Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
The sharp rise in energy usage in data centers, fueled by increased IT workload and high server density, and coupled with a concomitant increase in the cost and volatility of the energy supply, have triggered urgent calls to improve data center energy efficiency. In response, researchers have developed energy-aware IT systems that slow or shut down servers without sacrificing performance objectives. Several authors have shown that utility functions are a natural and advantageous framework for self-management of servers to joint power and performance objectives. We demonstrate that utility functions are a similarly powerful framework for flexibly managing entire data centers to joint power and temperature objectives. After showing how utility functions can capture a wide range of objectives and tradeoffs that an operator might wish to specify, we illustrate the resulting range in behavior and energy savings using experimental results from a real data center that is cooled by two computer room air-conditioning (CRAC) units equipped with variable-speed fan drives. © 2010 ACM.
Vittorio Castelli, Lawrence Bergman
IUI 2007
Michael Heck, Masayuki Suzuki, et al.
INTERSPEECH 2017
Fan Zhang, Junwei Cao, et al.
IEEE TETC
Jean McKendree, John M. Carroll
CHI 1986