Issue link: https://hub.radisys.com/i/866385
PAGE 2 www.radisys.com Verizon Deploys DCEngine for New PaaS Cluster in 14 Days | Radisys Case Study In September 2015, Verizon Labs wanted to rapidly build a Platform as a Service (PaaS) cluster. Radisys was ultimately selected due to Radisys' wealth of telecom platform expertise, flexibility and rapid innovation, along with 25+ years of experience providing telecom professional services. They were not looking to purchase just a few racks of equipment, instead they requested 20 racks – all to be delivered in three months' time. Since then there have been 155 racks deployed at 7 different sites, each deployed in just 14 days. Their network is now successfully carrying a revenue generating service. Verizon's so ware architecture and requirements Verizon runs a PAAS system in production and their so ware architecture is container-native architected around a Mesos cluster. The platform addresses multi-tenant development requirements, but all internal Verizon. They built an internal "platform" of services around DC/OS that includes logging services, monitoring, "external" networking and storage (both object and block). Some services are internally developed, some open source, while others are commercial. Major components include EMC ECS object storage, EMC ScaleIO block storage, and various/custom logging and monitoring packages. To learn more about the overall project, watch "How to Stand Up a 600 Node Bare Metal Mesos Cluster in Two Weeks" – a YouTube Video presented by Craig Neth, Distinguished Engineer – Architecture & Infrastructure from Verizon Labs. DCEngine delivers the platform requirements Verizon selected the Radisys DCEngine, a hyperscale storage and compute solution, that is employed by Radisys' Professional Services. Verizon selected Radisys not only for our high density solution, but also our integration and development expertise. Radisys collaborated with Verizon to rapidly engineer and deploy the solution. Radisys continues to work in an agile style of development with Verizon introducing new technologies, higher densities and even specialized cooling. Verizon's DCEngine initial rack configuration comprised of CoreOS, 4x Cumulus switches, 10x storage sleds, 10x compute sleds and 2x PSU. The 30 servers/rack consisted of: 50 CPU sockets, 960TB spinning storage (10x16x6TB), 55TB SSD, at least 300 cores, and 3.8TB+ DRAM. 1U ToR Switch 2U Storage Sled 2U Storage Sled 2U Storage Sled 2U Storage Sled 2U Storage Sled 1U ToR Switch 1U ToR Switch 1U ToR Switch 1U 12V AC/DC Power Shelf 1U 12V AC/DC Power Shelf 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled 2U Compute Sled DCEngine Example Rack Loading OCP Approved Top of Rack (ToR) Switch Optimized for high network transactions and compute Optimized for long term, Object store Per DCEngine Compute Sled - half width Per DCEngine Storage Sled - full width Component Component CPU RAM Boot/OS flash SSD Network IF CPU RAM Boot/OS flash SSD flash HDD Network IF Total Size Network IF 100 Gbps Up to 22 core 512GB 1024GB Up to 22 core Intel 4x E2600L v4 16x 16GB DIMM DDR4 1x 512GB SSD on M.2 2x 1TB SSD, SATA 16x 8TB HDD 3.5", SATA 2x 10Gbps, 2x 1Gbps Up to 512GB 512GB 2TB 128TB 22 Gbps 8TB 22Gbps Intel 4x E2600L v4 16x 16GB DIMM per server DDR4 2x 512GB SSD on M.2 4x 2TB SSD, SATA 2x 10Gbps per server ,1x 1Gbps 96x10G (SFP+), 8x40G (QSFP) Throughput Configuration Configuration Component Total Size Configuration Figure 1: DCEngine Rack Diagram Radisys CONFIDENTIAL – For Internal Use Only