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Data room Engineer Position at Cambridge, MA (Onsite) at Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Email: [email protected]
From:

Surender Saini,

Sunray Enterprise INC.

[email protected]

Reply to:   [email protected]

Subject: Data room Engineer

Location : Cambridge, MA DAY 1 Onsite

Duration: Long Term Contract

Note:
NEED A DATACENTER ROOM ENGINEER WITH STRONG CABLING EXPERIENCE

L3 Engineer Roles & Responsibilities

Daily Operations

Site data center/computer room operators must keep up with the requests, tasks, deliverables and projects through various forms of communication

Service Now (SNOW)

Operators must continually monitor the associated activities and stay up to date with the variety of tickets and requests

Change request/task

Request ticket

Incident ticket

Email, MS Teams, Phone

These requests must be documented, and no work is to be completed without a proper SNOW ticket, task or request

Site personnel will assist with daily & weekly data tape activities

Includes: onsite tape deliveries, shipments, recalling tapes, inserting & removing tapes for associated tape libraries/robots

Complete data restore activities

Update computer room devices/equipment in ServiceNow and DC Ops maintained spreadsheets

Cabinet elevation drawings

Cable connection database

Structured cabling port capacity

Racking Equipment

Responsible for the equipment cabinet assignments within the computer rooms based on requirements (power, space and connectivity)

Racking equipment requests are provided mainly though ServiceNow change tasks or through request tickets

Racking can also be part of testing equipment, pilot installations or specific projects

Safety must be taken into account when racking equipment

All racking should be completed by 2 people (minimum)

Racking should use the Server Lift, foot crack table lift or other available mechanical device for medium to heavy lifts

Rails and shelves should be in place first before sliding in the server, switch or other device

All servers or associated appliances must have cable management arms installed at the rear

Unracking Equipment

Responsible for the unracking of equipment located within the cabinets and/or racks

Unrack equipment requests are provided mainly though ServiceNow disposal change tasks or through request tickets

Unracking tasks can also be part of a data center or computer room closure project

Safety must be taken into account when unracking equipment

All unracking should be completed by 2 people (minimum)

Unracking should use the ServerLift, foot crack table lift or other available mechanical device for medium to heavy lifts

Rails, shelves and cable management arms must be removed as part of the unracking activities

Work with associated disposal groups to assist in the final disposal task when the equipment leaves the site on a truck/van (documentation)

Work with groups when hard drives, data tapes or other mediums require these items to be destroyed or grinding into pieces (documentation)

Patch Cabling

New Installations

The majority of the patch cable run specifics will be provided though ServiceNow change tasks or through cabling request tickets

These tickets must provide the details required to deliver/run the patch cables (copper/fiber) to the specific servers/devices and network/SAN switches or another device

Patch cable runs can also be part of testing equipment, pilot installations or specific projects

Additional connections

All additional connections required for existing devices/equipment will be provided though ServiceNow cabling request tickets

These tickets must provide the details required to deliver/run the patch cables (copper/fiber) from specific server/device ports to network/SAN switch ports or other device ports

Additional patch cable runs can also be part of testing equipment, pilot installations or specific projects

Patch cable cleanup / removals (power cord removal)

The majority of the patch cable cleanups and removals will come through ServiceNow disposal tickets

These tickets provide the details required to unplug and remove the patch cables (copper/fiber) at the server/device ports as well as the network/SAN switch ports or other device ports

The patch cables which were removed will be evaluated and placed back into inventory if the proper copper patch cable category (CAT6A) or fiber patch cable category (SM OS1/2 or MM OM4)

The remaining patch cables will be thrown away

Patch cables must be unplugged and removed before any device can be unracked

Power cords must also be removed as part of the cleanup and/or disposal activities

The power cords which were removed will be evaluated and placed back into inventory if they are the standard P-LOCK 2 color power cords

The remaining power cords will be thrown away

Power cords must be unplugged and removed before any device can be unracked

Capacity Planning

Structured Cabling

Continuous vigilance into the usage and availability of copper & fiber patch ports

New installations should be planned with plenty of time allowed

Time buffer required for design, present requirements (SOW) to the Low Voltage Contractor (LVC), receive quote, material ordered, installation, testing

Network switch ports

Continuous vigilance into the usage and availability of copper & fiber switch ports

New switch module or switch orders should be planned with plenty of time allowed (buffer)

These items must first be specified, then approved by the network architecture group/BT

Time buffer required for approval, items ordered (supply chain delays), planning the installation

Storage Area Network (SAN) switch ports

Continuous vigilance into the usage and availability of fiber switch ports

New switch module or switch orders should be planned with plenty of time allowed (buffer)

These items must first be specified, then approved by the storage architecture group

Time buffer required for approval, items ordered (supply chain delays), planning the installation

Cabinet Power usage

Continuous vigilance on the power usage (AMPs) per PDU and per cabinet (both PDUs)

Maintain 80% or less AMPs or kW solely based on the capacity of one PDU

A single PDU should be able to maintain the power for all the equipment in a cabinet

Troubleshooting

Site DC Ops personnel must have complete knowledge of:

The cabling distribution within the computer room (point-to-point or structured cabling)

The cabling distribution to/from the computer room

The switching equipment network & SAN switches

The physical connections on every piece of equipment (servers, storage, network, tape library/robot, etc)

Complete basic equipment initial configurations (ILO, IDRAC, console, etc)

Network switch port configurations (port speed, duplex, VLAN, trunking, Etherchannel, tagging, etc)

Used on BT network switch port configuration requests

Site must have onsite cable testing tools

Cleanliness

All areas within the computer room must be kept clean and free of clutter

All spaces (offices, storage rooms) outside the computer room must be kept clean, without clutter and organized

The computer room must have a once a year (minimum) scheduled professional cleaning

The computer room must be clear of paper, cardboard, plastic, garbage, debris or other loose items

Loose items cannot sit on top of any piece of equipment or in any cabinet

All these items must be stored in a storage cabinet (preferably locked) inside the computer room or adjacent room(s)

Bottled drinks including water, soda or other drinks are not allowed in the computer rooms

Safety

Working areas must be identified and outlined with safety cones

Unsafe areas must be sectioned off with CAUTION tape

Open toed shoes are not allowed inside computer room areas (includes visitors)

Safety glasses must be worn when removing raised floor tiles

Items & Materials Inventory

An inventory of all the items and materials used in computer room must be kept up to date

Includes: patch cables (copper & fiber), locking power cords (2 colors) and other items and material required to support the computer rooms daily activities (see APPENDIX for ordering template)

Each site must maintain cable testing tools on hand

Spare Parts Inventory

Site must maintain an up-to-date inventory on spare parts on hard

Includes: servers, hard drives, RAM, server cards, etc

Onsite Inventory - COD Servers & In-Inventory Servers

Support the sites COD (Capacity on Demand) inventory

These COD servers will be racked in the cabinets, powered ON, cabled, switch/SAN ports configured, with or without an OS installed

Support and maintain a certain amount of In-Inventory servers

These servers are powered OFF and racked in a cabinet or stacked/stored in the computer room or storage area

The number of servers along with the server Make & Model are specified by IT Hosting

These servers will be used for replacements, new installations and parts

Besides servers, appliances or other devices/equipment may be placed into inventory

Asset Reconciliation

The computer room physical inventory must align 100% against the CI records in Service Now, and vise versa

Two comparisons must be completed

First physical inventory against the CI records

Second CI records against the physical inventory

All the discrepancies with the physical inventory records or CI records must be identified, investigated and reconciled, remediated and corrected

Ultimately, the physical inventory must match the Service Now CI records across all fields

On-Call schedule

Each site must have a hierarchal or rotating on-call list/schedule to cover after hours or weekend incidents when they surface

Access

Only individuals with permanent badge access are permitted in the computer rooms without a request or without an escort

All vendors/visitors must be escorted into the computer rooms (no exceptions)

Temporary access can be granted through the datacenteraccess.bms.com website (new version to be operational soon)

Projects / Future Work

DC Ops will work alongside various groups and people assisting them in planning out future work and/or activities

Knowledge

Network connectivity throughout the computer rooms

SAN connectivity throughout the computer rooms

Structured cabling distribution

Patch cable labeling procedures

Proper patch cable routing, bundling, neatness

Troubleshooting all connectivity issues

Use of patch cable testers (LAN, copper & fiber)

IP addressing

Network switch port configurations

Server ILO, IDRAC port configuration

ServiceNow CMDB modules

Power distribution at the cabinet level

Computer room support systems (CRAC, UPS, Generator, Fire Suppression, etc)

Capacity planning on all connectivity/power aspects where availability is critical

Particle counter readings

Thanks

Surender Saini

SunRay Enterprise, Inc.

Email: 
[email protected]   

Keywords: continuous integration materials management information technology microsoft Massachusetts
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Thu Jul 27 21:24:00 UTC 2023

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Location: Cambridge, Massachusetts