The Open Compute Project Foundation maintains a number of OCP projects, such as:
Server designs In 2013, two years after the Open Compute Project had started, it was noted that the goal of a more modular server design was "still a long way from live data centers". However, by then some aspects published had been used in Facebook's Prineville data center to improve energy efficiency, as measured by the
power usage effectiveness index defined by
The Green Grid. Efforts to advance server compute node designs included one for
Intel processors and one for
AMD processors. Also in 2013,
Calxeda contributed a design with
ARM architecture processors. Since then, several generations of OCP server designs have been deployed: Wildcat (Intel), Spitfire (AMD), Windmill (Intel E5-2600), Watermark (AMD), Winterfell (Intel E5-2600 v2) and Leopard (Intel E5-2600 v3).
OCP Accelerator Module OCP Accelerator Module (OAM) is a design specification for hardware architectures that implement artificial intelligence systems that require high module-to-module bandwidth. OAM is used in some of AMD's
Instinct accelerator modules.
Rack and power designs Designs for a mechanical mounting system to replace standard
19-inch racks have been published, with a cabinet the same outside width (600 mm) and depth as existing racks, but with an interior space allowing for wider equipment chassis with a 537 mm width (21 inches). This allows more equipment to fit in the same volume and improves air flow. Compute chassis sizes are defined in multiples of an
OpenU or
OU, which is 48 mm, slightly taller than the 44mm
rack unit defined for 19-inch racks. As of March 2026, the most current base mechanical definition is the Open Rack V3.1 Specification. At the time the base specification was released, Meta also defined in greater depth the specifications for the
rectifiers and power shelf. Specifications for the power monitoring interface (PMI), a communications interface enabling upstream communications between the rectifiers and
battery backup unit(BBU) were published by Meta that same year, with
Delta Electronics as the main technical contributor to the BBU spec. However, since 2022 the
AI boom in the data center has created higher power requirements in order to satisfy the demands of
AI accelerators that have been released. As of September 2024, Meta is in the process of updating its Open Rack v3 rectifier, power shelf, battery backup and power management interface specifications to accommodate this increased energy demand. In May 2024, at an Open Compute regional summit, Meta and
Rittal outlined their plans for development of their High Power Rack (HPR) ecosystem in conjunction with rack, power and cable partners, increasing power capacity in the rack to 92 kilowatts or more. At the same meeting, Delta Electronics and
Advanced Energy reported on their progress in developing new Open Compute standard specifications for power shelf and rectifier designs for HPR applications. Rittal also outlined their collaboration with Meta in designing airflow containment,
busbar designs and
grounding schemes for the new HPR requirements.
Data storage Open Vault storage building blocks (also called "Knox") offer high disk densities, with 30 drives in a 2 OU
Open Rack chassis designed for easy
disk drive replacement. The 3.5 inch disks are stored in two drawers, five across and three deep in each drawer, with connections via
serial attached SCSI. There is a "cold storage" variant where idle disks power down to reduce energy consumption. Another design concept was contributed by Hyve Solutions, a division of
Synnex, in 2012. At the OCP Summit 2016 Facebook, together with Taiwanese ODM Wistron's spin-off Wiwynn, introduced "Lightning", a flexible NVMe JBOF (just a bunch of flash), based on the existing Open Vault (Knox) design.
Energy efficient data centers The OCP has published data center designs for energy efficiency. These include power distribution at
three-phase 277/480 VAC, which eliminates one transformer stage in typical North American data centers, a single voltage (12.5 VDC) power supply designed to work with 277/480 VAC input, and 48 VDC battery backup.
Open networking switches On May 8, 2013, an effort to define an open
network switch was announced. The plan was to allow Facebook to load its own
operating system software onto its
top-of-rack switches. Press reports predicted that more expensive and higher-performance switches would continue to be popular, while less expensive products treated more like a
commodity. The first attempt at an open networking switch by Facebook was designed together with Taiwanese
ODM Accton using
Broadcom Trident II chip and is called "Wedge"; the Linux OS that it runs is called "FBOSS". Later switch contributions include "6-pack" and Wedge-100, based on Broadcom Tomahawk chips. Similar switch hardware designs have been contributed by:
Accton Technology Corporation (and its Edgecore Networks subsidiary), Mellanox Technologies, Interface Masters Technologies, Agema Systems. Capable of running
Open Network Install Environment (ONIE)-compatible
network operating systems such as
Cumulus Linux, Switch Light OS by Big Switch Networks, or PICOS by
Pica8. A similar project for a custom switch for the Google platform had been rumored, and evolved to use the
OpenFlow protocol.
Servers A sub-project for
Mezzanine (
NIC) OCP NIC 3.0 specification 1v00 was released in late 2019 establishing three form factors: SFF, TSFF, and LFF. ==Litigation==