Skip Links

Network World

  • Social Web 
  • Email 
  • Close

Data center spec set for debut

Lack of support from IBM, Microsoft, HP and others raises questions about impact.
By Denise Dubie , Network World , 05/17/2004
  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print

Proponents of a management specification scheduled to debut next week say it will lay the groundwork for more automated data centers, though lack of support from many key players has cast doubt on the effort.

The Data Center Markup Language (DCML) Framework Specification 1.0 is scheduled to launch next week in Las Vegas at CA World, an annual conference run by Computer Associates, a leading DCML supporter.

The XML-based specification will provide an inventory of data center elements, describe how those pieces interoperate and define the various policies that bind them together. The specification encompasses a range of data center components, from servers to network gear and from applications to infrastructure software.

Supporters include vendors such as BMC Software, Electronic Data Systems, Mercury Interactive and Opsware, and users such as First Data, Lehman Brothers and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Conspicuous by their absence, however, are some leading voices in the move to a new data center and some of the top data center product suppliers. Companies that have not thrown their weight behind the effort include Dell, HP, IBM, Microsoft and Sun. Some of the major companies, such as IBM, are involved in their own efforts; some note that they are waiting to see how numerous standards efforts shake out. HP says it is keeping an eye on DCML through its partnership with automated data center software maker Opsware.

"If [the DCML Organization] is trying to create a standard for better service management of what is in data centers and they are missing the companies that supply about 90% of the components in data centers, then they are in trouble," says Lance Travis, vice president at AMR Research.

Without DCML, proponents say the new data center will resemble the Tower of Babel, with systems and gear from multiple vendors unable to communicate or execute on automated actions. The lack of communication will prevent heterogeneous products from automatically integrating and dynamically provisioning and reallocating resources in the new data center, they say.

"We are getting a taste of what the future will look like today. Integrating management systems is manual, and there are too many sources of data to make sense of it," says Tim Howes, director of the DCML board and CTO at Opsware. "A typical mature data center could have a dozen management systems in place that don't talk to each other."

  • Share/Email
  • Comment
  • Print
Partner Content

SMART Steps Toward Consolidated Workload Automation

Consolidating job scheduling into a single, comprehensive workload automation solution is a critical first step to effective workload automation (WLA).

White paper on WLA here


A Comprehensive Approach to Practicing ITIL Change Management

Read a compelling whitepaper by EMA, Inc. to learn best practices for integrating workload automation.

Whitepaper here

2 Minutes to IT workload automation

BMC CONTROL-M can put money back into your IT budget and strip the complexity and risk from workload automation.

View video here

Gain a faster, cheaper way to manage workload

BMC CONTROL-M can help you migrate to a workload automation solution to meet your organization’s goals.

Listen here for more info

Comment
Login
Forgot your account info?
Add comment
Anonymous comments subject to approval. Register here for member benefits.
Have a NetworkWorld account? Log in here. Register now for a free account.

Videos

rssRss Feed