Original Research
Downtime Severity Levels (DSL)
A way to measure the Impact and Depth of Downtime in Data Centers — distinguishing inherent and non-inherent downtimes across components, systems, critical rooms, and the full site.
Definition
What are Downtime Severity Levels (DSL)?
Downtime Severity Levels or DSL is a scale that measures the severity of a Data Center downtime according to its impact level. It is designed to be used for Critical Essential Systems.
It is a seven-level scale that classifies the severity of the Data Center downtime according to:
Causes of Downtime: These can be related to Inherent Events (Preventive Maintenance, Failures / CM, Critical Events) or Non-inherent Events (Catastrophic Event, Catastrophic Failure).
Depth of Impact: The location affected by the maintenance/failure or by any other internal/external event related to Structures, Systems, and Components (SSCs).
Critical Essential Systems are the basis for Data Center Availability
Electrical System
CRITICAL ESSENTIALCooling System
CRITICAL ESSENTIALTelco System
CRITICAL ESSENTIALSecurity
CRITICAL NON-ESSENTIALSafety
CRITICAL NON-ESSENTIALCritical Essential Systems Provide the minimum necessary to sustain availability. If any Essentials System fails, the service availability will fail imminently.
The 7-Level Scale
DSL and Depth of Impact of Downtime
The DSL was designed as a communication tool, in order to unify and categorize the severity of any event/incident that occurs from a single Component, to a System, Structure, or full Data Center.
Catastrophic Events
Catastrophic Events refer to large-scale events that go beyond regular operations — natural disasters, fires, floods or events that impact the entire site.
Catastrophic Failures
Catastrophic Failures refer to the conditions of a Structural element that creates a building-level impact, including outside services dependencies.
Featured Publication
Downtime Severity Levels Article was selected as Cover for 7×24 Exchange Magazine 2023 Spring Issue
Article published by 7×24 Exchange Magazine, written by SERES research team.

