IBM is receiving plaudits for its enterprise server strategy after releasing
the next version of its AIX
Unix operating system to public beta, ahead of a commercial release in
November.
The AIX 6 open beta reverses a previous policy of only issuing pre-release
copies to select customers and is the latest installment of IBM’s plan to be the
biggest Unix company in the world.
The AIX release taps into IBM’s
Power6 processor, made available
on System p servers from last month, but will also run on systems back to
Power4-generation machines. Applications for AIX 6 are also intended to be
backwards compatible with versions as far back as AIX 5.2.
Key features include Workload Partitions, a capability that IBM said cuts the
number of operating system images that have be managed and supports AIX and both
Red Hat and Suse Linux distributions. The complementary Live Application
Mobility feature allows partitions to be moved without requiring the application
to be restarted.
For security, Role Based Access Control allows administrators to create
authorisation profiles for resource allocation.
In a statement, IBM System p vice-president Scott Handy said the open beta
would let customers get to grips with new virtualisation capabilities and help
in “speeding time to value”.
Gordon Haff of analyst Illuminata said, “I'd characterise this release as
going a long way towards closing major feature gaps with its competition. IBM's
System p is more directly competitive with HP than with Sun, given how much of
Sun's attention is on scale-out boxes, whereas IBM is more focused on the
higher-end systems. Certainly, that HP has been going through a product line
transition to its Itanium Integrity servers hasn't helped HP any.”
Haff added that although the Unix sector as a whole is not growing, nobody
should expect a rapid decline.
“Linux has captured the attention of developers and continues to grow [but]
the traditional Unix market is still large and the big Unixes still mostly
exceed Linux in technical sophistication and capability of handling the highest
loads in large servers.”
Other watchers said IBM’s execution on the Power and AIX release schedules
are giving it momentum.
“From a distant third in Unix five years ago, IBM is pretty much neck and
neck with Sun and HP, if not a little out in front,” said Brad Day, principal
analyst at Forrester Research’s IT operations group.
“This AIX release is the first time we’ve seen a clear set of movements to
make the System p a mainframe replacement, and IBM has obviously learned from
Sun’s playbook in opening up Solaris.”
Day added that many firms are now using System p servers to consolidate
workloads with about a third of Forrester clients running Linux alongside AIX.
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