Three years after rolling out the UCS, Cisco is coming back around with new management and networking capabilities, and new blade and rack servers.
Cisco Systems is significantly expanding the management,
networking and performance capabilities in its three-year-old Unified Computing
System, an all-in-one solution that officials say is quickly gaining traction
in the competitive converged data center market.
Through enhancements announced March 8, Cisco officials are
making it easier for businesses to manage both blade and rack servers within a
UCS domain, and later this year will expand the capabilities to enable
businesses to support larger-scale UCS deployments both within a data center
and between multiple data centers.
In addition, the vendor is rolling out three new servers
powered by
Intels new Xeon E5-2600 processors,
which offer up to eight cores and significant gains in both performance and
energy efficiency.
We are augmenting the whole portfolio, Brian Schwartz,
director of product management for Ciscos Data Center Group, told
eWEEK.
The third generation of the UCS fabric computing platform
comes almost exactly three years after Cisco introduced the solution, which
offers servers, networking, storage, virtualization and management in a single,
tightly integrated package. The offeringwhich includes not only Cisco-branded
servers but also technology from such partners as storage giant EMC and
virtualization vendor VMwarewas introduced just as the idea of such converged
solutions was taking hold due to the demand for high-performance infrastructure
offerings that are energy-efficient, automated and easy to deploy and manage.
It also put Cisco, which had built its business by selling
networking gear, into direct competition with companies like Hewlett-Packard,
which had been a strong partner. HP and other vendors also offer such tightly
integrated data center solutions.
However, Schwartz said that while Cisco is still working on
its first-generation products, the company is already is onto UCS 3.0.
The adoption rate for the solution has been strong. According
to Cisco, the revenue run rate for the UCS is now at $1.3 billion, and 11,000
UCS customers and 2,000 channel partners are now selling the offering. In
addition, according to fourth-quarter 2011 numbers from market research firm
IDC, Cisco is now No. 2 in blade server revenue in the United States, and No. 3
worldwide.
The enhancements Cisco has made to the UCS will only fuel
that adoption, Schwartz said. The enhanced integration with Ciscos Unified
Fabric technology will now enable UCS Manager to manage both blade and rack
servers within a single domain, which Schwartz said would mean greater flexibility
in resource use and reduced costs in server connectivity. It also would mean
that businesses can more easily add to the capacity of their data centers.
In the second half of the year, that capability will expand
beyond single UCS domains to cover multiple domains, enabling easier management
of thousands of servers both within a data center and between data centers.
Cisco also is adding to rack servers and one blade server to
the portfolio, all powered by Intels Xeon E5-2600, which was introduced March
6. The systems, which will be available later in March, will offer more cores,
memory capacity and internal storage, as well as improved communications. The
UCS B200 M3 blade offers 24 dual in-line memory module (DIMM) slots and up to
80G bps of bandwidth. In addition, the 1U C220 M3 rack server is aimed at such
workloads as Web 2.0 to distributed databases, while the 2U C240 M3 will handle
such storage-intensive workloads as big data and collaboration.
Ciscos new integrated networking and virtualization
offerings include the 2204XP, which offers 80G bps and 160G bps I/O capabilities
to each chassis and also offers port channeling for load balancing across all
ports. The UCS 6296UP Fabric Interconnect doubles the switching capacity from
960G bps to 1.92T bps and reduces latency by 40 percent. It also offers greater
energy efficiency, reducing the watts per port by 36 percent, according to
Cisco.
Schwartz also pointed to Ciscos VM-Flex hypervisor bypass
technology, which gives virtual machines direct access to hardware I/O devices, rather than having to deal with embedded software switches. It
removes the hurdles to virtualization adoption and improves performance by 15
percent and throughput by 10 percent, and lowers CPU utilization by 30 percent,
he said.
Schwartz said the enhancements add to the UCS capabilities
in offering businesses a unified solution for their data centers.
The real value comes in that theyre all working together,
he said of the various components that make up the UCS.