
Data centers can lower costs significantly by pro-visioning expensive electrical equipment (such as UPS, diesel generators, and cooling capacity) for the actual peak power consumption rather than server nameplate power ratings. However, it is possible that this under-provisioned power level is exceeded due to software behaviors on rare occasions and could cause the entire data center infrastructure to breach the safety limits. A mechanism to cap servers to stay within the provisioned budget is needed, and processor frequency scaling based power capping methods are readily available for this purpose. We show that existing methods, when applied across a large number of servers, are not fast enough to operate correctly under rapid power dynamics observed in data centers. We also show that existing methods when applied to an open system (where demand is independent of service rate) can cause cascading failures in the software service hosted, causing the service performance to fall uncontrollably even when power capping is applied for only a small reduction in power consumption. We discuss the causes for both these short-comings and point out techniques that can yield a safe, fast, and stable power capping solution. Our techniques use admission control to limit power consumption and ensure stability, resulting in orders of magnitude improvement in performance. We also discuss why admission control cannot replace existing power capping methods but must be combined with them.
Keywords
computer centres; power aware computing; power consumption; data center power capping; electrical equipment; peak power consumption; rapid power dynamics; safety limits; server nameplate power ratings; software service; stability; under-provisioned power level; Batteries; Delay; Power demand; Power measurement; Servers; Software; Uninterruptible power systems; admission control; frequency scaling; power capping;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Green Computing Conference (IGCC), 2012 International
Conference_Location
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-2155-6
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4673-2153-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGCC.2012.6322253
Filename
6322253
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