We have categorized our data center frequently asked questions into four areas for your convenience. Please choose from the below to quickly navigate to the desired seciton.
We have categorized our data center frequently asked questions into four areas for your convenience. Please choose from the below to quickly navigate to the desired seciton.
A data center is a building or portion of a building whose primary function is to house a computer room and its support areas.
TIA-942 is the TIA standard that covers data centers.
TIA-942 recommends a Star topology.
A topology in which telecommunications cables are distributed from a central point.
LC (Lucent Connector) is a type of fiber connector. Designed for high-density connections and supports SFP and SFP+ transceivers.
MPO (multifiber push-on) is a type of fiber connector for ribbon cables with four to 24 fibers designed for high-density connections.
The computer room space occupied by equipment racks or cabinets.
The main cross-connect (MC) is the centralized portion of the backbone cabling used to terminate and administer it mechanically. The MC provides connectivity between equipment rooms, entrance facilities, horizontal cross-connects, and intermediate cross-connects.
The space in a data center where the main cross-connect is located.
SAN is a high-speed network that uses the Fibre Channel transmission protocol to interconnect different kinds of data storage devices with associated data servers on behalf of a larger network of users.
The Telecommunications room (TR) is an enclosed space for housing telecommunications equipment, cable terminations, and cross-connects. The TR is the recognized cross-connect between the backbone and horizontal cabling.
Main distribution area is the space in a computer room where the main cross-connect is located.
Structured cabling is a cable infrastructure that yields an organized and standardized cable network that enables simple moves, adds, and changes (MAC) to a network.
A facility enabling the termination of cable elements and their interconnection or cross-connection.
Structured cabling hardware used to connect backbone or horizontal cables.
A multitenant data center (MTDC), also known as a colocation data center, is a facility where organizations can rent space to host their data. MTDCs provide the space and networking equipment to connect an organization to service providers at a minimal cost. Businesses can rent to meet varying needs – from a server rack to a complete purpose-built module. The scalability of usage provides the business benefits of a data center without the high price. (April, 2018. Fahey, L. and Robinson, T., Multitenant data centers are key to managing data without breaking the bank, Cabling Installation & Maintenance)
Location in a multitenant data center where telecommunications companies can physically connect to one another and exchange data.
An enclosure that subdivides multitenant data center space within the building using mesh walls, a door, security panels, etc.
Latency is the amount of time it takes to get a response.
Cloud computing is the practice of storing, managing, and processing regularly used computer data on multiple remote servers that can be accessed through the internet.
A private cloud is a dedicated cloud infrastructure, designed with the needs of a single business.
A public cloud is a multi-tenant/shared infrastructure, typically owned and managed by a third party.
A hybrid cloud is the combination of private cloud and public cloud services in a single hosting solution.
Network monitoring is the use of a system that constantly tracks a network's performance, usage, failing components, and outside threats and notifies the administrator in case of potential issues.
Network monitoring is essential to ensuring your network system’s success as it can automatically detect and respond to threats and performance issues.
Port tapping is a method of extracting data out of a live data link to enable network monitoring.
In the telecommunications industry, “TAP” is not an official acronym. However, some vendors have used the acronym “TAP” to refer to a “test/traffic access port.” The term “tapping” comes from the surveillance nature of connecting to and monitoring communications.
A coupler, also called a splitter, is a passive device that takes a single input of optical light and divides it into two or more outputs. (It can also take two or more inputs of light and combine them into a single output.)
A split ratio refers to the percentage of output power going to the live traffic receiver versus the output power going to the monitoring device. For example, if you have a 70/30 split ratio on your tap module, 70% of your power is going to the live receiver, while 30% is going to the monitoring device.
Supportable monitor link lengths are determined on a case-by-case basis for different protocol data rates due to the monitor link length limitation for unequal split taps and varying monitor equipment receiver sensitivity. For multimode fiber channel applications, the monitor link’s maximum distance should not exceed 20 meters for direct monitor equipment interconnections in all multimode applications.
Data is transmitted over a single pair of fiber with one fiber for transmit (tx) and one fiber for receive (Rx).
Uses a parallel optical interface to simultaneously transmit and receive data over multiple fibers, typically used in short-to-mid-reach applications.
It is a technology that multiplexes a number of optical signals onto a single fiber by using different wavelengths of laser light.
It is a proprietary network transmission protocol that uses 2x20G lanes at two different wavelengths.
It is a two-tier network consisting of spine switches and leaf switches.
It is a configuration that breaks 40/100G ports into 4x10 and 4x25G ports.
Top-of-rack (TOR) is a common architecture of switch-to-server connections. The switch is placed at the top of the rack for easier accessibility and clearer cable management.
The middle-of-row (MOR) switch is placed in the middle of the row to reduced cable lengths.
The end-of-row (EOR) switch is placed at the end of the row. Each server in individual racks is directly linked to an aggregation switch, eliminating the use of individual switches in each rack.
It is the networking of two or more data centers to achieve business or IT objectives. This interconnectivity enables the data centers to work together, share resources, and pass workloads between each other.