Jun 28 2023
Data Center

5 Things Agencies Must Know About Software-Defined Data Centers

From automation to security, software-defined data centers can benefit state and local governments.

A traditional three-tiered data center architecture with separate infrastructure for networking, processing and storage remains the norm. But for agencies seeking to modernize their legacy data centers, a transition to a software-defined data center can unlock a number of important benefits. Here are five things to know about SDDCs.

1. What Is a Software-Defined Data Center?

An SDDC is a data storage facility in which all infrastructure is virtualized and delivered as a service. Software-delivered services can save time and money over physical hardware and are easier to manage because they don’t require manual updates or frequent maintenance.

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2. How Can Automation Add Efficiency to the Data Center?

An SDDC approach promotes automation and orchestration in the data center. Infrastructure can be automatically monitored, adjusted, optimized and repaired. This can speed up IT processes and make tasks more reliable and predictable.

3. How Does an SDDC Add Scalability and Agility to Data Storage?

In a spine-leaf networking architecture, SDDC can increase the bandwidth available between the leaf and spine, allowing organizations to add more switching capability. This improves performance, redundancy and availability. Software-defined storage is also extremely scalable, allowing organizations to quickly pivot and expand capacity to support new workflows.

EXPLORE: Illinois is moving forward on its data center modernization initiative.

4. How Does an SDDC Improve Data Management and Visibility?

In an SDDC, management is abstracted and centralized, giving IT professionals greater visibility into their data centers. Rather than pushing out updates to individual devices, administrators can make changes centrally and implement them across their entire environment. A centralized dashboard makes it simple to monitor and track health and performance metrics.

5. What Is Multitenancy, and How Can it Improve Security?

Multitenancy is an architecture that provides separate networks for customers that share a data center. In a multitenant environment, individual tenants have no visibility into what other tenants are doing. For instance, a university system with multiple sites might make each site a separate tenant. Institutions can also use multitenancy to create separate testing and development networks that won’t interfere with their production networks.

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