Jeff the OCP community have created a Circular Economy hardware market. Watch the presentation by Ali Fenn from the 2019 Amsterdam Regional OCP Summit in the following www.opencompute.org/events/past-summits
@@jonlaban4272 not posible, this servers uses exclusive components with amazing hdd, processors and ssd's with capacity you can't imagine and i can't tell you either or im getting fired. So a hacker can make one of these in a whole messy room, and it's not even close because of the crap components out there in the market.
@@wiziek developing IA servers for the new meta Facebook era rn, new models running fast af in mass production, maybe you will never know nothing about this but you will see in the coming years people just hanging around in VR universes. Again, you can't just make this kind of equipment with components you can buy from amazon.
I'm surprised to see how they touch everything, asking myself, if they used antistatic floors, antistatic shoes and ionising air blowers, to avoid ESD?
was thinking the same... Almost all concepts in this video already exists for a long time. Although mostly proprietary and probably much more expensive.
OCP vanilty free open source servers use up to 50% less energy than traditional proprietary enterprise servers. See the energy study by SK Telecom in the Open Compute RUclips channel
Image compression, video compression and split renders, livestream encoding, AI for reccomendation system, auto mod, etc... Why do you think big companies dont need GPU?
This thing is like the hulk of servers. Speaking of which, the lime green toolless pulls remind me if the HP removal tabs. Curious to know how much this set up costs?
They switched from 12V to 48V. "Generally, above 15kW per rack, 12 volt systems become too inefficient to manage", source: www.opencompute.org/files/OCP18-Workshop-Huawei-v2-final.pdf
This for sure was supposed to be black shirt interviewing blue shirt as if he's Facebook but black shirt kinda took over the entire thing and just asked blue shirt to confirm what he said lmao
Some actually do have a kind of water cooling, where there are radiators in the racks so they can use standard hardware. The air gets pulled through cool radiators and comes out through "absorber" radiators this water then gets cooled centrally. The air which comes out of the back, so after the absorber radiator, is like 20c it's pretty cool (edit: pun inteded ;) )
Some do / did. Most switch mode power supplies are just as happy with DC as AC. However, distributing 350VDC through a facility is quite dangerous. (AC you can actually let go of.)
@@jfbeam I was thinking more like a common 12 volt bus so there wouldn't be any conversion losses, but now that I think about it more, the bus bars would have to be enormous to handle that sort of current, and a fault could be seriously nasty.
@@TobiaslieseNo one can argue how critically important computer technology is for all our lives. It has become a basic utility need no less than water and heat for our homes. But water and heat services do not exploit our personal identity like computer companies. Their deceptive manipulation and exploitation of that basic human need is rewarded by greed.
@@rogernevez5187 graphic. These servers are dedicated to store an extremely large ammount of graphic data. The "desk" alike units are called lightning, they have 15 modules with 2 ssd's each one. the ones with the Gpu's are honeybadgers. These 2 handle the process of data and store all that data in the bigger one (bryce canyon).
@@andreagarau2918 No one can argue how critically important computer technology is for all our lives. It has become a basic utility need no less than water and heat for our homes. But water and heat services do not exploit our personal identity like computer companies. Their deceptive manipulation and exploitation of that basic human need is rewarded by greed.
What power options does the DC have? If it has DC you'd probably want to look into using that instead of converting it (twice) and losing power in the conversions but if it doesn't have DC available usually you'd want to just go for AC... Either way, you shouldn't base such a decision off of RUclips comments, ask the supplier who you're ordering from what they think, if they do not have a proper answer move on to a supplier that does.
How do you like it at FB, I work at a google data center as a contractor and am looking to try to get a full time job, which is not the direction google is moving towards
OCP requires a different data center design, what is the adoption of these to date? Should we be building space for them at EcoDataCenter, our 'climate positive' data center in Sweden?
do domu nám vnikli zloději sousedi a ukradli nám naše data z karet, i naše fotky, data a vnikli nám do naší elektroniky, zloději, hekři a podvodníci, Břeclavsko, czech republic
Thanks, this is really interesting concept. I think I'll stay with traditional separate units for a long time. They more convenient to swap as customers are coming and going. For internal company use it's brilliant.
I am curious if managment failed to realize the price over time or if it was a heavy investment done prior and still having to run support on that dedicated hardware system and still being screwed by the vendor.
Indeed, these units are called, as they said "JBOD" (Just a Bunch Of Disks) That's how we call them at the test area, they're just hard drive disks with an insane capacity controled by a "minicomputer" called monolake or twinlake.
it annoying standards unless you can afford nonstandard size equipment ( 21 inches) like google or facebook and why 12 volts instead of 48 volts. this standard will never really popular unless your large and have plenty of money
The fan isn't in the chassis, so you don't even need to open it up. Blade chassis usually do this too, so not totally new, but all of this looks to be essentially blade type hardware made bigger.
using dc from dc bars is not something new, its been a thing in dc's for years, so is the blades and all the hot swap stuff. cool but nothing new here. also having batteries inside the racks, is slowly been abandoned, its a fire hazzard and there is no need if you have the dc bars.
10:52 who ever thought that was a good idea is stupid!! No need for that to be so beefy.... More so on a project meant to be as efficient as possible....
That black guy's hand... gosh... can you NOT KEEP TOUCHING THINGS... any... any of the server comonent? the blue-shirt guy looks pretty terrified. Those passive "If we take one of these out... WHICH APPARENTLY WE'RE NOT QUALIFIED TO DO" on 10:28... 7:11 wtf are you doing?
Uhm, so this is actually fake. Facebook has like 2 servers running Facebook and their other apps but the also have over 1000 petabyte of storage to store your data
Not as bad as you might think - obviously with the amount of disk, GPU, and CPU thats in the rack the dollar amount is high, but it's on par with consumer grade stuff because the designs are open so anyone can build them
When one looks holistically at financial costs then the savings are huge. e.g. an OCP optimised data centre facility has a CAPX thats 50% lower than a traditional Tier III Enterprice Data Centre. Cost if the biggest driver for adoption of OCP vanity free open source gear
@@jonlaban4272 Alot of that is simply in avoiding "unneeded expenses" You didn't buy a single extra hard disk, you didn't buy a single extra graphics cards,
This guy in blue can’t stop making love to the camera. 😂
and the Noah face is moving ROFL
He's cute!
😂
😂😂😂
hahhah
I have to ask. Is the material recycled and flame-retardant?
Same. I've been really curious but can't seem to find information about it anywhere.
Jeff the OCP community have created a Circular Economy hardware market.
Watch the presentation by Ali Fenn from the 2019 Amsterdam Regional OCP Summit in the following
www.opencompute.org/events/past-summits
😂😂😂
That's the first I'm hearing about it...
It mean u can melt the iron of all rack to get iron.
That’s quite a package. And the stuff in the rack is nice too.
HAHA I immediately searched the comments knowing I wouldn't be the only one! :D
nerdy and hot! YES PLEASE
A guy in black: It looks like 2 + 2 is 4
A guy in blue: Yeah that is right 2 + 2 is 4.
Yeah true, this type of host just asks confirmation because he knows everything already. The networks guy does great in my opinion
That, but 10 times more verbose.
Really cool stuff. I'm studying for a Meta interview and this'll be a big help. Thanks!
This is such a great insight video that it deserves an A++ rating. Fantastic video.
Man alot of these pieces are so modular. Would be very easy to get alot of repairs done in a very short amount of time.
Excellent, thank you for showing us this hardware.
Very impressive and amazing how fast the Datacenter is transforming.
Open source hardware Hackers make better stuff faster
@@jonlaban4272 not posible, this servers uses exclusive components with amazing hdd, processors and ssd's with capacity you can't imagine and i can't tell you either or im getting fired.
So a hacker can make one of these in a whole messy room, and it's not even close because of the crap components out there in the market.
@@bigfloppa2912 haha try better while trolling
@@wiziek developing IA servers for the new meta Facebook era rn, new models running fast af in mass production, maybe you will never know nothing about this but you will see in the coming years people just hanging around in VR universes.
Again, you can't just make this kind of equipment with components you can buy from amazon.
Not really. Much of this sort of tech has been around for many years. But it is getting refined as newer silicon comes around.
all it started back in 2004 with a single core machine with 1GB ram and a 80GB disk !
And a ton of black budget funding
@@PalCan - My IBM 5100 (monument/décoration) is getting jealous.
I'm surprised to see how they touch everything, asking myself, if they used antistatic floors, antistatic shoes and ionising air blowers, to avoid ESD?
I am sold where can i get pricing on this for each unit ?
Contact steve.helvie@opencompute.org
What a realistic price for this? Lots of custom looking stuff. 100k? 1000k?
@@MusicBent ..speak with people that provide OCP solutions.
Menno is a good bloke that know the gear intimately.
menno@circleb.eu
I think musicbent is right your looking at around 100k+ that's not to mention the operational costs and upkeep
Christian Darrall whatever the true cost, it means Facebook sells at least that many ads to make X many of these racks worth the cost. Crazy.
this video is help us to know about rack and cluser ...in real time..
and how connnected nodes in the cluster also...
2:30 if a fan doesn't work, it automatically generates a ticket... this has been around since the 80-90.... really they tell us that's the future?
was thinking the same... Almost all concepts in this video already exists for a long time. Although mostly proprietary and probably much more expensive.
Yeah now everything is open source and well documented. That is huge.
Opensource computers... finally! And even more power efficient than branded computers. Oh yeah!!!
OCP vanilty free open source servers use up to 50% less energy than traditional proprietary enterprise servers.
See the energy study by SK Telecom in the Open Compute RUclips channel
11:10 *Something that you might not think in a traditional server is GPU, but that is something that FB needs.*
Why does FB needs GPUs ?????
Image compression, video compression and split renders, livestream encoding, AI for reccomendation system, auto mod, etc...
Why do you think big companies dont need GPU?
@@chez14 AFAIK, except for AI, all the other cases you've mentioned are done more efficiently by CPUs rather than by GPUs.
This thing is like the hulk of servers. Speaking of which, the lime green toolless pulls remind me if the HP removal tabs.
Curious to know how much this set up costs?
For them, relatively cheap. For consumers, millions.
Contact CircleB in Amsterdam or Vespertech in Manchester for gear and prices
Green Touch Points
12 V for a whole rack? How many Amps are this 1.000? This is not possible with normal wires?
They switched from 12V to 48V. "Generally, above 15kW per rack, 12 volt systems become too
inefficient to manage", source: www.opencompute.org/files/OCP18-Workshop-Huawei-v2-final.pdf
13:00 I sh1t a brick when he pulled out that 72 drive tray.
This for sure was supposed to be black shirt interviewing blue shirt as if he's Facebook but black shirt kinda took over the entire thing and just asked blue shirt to confirm what he said lmao
I'm surprised data centers don't have huge common DC buses, and maybe even central water cooling.
Some actually do have a kind of water cooling, where there are radiators in the racks so they can use standard hardware. The air gets pulled through cool radiators and comes out through "absorber" radiators this water then gets cooled centrally. The air which comes out of the back, so after the absorber radiator, is like 20c it's pretty cool (edit: pun inteded ;) )
Some do / did. Most switch mode power supplies are just as happy with DC as AC. However, distributing 350VDC through a facility is quite dangerous. (AC you can actually let go of.)
@@jfbeam I was thinking more like a common 12 volt bus so there wouldn't be any conversion losses, but now that I think about it more, the bus bars would have to be enormous to handle that sort of current, and a fault could be seriously nasty.
That 4 computing unit is AWESOME!!!!!!!
What's inside a Facebook Datacenter Open Compute Rack?
All your information... that is being sold to the highest bidder.
Well it's your fault you gave it to them
@@TobiaslieseNo one can argue how critically important computer technology is for all our lives. It has become a basic utility need no less than water and heat for our homes. But water and heat services do not exploit our personal identity like computer companies. Their deceptive manipulation and exploitation of that basic human need is rewarded by greed.
10:15 those two guys in the background are busy on facebook
What ist the Name of the Servers, the stuff inside the Rack?
Bryce canyon and Honey Badger
And those "desks" as they called them are lightning units.
Fastest ones out there.
Hmm. Telecom has had 21" racks and always run off DC for... well ever
Maybe they're adapting that standard for data centers.
I thought it was 19" or 23" inch racks? 19" for data center 23" for telco and carriers. Is 21" something else?
is somebody chasing you??that was intense as F
It was lunch time and he waiting for his mom to bring him his lunch.
its not 12V its 48V telco voltages
OCP does 12V and 48V DC power distribution. 48V is looking like it will become more popular because of the higher rack power levels
@@jonlaban4272 Yes, but it still need much trafoing down, thinking most PC part is 12V
@@alfred_foxfired
12V or 48V DC available.
Check out the open source hardware at www.opencompute.org
11:18 *Where they put 8 GPUs.*
Facebook is mining bitcoins?
Graphic memory is faster for data process.
@@bigfloppa2912 What kind of data process ?
@@rogernevez5187 graphic. These servers are dedicated to store an extremely large ammount of graphic data.
The "desk" alike units are called lightning, they have 15 modules with 2 ssd's each one.
the ones with the Gpu's are honeybadgers.
These 2 handle the process of data and store all that data in the bigger one (bryce canyon).
GPUs are almost always faster if a workload can be split into huge numbers of parallel subtasks.
Have implemented the auto alerting system using the BMC and snmp. Have my own snmp server mailing out alerts. This I have done two years ago
It's fascinating to see how facebook spends the money made by abusing my personal data. Thanks for sharing ;)
And you give them your data by using their service.
@@andreagarau2918 No one can argue how critically important computer technology is for all our lives. It has become a basic utility need no less than water and heat for our homes. But water and heat services do not exploit our personal identity like computer companies. Their deceptive manipulation and exploitation of that basic human need is rewarded by greed.
148,839 video views on 3 January 2020
Video grew past 100,000 views in October 2019
Hello
Somebody advice me when should a server use DC or AC ?
If our DC has 1000 rack space. What power for server should I use ?
What power options does the DC have? If it has DC you'd probably want to look into using that instead of converting it (twice) and losing power in the conversions but if it doesn't have DC available usually you'd want to just go for AC...
Either way, you shouldn't base such a decision off of RUclips comments, ask the supplier who you're ordering from what they think, if they do not have a proper answer move on to a supplier that does.
interviewer: blah blah blah
interviewee: ahmm yah..
I know this servers... I'm one of the repair man in this fb server. 😊😊😊
How do you like it at FB, I work at a google data center as a contractor and am looking to try to get a full time job, which is not the direction google is moving towards
goouuug 1:34 XD
i'm getting into the server industry
join with us!
@@profitdotws9905 I will tell me how
What is the approximately cost of this rack with all device?
Twenty OCP cubby servers in a rack including all the powers systems are available for less than $20k
John Laban is there also a 19“ option available (for colo) for some of the bricks?
@@berndeckenfels yes 19inch available
Contact steve.helvie@opencompute.org
1 million
OCP requires a different data center design, what is the adoption of these to date? Should we be building space for them at EcoDataCenter, our 'climate positive' data center in Sweden?
do domu nám vnikli zloději sousedi a ukradli nám naše data z karet, i naše fotky, data a vnikli nám do naší elektroniky, zloději, hekři a podvodníci, Břeclavsko, czech republic
0:06 Turn on captions. I love putting datacenters in Iraq...
😂
Stuxnet round 2.... FIGHT !
Thanks, this is really interesting concept. I think I'll stay with traditional separate units for a long time. They more convenient to swap as customers are coming and going. For internal company use it's brilliant.
Hey...you have misunderstood
Changed the playback speed to 0.75X
Thanks
1.25x sounds like TV infomercial .... buy now
amazing hardware ...
I have one of these Open Compute racks in my DC. We made a hard pass on these. Mgt was un willing to change. $$$$
I am curious if managment failed to realize the price over time or if it was a heavy investment done prior and still having to run support on that dedicated hardware system and still being screwed by the vendor.
I prefer the Big Iron the hardware like IBM z14, the hardware porn that you can get from it, is super high.
Where the buyer so it's more seller than buyers
Take a drink everytime they say "actually" and you will be actually alcohol poisoned in no time at all. Geeks, you actually gotta love these guys!
Dear William: Please lose your shirt before making your next video. And bring a wide-angle lens!
Do we know any more information about "William"? is he in any other videos etc, I would be very excited to know more about him.
Give me one of the rack please
I really wished china took the layout so we could purchase components from there. Probably alot cheaper
Ha ha ha, I worked assembling those servers in a factory in Mexico
.. and this was 5y ago? =)
Does this rack work with 220 V or 110 V?
depends on the psu? most of them work with both
Very interesting from Myanmar. But, Amazing quiet. Thanks Mind Drip.
That rack must be $500k to $1 million?
Thanks
Noah? Oh my.
FACEBOOK IS A LITERAL WASTE OF FUCKING TIME AND ENERGY.NEED TO BE SHUT-DOWN ENTIRELY
10:35 lmao
Video grew past 100,000 views in October 2019
facebook is still running 1Gbps backbone??
Where did you get that from? Each of the sleds had QSFPs on them which can run at 40Gbp/s or 100Gbp/s depending on which type its using
Actually pretty simple tech.
Indeed, these units are called, as they said "JBOD" (Just a Bunch Of Disks)
That's how we call them at the test area, they're just hard drive disks with an insane capacity controled by a "minicomputer" called monolake or twinlake.
well now we know what to look for if that is what we desired to do who know only we knw baby
Hey that's my cousin
giant .php machine
what a joke amazon don't need storage. you know what is amazon web services. with their EFS and S3
He probably thinks Amazon just needs to store buy & sell listings 😂
it annoying standards unless you can afford nonstandard size equipment ( 21 inches) like google or facebook and why 12 volts instead of 48 volts. this standard will never really popular unless your large and have plenty of money
It's worth it for Facebook the single most expensive part of Facebooks bottom line that's unavoidable is electricity costs
@@Ayyy-lmao I can imagine that is true
Tons of equipment already runs on 12v or lower. Running 48v then stepping down again makes no sense
...if only Facebook uses it, then it's as standard and as popular as can be
Not sure who is from Facebook. The black shirt guy ( host) talks 10x more than Facebook staff (who was supposed to demonstrate).... 🤪
they are not facebook
i think these guys have never heard of hot swap: the idea you can swap a fan without switching on the device... where is the innovation here?
The fan isn't in the chassis, so you don't even need to open it up. Blade chassis usually do this too, so not totally new, but all of this looks to be essentially blade type hardware made bigger.
Nice.
using dc from dc bars is not something new, its been a thing in dc's for years, so is the blades and all the hot swap stuff. cool but nothing new here. also having batteries inside the racks, is slowly been abandoned, its a fire hazzard and there is no need if you have the dc bars.
We need more hardware that supports it tho. So it's good to see big companies create an open standard.
I just want to sell the thing
you do realise that every big company designs their own racks? they dont care about your open patent, all they care is profitability
who r you talking to
Yes, this units are in constant improvement, every time easier to assemble and repair, easy to test out and more efficient, with more capacity, etc.
gilding the lily
Puji syukur
Oh I see for get video's
That is super stupid, super difficult to maintain, even just to replace the power cable
FB awesome
Vanity free!
Work 24 hours
👍
10:52 who ever thought that was a good idea is stupid!! No need for that to be so beefy.... More so on a project meant to be as efficient as possible....
Andrew York looks like they needed the room to fit the heat sinks.
That black guy's hand... gosh... can you NOT KEEP TOUCHING THINGS... any... any of the server comonent? the blue-shirt guy looks pretty terrified.
Those passive "If we take one of these out... WHICH APPARENTLY WE'RE NOT QUALIFIED TO DO" on 10:28...
7:11 wtf are you doing?
مدري شدخل العراق بس اوكي..
The cameraman needs training
🤔
From Bangladesh
Uhm, so this is actually fake. Facebook has like 2 servers running Facebook and their other apps but the also have over 1000 petabyte of storage to store your data
Cool hardware but the guys in black has no idea what he’s talking about.
This is embedded IOT ware, very good and nice. Tech Things...
नही।कौई।औरत।नैट।स्पीड।है
Microsoft improving something?
*laughs in windows server*
cartoon
s
That thing looks like a POS lol.
screw facebook
He is so gorgeous he can make love to the camera 🤩 Totally yummy
yuser praivet data save server not gud
Try again, champ.
Watching all I'm thinking is $$$$$$$
Not as bad as you might think - obviously with the amount of disk, GPU, and CPU thats in the rack the dollar amount is high, but it's on par with consumer grade stuff because the designs are open so anyone can build them
When one looks holistically at financial costs then the savings are huge. e.g. an OCP optimised data centre facility has a CAPX thats 50% lower than a traditional Tier III Enterprice Data Centre.
Cost if the biggest driver for adoption of OCP vanity free open source gear
@@jonlaban4272 Alot of that is simply in avoiding "unneeded expenses" You didn't buy a single extra hard disk, you didn't buy a single extra graphics cards,
That is why facebook got so many fucking ads to recover their capital
Sunglasses. in a closed space...
So no one can see you're on cocaine.
open compute my ass... its ALL proprietary intel gear.
There is no open-source CPU yet. Once RISC-V is production-ready they'll probably make the switch. But that's going to take decades.
Ur indian man
Raymond Obedoza whats wrong with it