HomeDesign and ArchitectureFujitsu Laboratories Develops World's First IaaS Platform Technology for On-Demand Physical Servers

Fujitsu Laboratories Develops World’s First IaaS Platform Technology for On-Demand Physical Servers

Kawasaki, Japan, July 4, 2013 — Fujitsu Laboratories Limited today announced that it has developed a platform technology for Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) for on-demand physical servers that are configured to a user’s needs and can be provided in ten minutes. This technology is the first of its kind in the world.

Currently, physical IaaS, or physical server-hosting services, which provides physical servers installed in a datacenter, requires that the service operator manually install and configure servers at the customer’s request, leading to a lag time of several days between the time when a customer orders new servers and when the servers actually go online. The new technology makes use of another Fujitsu Laboratories innovation, called “Resource Pool Architecture”(1), which makes it possible to configure physical servers on-demand and instantly respond to customer orders.

This technology gives customers the ability to quickly bring high-performance physical servers online and instantly change hardware configurations, enabling greater flexibility in changing server numbers or the performance of individual servers to respond to changes in application loads. This also means that physical IaaS will have the benefit of the same sort of easy on-demand configurability that virtual IaaS have already offered. Through automation, the service provider can improve hardware resource utilization which will lead to reduced operating costs.

Fujitsu Laboratories is beginning internal trials of this technology in July 2013, and will conduct additional R&D with an eye toward further enhancing cloud services.

Background

Physical IaaS is a hosting service in which a service provider installs a physical server in a datacenter and leases it to a customer. In recent years, server-virtualization technologies have made it possible for a single physical server to run multiple virtual servers as virtual machines, and provide virtual IaaS on those virtual machines. This is a method that is currently widely used. Virtual IaaS lets customers use just the server resources they need, when they need them, but because those multiple virtual machines are sharing the resources of the same physical server, bringing additional virtual machines online doesn’t necessarily produce the expected performance improvements. This is because improvements are conditional on the usage status of the other virtual machines running on the same physical server. In particular, for data-processing applications that require stable, high-performance disk access, physical IaaS is necessary as it is able to provide stable performance to such applications.

Technological Issues

With physical IaaS, service operators need to install servers and configure software manually. This typically results in a lag of several days between the time when an order for servers comes in from a customer and when those servers actually go online. This lack of on-demand access has been a weak point for physical IaaS as compared with virtual IaaS.

About the New Technology

Fujitsu Laboratories developed “Resource Pool Architecture,” which pools the various individual hardware resources dispersed throughout a datacenter—including CPUs, memory, and disk storage—and brings them together as part of an architecture created within a physical server.

The Resource Pool Architecture uses a disk area network as a high-speed interconnect to connect the CPU and memory pool with the disk storage pool, making it possible to configure on-demand physical servers.

This new technology, which currently exists in a prototype implementation, is a platform for physical IaaS, and combines Resource Pool Architecture with FUJITSU Software ServerView Resource Orchestrator(2), cloud-platform management software. Some of its key features are as follows.

Rapid deployment of physical servers with Resource Pool Architecture

The IaaS functions in ServerView Resource Orchestrator can provide both physical servers and virtual machines based on system configurations defined by the customer. The existing ServerView Resource Orchestrator was integrated with functions for provisioning physical servers that are dynamically configured using Resource Pool Architecture.

This configures physical servers according to the customer’s order using Resource Pool Architecture, assigns fixed information (such as MAC addresses and BIOS settings), and provides them to the customer on-demand. Local disks and other optional configuration factors can be added to these servers on-demand as well.

Fujitsu Laboratories conducted a test of this technology, and was able to create a hardware resource pool of 48 servers and 512 hard disk drives and solid-state drives, configure physical IaaS systems from this pool, and provide physical servers to users, including operating-system installations, in as little as ten minutes.

Results

This new technology brings to physical IaaS the same easy on-demand access as virtual IaaS, reducing the time it takes to provide and configure physical servers from several days to about ten minutes. Customers quickly get access to high-performance physical servers and can instantly reconfigure them. They can also change the number of servers they have online and the performance of the servers themselves in response to application loads using physical IaaS in an on-demand time frame as is already available for virtual IaaS. Through automation, the service provider can improve hardware resource utilization which will lead to reduced operating costs.

Future Plans

Fujitsu Laboratories is beginning internal trials of the newly developed platform technology for physical IaaS in July. During this time it will study functionality and performance, and conduct R&D on ways to raise cloud services to a higher level.


Glossary and Notes

Resource Pool Architecture:
Pools the various individual hardware resources of a datacenter—including CPUs, memory, and disk storage—and brings them together as part of an architecture created within a physical server.
See also: “Fujitsu Develops Prototype of World’s First Server that Simultaneously Delivers High Performance and Flexibility” (September 26, 2011 press release)
Fujitsu Software ServerView Resource Orchestrator:
Dynamic resource-management software. Platform technology for private clouds that enables more efficient utilization, management, and operations of ICT resources.
See also: http://software.fujitsu.com/jp/ror/

About Fujitsu

Fujitsu is the leading Japanese information and communication technology (ICT) company offering a full range of technology products, solutions and services. Approximately 170,000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. We use our experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with our customers. Fujitsu Limited (TSE: 6702) reported consolidated revenues of 4.4 trillion yen (US$47 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2013. For more information, please see http://www.fujitsu.com.

About Fujitsu Laboratories

Founded in 1968 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu Limited, Fujitsu Laboratories Limited is one of the premier research centers in the world. With a global network of laboratories in Japan, China, the United States and Europe, the organization conducts a wide range of basic and applied research in the areas of Next-generation Services, Computer Servers, Networks, Electronic Devices and Advanced Materials. For more information, please see: http://jp.fujitsu.com/labs/en.

Technical Contacts

Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd.
ICT Systems Laboratories
System Platform Lab.
 E-mail: mangrove-pr@ml.labs.fujitsu.com

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