Boxes for edges: Open-IX announces enclosure standard for edge data centers
The Open-IX Association (“Open-IX”), a 501(c)(6) non-profit industry association and Accredited Standards Developer (ASD) of American National Standards announces the publication of its new Edge Standard (OIX-3) as an American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Standard.
The OIX Edge Data Center Standard provides a common framework for classifying edge data center characteristics, making it easier for vendors to communicate and differentiate their products’ capabilities while also helping buyers express their edge data center needs in a standardized format. Open-IX will work with ANSI to promote OIX-3 as a volunteer consensus standard to be relied upon by industry, government agencies and consumers across the United States and around the world. Open-IX has already developed standards for traditional data centers and internet exchanges and now adds standards on edge compute enclosures across Europe, Asia and North America.
With the growing number of edge data center deployments, manufacturers, service providers and customers need standardized reference criteria for making their purchasing and deployment decisions. Open-IX developed the OIX Edge Data Center standard through several years of research and collaboration among experts representing various internet and communications industry constituencies. The resulting standards are intended to allow for a more efficient procurement of edge internet infrastructure.
“We wanted the OIX-3 standard to benefit as many stakeholders as possible and reflect how edge data centers are actually being built and deployed,” explains committee member Frank Basso VP Technical Operations at Vapor IO “This led us to create more sub-categories to cover the various form factors, making the standard useful across many use case scenarios.”
Committee co-chair Venky Swaminathan, CTO of Trilogy Networks adds, “We believe this standard will help network providers and service providers make better procurement decisions, draft service quality standards and ultimately deliver better service.”
The Edge Standard sets forth the minimum level of resiliency and redundancy with respect to structure, power, environment, safety, security and network. The standard is divided into 5 sub-categories (XS, S, M, L, XL) relating to rack capacity. The standard gives the user flexibility to apply all or some of the criteria as applicable to their needs.
Details relating to OIX-3 technical requirements for Edge Locations can be found here.
ANSI coordinates, facilitates and promotes the development of voluntary consensus standards that are relied upon by industry, government agencies and consumers across the United States and around the world.
Article Topics
ANSI | edge data center | industry standards | Open-IX | Trilogy Networks
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