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The management, measurement, and monitoring of power generation, consumption, and optimization inside a data centre facility are all possible thanks to the comprehensive process known as “data centre power management.”
It is a step in the data centre infrastructure management (DCIM) procedure, which attempts to give administrators administrative control over a data centre’s electrical energy tools and operations.
The techniques for increasing power efficiency in the data centre, both at the hardware and software level, must be identified, implemented, and monitored. Power management software can be installed to measure, monitor, and control power consumption across the data centre, as well as retiring ageing equipment in favour of newer, power-efficient technology.
Data centre management is the collection of duties and operations carried out by a company to meet the ongoing needs of running a data centre. The management of hardware, software, services, and physical infrastructure is required to run data centres, which are becoming progressively more complicated facilities.
Data centres contain a wide variety of hardware, including computation and storage systems, which must be managed for continued operations. Data centre management activities frequently include cover software and virtual workloads that are executed on racks of server hardware. Another important duty falling under the purview of data centre management is overseeing the physical infrastructure of a data centre.
The Global data centre Power Management Devices market accounted for $XX Billion in 2021 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2022 to 2030.
Data centre resources and energy usage, including that of IT-related equipment (such as servers, storage, and network switches), are monitored, measured, managed, and/or controlled by data centre infrastructure management (DCIM) systems (such as power distribution units and computer room air conditioners).
They are utilised to optimise data centre power, cooling, and physical space since they are data-centre-specific (i.e., they are built for data centre use) as opposed to standard building management system technologies. No sensor-based solutions are required, but they do need to be built to support real-time power and temperature/ environmental monitoring.
Additionally, they must support resource management, which according to Gartner entails going beyond standard IT asset management to take into account the location and connections between assets.