Oracle on 28 June revealed an upgraded version of its Sun Fire x86 systems data centre stack that includes a series of new Intel-powered blade servers, five new rack mount servers, and a new 10 Gigabit Ethernet cluster networking module that embeds into the blade structure.
Because this was strictly an Intel x86-based announcement, there was no indication of any news on the Advanced Micro Devices chip front. However, that does not mean Oracle is changing its relationship with AMD, Oracle marketing executive Graham Lovell told media members and analysts in a conference call.
Dovas acknowledged that for the high-end workloads these new systems handle, the data storage function needed to be as close to data processing as possible for performance purposes. Thus the NAND flash-equipped blade servers in this system are, in effect, being used as storage arrays. Using blades for storage purposes is not a new development, but it has been becoming more common in the last several months.
Oracle Executive Vice President of Systems and Storage John Fowler said the new Sun Fire systems are aimed at enterprises that run a mix of Oracle and non-Oracle workloads across a variety of systems.
However, Oracle isn’t shy about reminding people that as of this year it provides the top-to-bottom data centre stack, plus all the middleware, management tools and applications to go with it.
Each single x86-based cluster can support up to 720 Sun Fire blades, Lovell said. The new systems ship with preloaded Oracle Solaris, Oracle Enterprise Linux—either Red Hat or Novell SUSE—and Oracle VM, Fowler said.
They also can be reconfigured to work as needed with VMware’s vSphere virtualisation layer and Windows Server and Exchange.
Networking is handled by two devices: a Sun Blade 6000 Virtualised Multi-Fabric 10GbE Network Express Module router and a Sun Network 10GbE switch. Both are designed to slide into a 19-inch rack next to blades, replacing larger, standard-sized network switch and router boxes.
Network virtualisation functions are embedded in blade processors, Dovas said. The new systems are controlled by one central management facility, Oracle Enterprise Manager Ops Center.
Lovell said the blade networking needs “zero management” and that the systems can be set up and made running “30 minutes after you unpack the box.”
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