By Mary Catherine O'Connor
Oct. 17, 2006—Computer products and services firm
Hewlett-Packard (HP) has announced a new technology application developed by its R&D arm,
HP Labs in Palo Alto, Calif. This new app is designed to give companies better visibility of, and control over, their IT assets housed in HP server racks. As a proof-of-concept test bed for the system, Midwestern grocery chain
Meijer offered up HP blade-server racks deployed at its Grand Rapids, Mich., data center.
HP says it is still testing and evaluating the system and has not yet set a release date or pricing information. The company believes this is the first
RFID-based, real-time IP asset-tracking system able to pinpoint the location of an asset to its slot inside a server rack.
The system is based on an
ISO-standard passive
RFID tag attached to each server, router switch or other IT component installed in an HP server rack. The rack is outfitted with an RFID
interrogator that can sense the location of each tag to its exact slot location in the rack, says Cyril Brignone, project manager at HP Labs. Making these tags readable inside the metal rack—which essentially acts as a large
Faraday cage, blocking RF electromagnetic radiation—required an innovative approach. In the interest of protecting HP's intellectual property, Brignone declined to reveal any further tag,
reader or configuration specifics.
|
|
Cyril Brignone, project manager at HP Labs
|
The system's main benefits for Meijer and other users are two-fold. It can generate a constantly updated inventory of the tagged contents of each rack. This visibility also serves a security function, by accounting for (or alerting users to the absence of) servers containing sensitive business data. "We have 600 Windows servers here," says Tim Osbeck, manager of operations and technical support for Meijer, "and it's always good to know where they are."
Osbeck says he and his team were impressed with the RFID system's ease of implementation and use, and that Meijer would consider deploying it permanently if it becomes commercially available. Currently, Meijer's approach to inventorying its IT assets consists of an employee making a manual checklist that is then keyed into a spreadsheet. This manual approach is time-consuming and prone to error. Moreover, whenever anyone needs to remove an asset from a rack—such as for repair or reconfiguration—there is no way to update the asset's status automatically.
The HP system tracks the time and date each tagged asset is removed from the rack. This, combined with the inventory data, could make it easier for Meijer to comply with the credit-card industry's requirements for asset accountability. "We already have multiple layers of security," Osbeck explains, "but this would give more specific data about the security of racks. We could show that a rack has not been opened in the last 60 days." If the servers in those racks hold credit card data, that's valuable information, he says.