Specifications

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DESIGN GUIDE - Data Center LAN Connectivity Design Guide
requirements as Web-based applications use far more bandwidth than client-server applications. Virtualization is
often used in SOA environments to increase the reliability of services and help scale capacity. SOA also broadens
application access to internal and external users, raising security concerns. Additional security issues are raised as
application services expose capabilities to other applications which require a different level of security.
Software as a Service (SaaS)
Many common enterprise applications, such as customer-relationship management (CRM), human-resource
management (HRM) and supply-chain management (SCM), can now be delivered in the Software as a Service (SaaS)
model. Many of these Web-based services require, in certain instances, more than 10 times the bandwidth of their
LAN-based counterparts, seriously impacting performance, reliability, availability and bandwidth requirements.
An Increasingly Decentralized Workforce
The corporate data center LAN design needs to accommodate the delivery of HA, high-performance services to
the estimated 89 percent of employees who work outside of headquarters in remote or branch offices (Nemertes
Research 2006). As employees in remote or branch offices become increasingly dispersed across different time
zones, HA time requirements also increase. In addition, virtualized operations have expanded enterprise user
populations beyond employees to include contractors, consultants, business partners and customers who may be
anywhere in the world. As a result, enterprises need to provide their end users with ubiquitous, secure connectivity
while ensuring all corporate resources and applications are secure.
Green and Environmentally Friendly Data Centers
As old data center facilities are upgraded and new data centers are built, it is important to ensure that the
data center network infrastructure is designed for maximum energy and space efficiency as well as a minimal
environmental impact. Power, space and cooling requirements of all network components must be accounted for
and compared with different architectures and systems so that the environmental and cost impacts across the
entire data center as a whole can be ascertained—even down to the lighting. Many times, it might be more efficient
to implement high-end, highly scalable systems that can replace a large number of smaller components, thereby
delivering energy and space efficiency. Green initiatives that track resource usage, carbon emissions, efficient
utilization of resources such as power and cooling are to be considered when designing a data center.
The Proliferation of Unified Communications
The adoption of Unified Communications systems that combine voice, video and data services is on the rise.
According to Forrester Research (2006), 46 percent of all companies in North America have installed IP telephony
systems and 39 percent use VoIP to communicate with their remote employees. Such deployments have a direct
impact on the high-performance and HA requirements of a data center LAN. For example, not only must adequate
LAN and WAN bandwidth be provisioned, but quality of service (QoS) rules must identify, classify and prioritize traffic
to deliver effective VoIP communication services.
Increasing Focus on Security
FBI/CSI statistics show that 72 percent of all companies surveyed reported at least one security incident in 2006.
Not surprisingly, a 2006 Forrester Research survey found that 57 percent of all firms consider “upgrading security
environment” a top priority. As employees and non-employees are being granted an ever-widening range of network
access, robust security is necessary at all levels in the corporate and data center LANs. IT must protect applications,
data and infrastructure by applying appropriate access controls without inhibiting user efficiency or negatively
impacting application performance. IT must also mitigate risks from untrusted sources such as non-employees,
whose PCs and networks are not under IT control. The move to globalize and virtualize the enterprise puts new
demands on IT to secure remote access communications and protect site-to-site communications, including
connections between data centers and from data centers to backup sites. IT must also fortify the network perimeter
as increasing volumes of Web and other traffic types flow across it.