i5/OS on other platforms?
Chris Maxcer at the System i Network suggests that Elaine Lennox, the marketing manager for IBM System i, has hinted that i5/OS may be ported to other hardware platforms; in particular, blade servers.
Would you buy a System i blade?
Posted: July 18th, 2007 under Operating systems.
No.
You usually don’t need many System i machines. If you’re a small company, you need one. If you’re a big company, you need two (Main Site & DR Site).
So the only reason i would see for a System i bladecenter is minimizing the footprint needed for applications that are still running “on a legacy platform”. Kinda the same way virtualization is often used to replace old NT4/Windows 2000 machines, and run them virtualized on current hardware.
Comment by Lukas Beeler — July 18, 2007 @ 1:08 pm
I wonder how that would go? Power6 blades or i5/OS on x86 CPUs? I have 2 520s today and 2 blade chassis. I suspose that if the i5 blade (or i6 blade)could co-habitate with x86 blades why not.
Comment by Bob James — July 23, 2007 @ 10:54 am
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Pingback by Openi5 Anyone? — July 23, 2007 @ 11:00 am
Yes.
As more of the ISeries becomes commodity hardware - PCI, IOP less cards, I would consider utilizing a Blade Server to take better advantage of unified storage like a Network Appliance.
Comment by David Marks — July 23, 2007 @ 7:19 pm
[…] There was plenty of talk earlier this year that a server blade running i5/OS might be ready by the end of this year, but in conversations I had this week from IBM’s Power systems group, that’s not going to happen. […]
Pingback by i5/OS on blade server not coming until next year — The iSeries blog — November 7, 2007 @ 3:55 pm
Would love to see the day of single user developer edition running on my desktop. Though that would put the time share services out on the street
Comment by JF — November 8, 2007 @ 4:26 pm
No. Probably the most important aspect of the System-i’s overall performance is the way it’s tightly-integrated CS (Control Storage) processors offload all I/O burdens from the main processor, so it can only “see” and execute program code. That’s mainly why, for example, that even an “old” low-end Model 820 with a single 750Mhz main processor (our current setup) can handle literally (and easily) HUNDREDS of simultaneous interactive users, each with excellent response time. This understandably baffles those IT Techs whose only experience is with PC Servers, where a 750 Mhz processor cannot satisfactorally handle even a SINGLE user nowadays.
Anyway, putting the System i’s “brain” in a blade center and making it rely on someone else’s “arms and legs” (generic I/O setups that are foreign to it) seems like a really bad idea. Presumably, the Rochester engineers have that covered and will continue to pleasnatly surprise us.
Comment by Bob Reese — November 17, 2007 @ 10:40 am
YES!!
Do not forget that IBM’s Bladecenter (the blade chassis) support x86, AMD, CELL and Power blades already in ONE CHASSIS. All that is needed is the OS.
This would be very useful for clients using both x86 and system i at a datacenter and want to incorporate their system i into the chassis itself.
All that’s needed is support for the communication to the chassis switches and connection to the lower end disk storage series.
Comment by Dennis Debono — December 24, 2007 @ 4:54 am
[…] That is the question some many System i users out there are asking. As you can see from some comments last year, some were looking forward to i5 blades, and some were not. […]
Pingback by What, exactly, is the point of the System i blade? — The iSeries blog — February 19, 2008 @ 1:07 pm