Microsoft’s Cloud Server Hardware

Microsoft OCP Chassis

SAN JOSE, Calif. –
Google and Facebook may grab most of the data center headlines. But there’s been plenty of innovation going on in Redmond. As it joins the Open Compute Project, Microsoft can now show the world the custom server and storage designs that power its global armada of more than 1 million servers.

This isn’t the first glimpse of Microsoft’s infrastructure. Data Center Knowledge has brought its readers tours of Microsoft data centers in Chicago, Dublin and Quincy, Washington, as well as the first look at its cloud server designs back in 2011.

But with its commitment to OCP, Microsoft will be contributing hardware specifications, design collateral (CAD and Gerber files), and system management source code for its cloud server designs. These specifications apply to the server fleet being deployed for Microsoft’s largest global cloud services, including Windows Azure, Bing, and Office 365.

Microsoft’s cloud server architecture is based on a modular high-density chassis approach that enables efficient sharing of resources across multiple server nodes. A single 12U chassis can accommodate up to 24 server blades (either compute or storage), where two blades are populated in each 1U slot. Each compute blade features 10 Intel dual-core Xeon E5-2400 processors.

Up to 96 Servers Per Rack

A rack can hold three or four chassis depending on the rack height, which can be as tall as 52U (compared to an industry standard of 42U). That allows Microsoft to pack as many as 96 servers into a single rack.

Microsoft’s use of a blade chassis and half-width server and storage blades offers a different design approach than the current OCP offerings. Like Microsoft’s chassis, the OCP Open Rack provides centralized power supplies and fans, but it has a 21-inch wide equipment area, opposed to the standard 19-inch wide trays seen in most racks. Facebook and OCP use a three-wide server design, with processors and memory housed inside a 2U sled. Open Compute storage houses JBODs (Just a Bunch of Disks) on 1U sleds, while Microsoft packs its storage into its half-width blades.

The addition of Microsoft’s designs offers OCP hardware vendors the opportunity to design servers for Windows Azure clouds being run in enterprise data centers, as well as competing for contracts with Microsoft.

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Author: Rich Miller