HardwareHardware Today: Server Admins SMASH Servers

Hardware Today: Server Admins SMASH Servers

ServerWatch content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.




Server management can be a hassle, as most companies accumulate servers from multiple vendors and end up with a scenario along the lines of a dozen Dell boxes, 15 HP servers, 20 IBM systems, 10 white boxes, and half a dozen old Compaq’s lurking somewhere in the server room. As a result, organizations must jump from one management console another to run scripts, all the while retaining a library of such scripts for every vendor and sometimes for every type of server.

The downside of the heterogeneous server room is management complexity. SMASH is an IPMI-based standard that seeks to remedy this. The standard’s benefits include simplifying administration and reducing costs.

“The typical administrator spends his/her day dealing with one crisis after another; it’s alert, diagnose, treat, and on to the next,” says John Fruehe, enterprise marketing manager for Dell Product Group. “Through a common and consistent interface the administrator can become more productive and can spend more time adding value back to the organization instead of learning the tools.”

Some of the benefits of SMASH include reducing the management burden of server hardware, cutting the cost of server administration, improving the reach of system administrators to remotely located servers, and standardizing the management of heterogeneous environments.

Such an interface is now available in a standard known as Systems Management Architecture for Server Hardware, or SMASH. Some of the benefits of SMASH include reducing the management burden of server hardware, cutting the cost of server administration, improving the reach of system administrators to remotely located servers, and standardizing the management of heterogeneous environments.

“In a nutshell, SMASH makes it much easier to manage servers regardless of the vendor,” says Winston Bumpus, president of the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF), a Portland, Ore.-based not-for-profit made up of representatives from hardware and IT vendors, such as IBM, HP, Dell, Cisco, Microsoft, and Intel that developed the SMASH standard. “SMASH also makes it possible to talk to the machine regardless of the state of the OS.”

Recently published by DMTF, products with SMASH v1.0 will begin shipping in the early part of 2006. They include add-in management cards, appliances, and system software. Their intention is to make hardware management much easier and therefore lower the cost of operations. This is achieved by standardizing the interfaces each hardware vendor provides. The result is command-line consistency.

“SMASH should help server managers avoid being locked in to a particular vendor through their management software,” says Jeffrey Hewitt, a research director at Gartner. “By standardizing the interface and the command line, it should facilitate the integration of management tools with the servers themselves, which should offer an opportunity to lower costs.”

IPMI Foundation

SMASH builds on the foundation that the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) laid earlier. IPMI defines a common and secure interface — over the existing LAN connection — for monitoring server hardware. This includes such features as temperature, voltage, and fan details. IPMI also controls various components to enable capabilities, such as remotely powering on/off and cycling individual servers or individual blades. There is even a way to view the log of important server events to track things like chassis intrusions or what caused the system to hang/reset. Finally, IPMI enables the IT department to remotely manage and recover failed servers. This includes the capability to remotely view the BIOS, operating system console, and reboot process.

“IPMI should facilitate lights out management of a server,” says Hewitt.

According to Steve Rokov, director of marketing for the embedded software & solutions division of management software firm Avocent, the server vendor integrates IPMI. Some tools that use it are SOLProxy from Dell and SMBridge from IBM, as well as various third-party applications, such as PowerCockpit from Mountain View Data. IPMI comes free with servers and is now in more than 50 percent of all server shipments. The low- to mid-level priced rack-based servers from IBM and Dell (including their blade systems) all have IPMI.

“It’s not often you get things for free, so take advantage of what the server vendors are doing to make their lives easier today,” says Rokov.

Think of SMASH, then, as the scriptable interface to IPMI inside the box. It is a more recent development than IPMI, and it enables administrators to use a consistent command-line interface for server monitoring and management tasks in heterogeneous server environments. The DMTF released this command-line protocol (CLP) standard in June 2005 to address the lack of command-line consistency in management and monitoring information in heterogeneous server environments. It addresses the need for a universal command-line syntax, enabling systems from different vendors to be managed similarly.

“By using servers with IPMI and SMASH, IT [departments] can realize lower operational costs by offering a consistent command line that changes little over time, thus reducing training requirements and the number of mistakes made,” says Rokov.

Other savings, he says, result from needing fewer scripts to perform management tasks across multiple server vendors, having to buy fewer management tools, and predicting hardware failures (thus being able to schedule maintenance during non-peak hours).

>> SMASHing It Up!

Get the Free Newsletter!

Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

Latest Posts

Related Stories