October 1, 2012
Journal Article

Implementing the Data Center Energy Productivity Metric

Abstract

As data centers proliferate in both size and number, their energy efficiency is becoming increasingly important. We discuss the properties of a number of the proposed metrics of energy efficiency and productivity. In particular, we focus on the Data Center Energy Productivity (DCeP) metric, which is the ratio of useful work produced by the data center to the energy consumed performing that work. We describe our approach for using DCeP as the principal outcome of a designed experiment using a highly instrumented, high performance computing data center. We found that DCeP was successful in clearly distinguishing between different operational states in the data center, thereby validating its utility as a metric for identifying configurations of hardware and software that would improve (or even maximize) energy productivity. We also discuss some of the challenges and benefits associated with implementing the DCeP metric, and we examine the efficacy of the metric in making comparisons within a data center and among data centers.

Revised: December 19, 2012 | Published: October 1, 2012

Citation

Sego L.H., A. Marquez, A. Rawson, A. Rawson, T. Cader, K.M. Fox, and W.I. Gustafson, et al. 2012. Implementing the Data Center Energy Productivity Metric. ACM Journal on Emerging Technologies in Computing Systems 8, no. 4:Article No. 30. PNNL-SA-80653. doi:10.1145/2367736.2367741