Hello Paul,
RE: [HP3000-L] OT: HP's Newest and Hottest DB Server Offering
These XC-HPC compute clusters are kewl... some of the ones I have seen are
greater than 1000 nodes.
I don't get to fix them :) I usually only see the issues on the backend as
they tend to be abusive of storage which is when I get the call.
Regards,
James Hofmeister.
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Raulerson [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 11:00 PM
To: James Hofmeister
Cc: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [HP3000-L] OT: HP's Newest and Hottest DB Server Offering
Kind of along those lines, I had the opportunity yesterday to tour the
data center
up at Baylor University, and one of the more interesting things they
had up there
was a supercomputer - from HP! Running Intel nodes and Red hat Linux
no less!
http://insidehpc.com/2007/09/27/baylor-university-purchases-hp-cluster/
I was a bit impressed, but it led t me to wonder if MPE/ix and HP3Ks
have ever
developed clustering capabilities and were tey ever used in great big
computing
tasks?
A casual google search has has basically turned up nil results.
-Paul
On Nov 18, 2008, at 11:40 PM, James Hofmeister wrote:
> Hello Peter,
>
> http://www.oracle.com/features/hp/exadata.html
> Wouldn't it be nice to have MPE sitting atop this platform with Image
> intrinsics rewritten to access Oracle DB?
>
> Nothing special... This is a rack of standard x86 Linux servers;
> lots of
> internal disk. The O.S. is Oracle's (OEL) Oracle Enterprise Linux.
> If you
> have had a positive support experience with Oracle with their
> applications
> in the past, then this may work for you. Support for all software,
> kernel,
> db, etc on the machine is from Oracle.
>
> Regards,
> James Hofmeister
>
> * To join/leave the list, search archives, change list settings, *
> * etc., please visit http://raven.utc.edu/archives/hp3000-l.html *
* To join/leave the list, search archives, change list settings, *
* etc., please visit http://raven.utc.edu/archives/hp3000-l.html *
|