Posts Tagged ‘data’

Data Centre Uninterruptible Power Supplies

Today’s modern data centres face an uphill struggle. Before even considering power protection, many are facing difficulties even securing enough supply for their sprawling facilities. Research organisation Gartner predicted that by this year (2008) 50% of currently established data centres would have insufficient power and cooling capacity to meet demands. Quocirca found that 43% of data centres are aware of an approaching power constraint with 14% (19% in the USA) having already reached their limit.

 

This is due, in part, to server sprawl as well as a lack of consolidation between procurement, application management and energy use. But even with a complete change around in management data centres still need to elevate power generation and protection further up the boardroom agenda as their businesses, and those of their customers, rely so heavily on power continuity.

 

Data centre power protection must focus on availability, redundancy, resilience and serviceability with uninterruptible power supplies at the centre and as the bridge between mains power and standby power (whether a diesel generator, fuel cell or other source).

 

The most important first step towards uninterrupted power is to categorise loads into critical, essential and non-essential and then size those that warrant UPS protection in terms of their energy use. Critical loads (IT infrastructure, servers, networks, routers and so forth) are those that the business simply cannot function without. They will require UPS protection and redundancy and may even warrant extended runtime. Essential loads (heating and emergency lighting, for example) are those that do not necessarily directly affect business continuity but which may be required for health & safety reasons. They may need UPS protection to ensure their continuity until generator start-up but may not require redundancy. Non-essential loads (printers, canteen facilities) can be temporarily lost in a power failure and do not require any form of UPS protection.

 

Sizing uninterruptible power supplies can be tricky. If it is significantly oversized it will run inefficiently and cost more to install. Conversely, ‘undersizing’ will introduce the risk of system overloads. Whilst an on-line uninterruptible power supply has a built-in automatic bypass for emergencies, running close to design limits with regular overloads is bad practice.

 

UPS Sizing: understanding the importance of ‘real power’ is crucial for power protection sizing. Kilowatts (kW) are a measure of the real power drawn by the load whereas kilovolt-amps (kVA) are a measure of apparent power. The difference between the two is the power factor (pf) and its size presents challenges when specifying UPS.

 

The greatest efficiency comes from operating at a power factor of 1.0 or ‘unity’. An uninterruptible power supply, with as high an output power factor as possible, should be specified. A power factor of 0.9 is the standard set by reputable UPS manufacturers like Riello UPS.

 

Power protection systems should consist of units offering an input power factor of not less than 99%, enabling users to cut energy wastage. Today’s UPS should offer a small footprint so as not to take up too much valuable revenue-earning rack space.

 

An online or double conversion UPS is recommended for the protection of critical telecom or data centre loads. The inverter (which is powered when mains supply is present from a rectified mains supply) continuously powers the load from the UPS battery when mains power fails. The transfer from mains to battery is seamless with no break in supply, which is critical for this type of installation.

 

Various UPS configurations are available including single, parallel and series-redundant with each resulting in a different level of resilience, MTBF (meantime-between-failure) and availability.

 

Resilience is built into the UPS in the form of an automatic static transfer switch. A sensor monitors the output waveform of the inverter. Should the inverter fail due to short-circuit, overload or fault condition, the static switch transfers the load to mains without a break.

 

Planning for the Future: data centre loads are not static and will be under constant change and adaptation throughout the life of the facility. A graduated ‘growth model’ needs to be conceptualized at the outset to allow for future expansion of power protection equipment.

 

UPS Monitoring and Maintenance: the advent of Html capability in the software arena has enabled modern UPS manufacturers to integrate sophisticated onsite and remote monitoring capability within their hardware. In fact, modern systems enable remote 24/7 monitoring (either by the client or at the manufacturer’s facility) of all critical UPS, generator, air-conditioning and fire suppression equipment.

 

Nowadays, modern UPS systems, attached to mission critical equipment, have an internal or external maintenance bypass, which allows servicing to be carried out without having to shut down the whole network and lose vital productivity. Proper maintenance, carried out in a timely and effective manner, can prolong the life of the UPS, increase its effectiveness and achieve a better return on investment.

 

Power protection is vital for today’s data centres and UPS providers like Riello are specifically designing products to suit the needs and constraints of this type of installation. For more information about designing, installing and operating power protection systems read The Power Protection Guide.

Robin Koffler is the General Manager for Riello UPS Ltd the UK subsidiary of Riello UPS (RPS S.p.A) a leading European manufacturer of Uninterruptible Power Supplies and a co-author with Jason Yates of The Power Protection Guide (ISBN 978-0-9554428-0-3)- available from Amazon.com

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Compact Flash Memory and Data Recovery

Both NOR and NAND Flash memory were invented by Dr. Fujio Masuoka from Toshiba in 1984.The name ‘Flash’ was suggested because the erasure process of the memory contents resembles a flash of a camera, and it’s name was coined to express how much faster it could be erased “in a flash”. Dr. Masuoka presented the invention at the International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) held in San Jose, California in 1984 and Intel recognizes the potentiality of the invention and introduced the first commercial NOR type flash chip in 1988, with long erase and write times.

Flash memory is a form of non-volatile memory that can be electrically erased and rewrite, which means that it does not need power to maintain the data stored in the chip. In addition, flash memory offers fast read access times and better shock resistance than hard disks. These characteristics explain the popularity of flash memory for applications such as storage on battery-powered devices.

Flash memory is advance from of EEPROM (Electrically-Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory) that allows multiple memory locations to be erased or written in one programming operation. Unlike an EPROM (Electrically Programmable Read-Only Memory) an EEPROM can be programmed and erased multiple times electrically. Normal EEPROM only allows one location at a time to be erased or written, meaning that flash can operate at higher effective speeds when the systems using; it reads and writes to different locations at the same time.

Referring to the type of logic gate used in each storage cell, Flash memory is built in two varieties and named as, NOR flash and NAND flash. Flash memory stores one bit of information in an array of transistors, called “cells”, however recent flash memory devices referred as multi-level cell devices, can store more than 1 bit per cell depending on amount of electrons placed on the Floating Gate of a cell. NOR flash cell looks similar to semiconductor device like transistors, but it has two gates.

First one is the control gate (CG) and the second one is a floating gate (FG) that is shield or insulated all around by an oxide layer. Because the FG is secluded by its shield oxide layer, electrons placed on it get trapped and data is stored within. On the other hand NAND Flash uses tunnel injection for writing and tunnel release for erasing.

NOR flash that was developed by Intel in 1988 with unique feature of long erase and write times and its endurance of erase cycles ranges from 10,000 to 100,000 makes it suitable for storage of program code that needs to be infrequently updated, like in digital camera and PDAs. Though, later cards demand moved towards the cheaper NAND flash; NOR-based flash is hitherto the source of all the removable media.

Followed in 1989 Samsung and Toshiba form NAND flash with higher density, lower cost per bit then NOR Flash with faster erase and write times, but it only allows sequence data access, not random like NOR Flash, which makes NAND Flash suitable for mass storage device such as memory cards. SmartMedia was first NAND-based removable media and numerous others are behind like MMC, Secure Digital, xD-Picture Cards and Memory Stick. Flash memory is frequently used to hold control code such as the basic input/output system (BIOS) in a computer. When BIOS needs to be changed (rewritten), the flash memory can be written to in block rather than byte sizes, making it simple to update.

On the other hand, flash memory is not practical to random access memory (RAM) as RAM needs to be addressable at the byte (not the block) level. Thus, it is used more as a hard drive than as a RAM. Because of this particular uniqueness, it is utilized with specifically-designed file systems which extend writes over the media and deal with the long erase times of NOR flash blocks. JFFS was the first file systems, outdated by JFFS2. Then YAFFS was released in 2003, dealing specifically with NAND flash, and JFFS2 was updated to support NAND flash too. Still, in practice most follows old FAT file system for compatibility purposes.

Although it can be read or write a byte at a time in a random access fashion, limitation of flash memory is, it must be erased a “block” at a time. Starting with a freshly erased block, any byte within that block can be programmed. However, once a byte has been programmed, it cannot be changed again until the entire block is erased. In other words, flash memory (specifically NOR flash) offers random-access read and programming operations, but cannot offer random-access rewrite or erase operations.

This effect is partially offset by some chip firmware or file system drivers by counting the writes and dynamically remapping the blocks in order to spread the write operations between the sectors, or by write verification and remapping to spare sectors in case of write failure.

Due to wear and tear on the insulating oxide layer around the charge storage mechanism, all types of flash memory erode after a certain number of erase functions ranging from 100,000 to 1,000,000, but it can be read an unlimited number of times. Flash Card is easily rewritable memory and overwrites without warning with a high probability of data being overwritten and hence lost.

In spite of all these clear advantages, worse may occur due to system failure, battery failure, accidental erasure, re-format, power surges, faulty electronics and corruption caused by hardware breakdown or software malfunctions; as a result your data could be lost and damaged.

Flash Memory Data Recovery is the process of restoring data from primary storage media when it cannot be accessed normally. Flash memory data recovery is a flash memory file recovery service that restores all corrupted and deleted photographs even if a memory card was re-formatted. This can be due to physical damage or logical damage to the storage device. Data even from damage flash memory can be recovered, and more than 90% of lost data can be restored.

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Pen Data Recovery Ddr

Pen Data Recovery DDR

Saturday, April 03, 2010;

Memory stick data retrieval application recovers lost pen drive folders, music, audio-video files, photo, digital images, snaps from USB drive storage media. Thumb drive data rescue software is working as powerful USB recovery tool to get back lost or deleted data from formatted thumb drive, USB drive, flash drive, compact drive, smart drive and pen drive. Pen drive file salvage program has advanced graphical user interface (GUI) which is user friendly and restores thumb drive files even files deleted from pen drive by using Shift + Delete key.

USB drive image recovery software restores formatted pictures, mp4 songs, important documents, movies folders. Kingston pen drive data rescue utility recovers various types of files, folders including compressed, encrypted documents, zip files from quickly formatted memory stick. Thumb drive data retrieval tool restores audio, image files in all major formats like bmp, mov, jpeg, tiff, mp3, mpeg, wav etc. USB drive music salvage application supports all major brands of memory stick including Kingston, Transcend, Nikon, Super Flash, Sony, Corsair, Samsung and many more.

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http://www.data-recovery-usb-drive.com/usb-drive/pen-drive-data-recovery.html

Pen Drive Data Recovery Software

Thumb drive file retrieval program restores lost data due to improper usage of drive, virus/worm attack, accidental corruption, hardware/software malfunction, power failure, system shutdown etc. Memory stick data rescue application is fully compatible with all Windows operating system including 98, ME, NE, 2000, server 2003, NT, XP, Vista and Windows 7. Pen drive data recovery software shows retrieved data in tree-structure or hierarchical structure. USB drive image salvage tool recovers valuable data when error message displayed like “Drive not formatted” while accessing removable media on your laptop or desktop PC.

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USB drive data rescue application recovers permanently deleted music songs, digital pictures, photos, images, MS word document. Pen drive image recovery software restores corrupted photograph, video clipping from formatted memory stick storage media.

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