Tuesday | 7 October, 2008
CIO
Plans by West Torrens Council to be disaster proof really take-off
Server leasing costs reduced by 80 per cent
Sandra Rossi (Computerworld) 15 April, 2008 13:52:09

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The city of West Torrens, which is home to Adelaide Airport, has implemented a server virtualisation and redundancy strategy to protect its data from unexpected disasters such as air crashes and floods. Under its previous disaster recovery plan, it would have taken up to three weeks after a major incident before the council was fully operational.

However, by deploying new servers it is a drag-and-drop exercise in which entire virtual machines can be backed up, and system restoration can happen in minutes rather than weeks. The council's manager of information services, Chris James, said the need to upgrade the council's disaster plan was driven home when fire devastated a neighbouring local government office. At the time, James said West Torrens was relying on uninterruptible power supply technology that allowed systems administrators to conduct a controlled shutdown sequence if power failed.

He said data was backed up nightly to disks and tapes, but resuming normal operations could have taken up to three weeks. "We began formulating a technological and policy-based disaster recovery plan to ensure we could remain operational in the face of unforeseen events," James said. "This was also an opportunity to update our information systems strategy, utilising current technology to optimise the IT server architecture." Recognising that a virtualised environment would help meet disaster recovery objectives, the council engaged Technical Architecture Solutions (TAS) to implement the server plan.

TAS formulated a two-stage plan that included virtualising a number of servers then replicating these to a second physical site to provide full disaster recovery capabilities. In all, 24 of the 26 physical servers were virtualised and consolidated on to four physical servers. Within a month, the council and TAS converted 15 physical servers into virtual machines, running on top of the VMware ESX Server hypervisor on four IBM X3650 servers, each with two dual-core 3GHz CPUs and 16GB of RAM.

PlateSpin PowerRecon was used during capacity planning, while VMware Converter and PlateSpin PowerConvert facilitated the virtualisation of council's application environment by converting existing servers into virtual server images. James said the quick wins proved the project was viable and led to the remaining servers being virtualised.

He said virtualising the data centre environment freed up 24 physical servers, some of which have been reused to construct the disaster recovery capability. "To ensure continuous availability, virtual machines can be mirrored daily between the primary and backup data centres over a dedicated fibre-optic connection," James explained.

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