IBM expects that the ability to move
running virtual partitions between physical servers will give the company an
additional edge in the Unix server market.
Live Partition Mobility is currently in beta and the technology is slated for
release in November for Power6 servers running AIX. During a meeting at its San
Francisco office, IBM claimed that it will be the only server vendor that is
capable of such live partition moving.
The meeting was timed as a response to
Tuesday's unveiling of Sun's UltraSparc
T2 processor by Sun Microsystems, better
known by its Niagara 2 codename, as well as the
Linuxworld San Francisco tradeshow that
kicks off on Tuesday as well.
Although Niagara 2 traditionally targets high throughput applications such as
web servers, the chip also drastically increased its floating point
capabilities. Sun published floating point benchmark results that outstripped
those of IBM's Power6 processor by six per cent.
Floating point calculations are typical for scientific-style simulations and
models.
In its press release, however, Sun didn't focus on the high performance
computing space, most likely because the Niagara doesn't scale to very large
systems that are common for that segment. Instead the server vendor targets the
processor at web servers as well as routers and switches.
"With Niagara 2, Sun focused on a niche with the high throughput web serving,
which can be very easily done with blade [servers]," complained Scott Handy,
vice president for worldwide marketing and strategy for IBM's Power systems.
IBM also claimed a more elegant chip design. Design features such as strained
silicon and an integrated memory controller allows it to control overall power
consumption while increasing performance with a dual core chip compared to Sun
's 8-core Niagara.
Reducing the number of cores can lead to savings on software licences. Oracle
especially is known for charging users by the core rather than per socket or
physical CPU. The database vendor charges two licences for each Niagara
processor and 1.5 licences for each IBM Power6 chip. A quad core x86 processor
will set the user back two licences.
Although performance is important, customers are increasingly asking for
features such as virtualisation support and improved power efficiency, Handy
charged. He cited Big Blue's growing market share in Unix servers as evidence
that the company's message is catching on. He also said that the company has
completed 700 migrations from Sun and HP servers to AIX on Power systems over
the last 18 months, generating more than $500m in revenues.
Handy especially talked up the Live Migration technology because it will cut
down on planned down time, which occurs when system administrators have to shut
down a server to perform hardware maintenance.
VMWare currently offers its Vmotion technology, but requires both servers to
simultaneously access the same virtual image. IBM's technology physically moves
the entire operating system and application stack to a new system.
The Xen open source technology will offer live migration in a future upgrade.
Microsoft also plans to offer it as a feature to its Viridian virtualisation
technology but doesn’t have a projected launch date.
Chip vendors are also catching on. Intel is adding a Flex Migration
technology to Penryn, its 45nm processor that is due out early next year. AMD is
already offering a similar technology in its Opteron processor, although no
operating system currently supports the feature.
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