Cloud og IBM Power Systemer – et perfekt makkerpar (IBM Systems and Technology Group)

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© 2010 IBM Corporation Cloud og IBM Power Systemer – et perfekt makkerpar Oktober 2010 Michael Ødegaard Larsen Produktchef – IBM Power Systems – Nordic [email protected]

description

Nedsætning af omkostningerne i serverrummet med Cloud Cloud Computing tilbyder en himmel fuld af fordele, hvis man ønsker at eliminere de omkostnings-tunge serverrum. Ved hjælp af IBM Power Systems i samspil med Cloud teknologi kan virksomheder opbygge en velfungerende infrastruktur og opnå betydelige besparelser. Lær om, hvordan du opbygger en velfungerende infrastruktur baseret på IBM Power Systems og Cloud, samt hvilke muligheder og økonomiske fordele det kan give din virksomhed. Læs mere her: bit.ly/softwaredaghw3

Transcript of Cloud og IBM Power Systemer – et perfekt makkerpar (IBM Systems and Technology Group)

Page 1: Cloud og IBM Power Systemer – et perfekt makkerpar (IBM Systems and Technology Group)

© 2010 IBM Corporation

Cloud og IBM Power Systemer– et perfekt makkerpar

Oktober 2010

Michael Ødegaard LarsenProduktchef – IBM Power Systems – Nordic

[email protected]

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© 2010 IBM Corporation2

IBM Power Systems

Deployment Options for Cloud Computing

Private Public

Hybrid

IT capabilities are provided “as a service,” over an intranet, within the enterprise and behind the firewall

Internal and external service delivery methods are integrated

IT activities / functions are provided “as a service,”

over the Internet

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© 2010 IBM Corporation3

IBM Power Systems

POWER7 Portfolio (2H 2010)

Major Features: � Modular systems with linear scalability� PowerVM Virtualization

� Physical and Virtual Management� Roadmap to Continuous Availability� Binary Compatibility

� Energy / Thermal Management

Power 755

Power 750

Power 770

Power 780

BladeCenter PS700 / PS701 / PS702

HPC

Power 795

Power 720 / 740

Power 710 / 730

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© 2010 IBM Corporation4

IBM Power Systems

… and Therefore Organizations are Deploying Cloud in 2010

Gartner 2010 CIO review

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© 2010 IBM Corporation5

IBM Power Systems

What is Different About Cloud Computing?

With cloud computingWithout cloud computing

� Virtualized resources

� Automated service

management� Standardized services

� Location

independent

� Rapid scalability� Self-service

• Software• Hardware

• Storage• Networking

• Software• Hardware• Storage• Networking

• Software• Hardware• Storage• Networking

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© 2010 IBM Corporation6

IBM Power Systems

Cloud Computing Delivers IT and Business Benefits

AutomatedFaster cycle times

Lower operating expensesOptimized utilization

Improved complianceOptimized security

End user experience

StandardizedEasier access

Flexible pricingReuse and share

Easier to integrate

VirtualizedHigher utilization

Economy of scale benefits

Lower capital expense

Higher quality services

Doing more with less

Breakthrough agility and reducing risk

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© 2010 IBM Corporation7

IBM Power Systems

What is Enterprise Cloud Computing?

Cloud computing for mission critical workloads

Infrastructure must provide the enterprise quality of servicecharacteristics needed to support mission critical workloads

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© 2010 IBM Corporation8

IBM Power Systems

Security & Immature Technology are the Top 2 Challenges Customers Report in Moving to the Cloud

Power is uniquely positioned

to address these concerns

� Power provides enterprise level security,

certified to meet the stringent

requirements of the EAL4+ Common

Criteria certification

� Highly stable and reliable POWER

roadmap delivering advanced virtualization capabilities for years

Q. What do you see as the top 2 challenges in moving to a public/private cloud? n = 255Note: Multiple responses were allowed.Source: IDC's Datacenter and Cloud Computing Survey, January 2010

IDC, Cloud Computing Attitudes, Doc # 223077, Apr 2010

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© 2010 IBM Corporation9

IBM Power Systems

Many Criteria are Important to Customers Related to Moving to the Cloud

Power helps customers meet these criteria:

� Resiliency without Downtime

– Roadmap to continuous availability with High

availability systems & scaling

� Workload Optimized Systems

– Balanced system designs that automatically

optimize workload performance and capacity

� Virtualization without Limits

– Differentiated virtualization ensures enterprise

QOS capabilities & performance without penalty

� Management with Automation

– Reduce deployment time and lower IT costs with

automated management & provisioning of

resources

Q. Rate the following criteria for their importance in your decision to move applications to a public/private cloud. n = 255Note: Responses were based on a scale of 0–10, where 0 = not at all likely and 10 = extremely likely.Source: IDC's Datacenter and Cloud Computing Survey, January 2010

IDC, Cloud Computing Attitudes, Doc # 223077, Apr 2010

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© 2010 IBM Corporation10

IBM Power Systems

Power is Cloud Optimized

Self-service portal with automatic provisioning of resources for improved

customer service & reduced IT labor hours by up to 67%

Automatically optimize workload performance and capacity based on demand

Leadership virtualization capability provides enterprise QOS with higher performance, more scalability, and driving systems up to 90% utilization

Enterprise level security for mission critical workloads

Complete resource control with integrated server, virtualization, network and

storage management

Charge for IT services based on the usage and accounting data

Workload-Optimizing Systems

+

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© 2010 IBM Corporation11

IBM Power Systems

POWER7: Workload Optimized SystemsBalanced system designs that automatically optimize workload performance and capacity

Improve performance and scalability by optimizing IT

assets based on workload, to ensure the ideal elasticity of your cloud

� 4.6 to 7.5 times more performance per core than HP

Itanium and Sun Enterprise T5440 cluster respectively

� Reduce costs with more performance per core while using

up to 70 percent less energy

� Workload optimizing features make POWER7 #1 in

transaction and throughput computing

� The broadest performance range of any platform on the

market

� Innovative RAS capabilities deliver near-continuous system

availability

� Light Path diagnostics can reduce failure identification from

hours to minutes

Best results listed for IBM POWER, HP, and Sun/Oracle systems over 1M tpmC. Source: http://www.tpc.org as of 4/1/08. See Power 780 benchmark details for specific results. See Notices and Substation slides for further details

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© 2010 IBM Corporation12

IBM Power Systems

PowerVM: Virtualization without Limits A key decision point for your cloud environment

Enterprise QOS virtualization capability with higher performance, more scalability, and enterprise security provides the best foundation for your cloud

� Drive systems to over 90% utilization

� Live Partition Mobility with VM’s of any size up to the

entire system that can easily move between your POWER6 and

POWER7 systems

� Scales seamlessly from 1/10 of a core to 256 cores and

can use all resources of the host server

� Dynamic changes to any IT resource without reboot

� Integrated storage virtualization for simplified provisioning

and management of virtual servers

� Secure by design with Zero common vulnerabilities

exposures (CVEs) reported against PowerVM by US CERT or

by MITRE Corporation.

*All statements regarding IBM's future direction and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice, and represent goals and objectives only. Some features require the purchase of additional software components.

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© 2010 IBM Corporation13

IBM Power Systems

Power Systems Operating Environments

AIX - The future of UNIX

� High availability Power Systems with AIX deliver 99.997% uptime

� Vertical scalability with AIX 7* for massive workloads with up to 256 cores/1024 threads in a single AIX partition

� Enterprise Level Security certified to meet the stringent requirements

of the EAL4+ Common Criteria certification

Now available as a Virtual Image for faster deployment

IBM i - Total integration with i

� Highly reliable, integrated combination of relational database, security, web services, networking, and storage management capabilities

� Trusted security with Object Based Architecture enables integrity,

security, and virus-resistance

Linux – Scalable Linux ready for x86 consolidation

� Improved performance of x86 Linux workloads on POWER7 with new PowerVM Lx86

� Simplify migration by running most existing x86 Linux applications with

no application changes

*All statements regarding IBM's future direction and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice, and represent goals and objectives only. Some features require the purchase of additional software components. Please see Disclaimer slide

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© 2010 IBM Corporation14

IBM Power Systems

PowerHA System Mirror: Resiliency without DowntimeDynamically respond to new business demands with continuous application availability

High availability solutions for ensuring your mission

critical applications running in the cloud are always available

� Unified solution for data center and geographically

dispersed multi site resiliency

� Monitors, detects and automatically reacts to events

� Establishes a heartbeat between the systems and

enables automatic switch-over for resiliency

� Shared storage clustering enables:

� Near-continuous application service

� Minimizes the impact of planned & unplanned

outages

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© 2010 IBM Corporation15

IBM Power Systems

IBM Systems Director with VMControl: Management with AutomationIntegrated service management for simplified IT operations

Automated management, provisioning and optimization of physical/virtual servers and system

pools ensure that your cloud resources are automatically provisioned for optimal utilization

� Combines management functions into a single virtualization management tool

� Automated provisioning of standardized virtual images

enable you to reduce deployment times from days to

hours and reduces deployment errors

� Improved manageability by combining multiple virtual

resources into one manageable entity

�Automated virtual image mobility within the system

pool for optimal utilization and resilience

� Optimizes virtual assets within a system pool for

performance, availability and energy use

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© 2010 IBM Corporation16

IBM Power Systems

Tivoli Service Automation Manager: Management with AutomationAutomatic provisioning of resources requested via a self-service portal

Self-service portal and standardized service catalog

leverage all the features of your Power Systems cloud

infrastructure to enable automated delivery of requested services without IT intervention

� User friendly self-service interface accelerates time to value

� Service catalog enables standards to drive consistent

service delivery

� Provisioning of assets based on defined policies reduce

deployment times and lower IT costs

� Automated provisioning and de-provisioning improves

customer satisfaction by accelerating service delivery

� Provisioning policies allow automated release and reuse of

assets without IT intervention

The use of Tivoli Service Automation Manager can reduce labor hours for a unique software image by up to 67% compared to manual deployment on an IBM Power Systems server*

* “Building a Dynamic Infrastructure with IBM Power Systems” IBM SWG Competitive Project Office, March 2010

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© 2010 IBM Corporation17

IBM Power Systems

IBM CloudBurst on Power SystemsIntegrated cloud solution for the fastest private cloud deployment

Completely integrated service management platform

with network, servers, storage, software and quickstartservices that enable the fastest time to value

� Deliver services faster via a self service portal by offering

a standardized service catalog and automatically provisioning

requested resources

� Reduce complexity and risk through standardization and

automation which help to reduce human errors

� Lower IT costs by leveraging automation workflows to

provision assets based on business approved policies

� Decrease capital expenses by ensuring optimal utilization

of all resources

� Scales to the enterprise with the ability to expand the

solution to manage additional platforms and workloads

� Enterprise quality of service by leveraging the Power

systems hardware, virtualization and software components

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© 2010 IBM Corporation18

IBM Power Systems

� Faster Results� Less Risk� Cost Reduction

Jan.

5

June

Jan.

2

3

4

Build from Scratch

Months Days

Pre-Built

Pre-implementation System Sizing

Acquire Components

Installation & Configuration

Testing & Validation

IBM CloudBurst Delivers Results in Days Versus Months

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© 2010 IBM Corporation19

IBM Power Systems

Power Systems Cloud Solutions Entry PointsDelivered with Enterprise QOS virtualization for mission critical workloads

Industrial strength virtualization coupled with automated resource balancing and virtual image management

Integrated service management platform with network, servers, storage, software and quickstartservices that enable the fastest private cloud deployment today

Flexible set of offerings including the pre-integrated software stack for automated IT service deployment, resource monitoring and service availability for integration with your existing IT environment

Time to Value

Infr

as

tru

ctu

re I

nte

gra

tio

n

Foundation for key cloud attributes

Customized for the most flexible solution

Completefor fastest time to value

POWER7, PowerVMIBM Systems Director AIX, IBM i, Linux

IBM CloudBurst*

IBM Service Delivery Manager*FoundationPowerHA

*All statements regarding IBM's future direction and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice, and represent goals and objectives only. Some features require the purchase of additional software components. Please see Disclaimer at end of Presentation

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© 2010 IBM Corporation20

IBM Power Systems

Choose the Right Platform to Deliver Your Cloud ServicesPower is Cloud Optimized

Self-service portal with automatic provisioning of resources for improved

customer service & reduced IT labor hours by up to 67%

Automatically optimize workload performance and capacity based on demand

Leadership virtualization capability provides enterprise QOS with higher performance, more scalability, and driving systems up to 90% utilization

Enterprise level security for mission critical workloads

Complete resource control with integrated server, virtualization, network and

storage management

Charge for IT services based on the usage and accounting data

Workload-Optimizing Systems

+

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© 2010 IBM Corporation21

IBM Power Systems

Ibm.com/power

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© 2010 IBM Corporation22

IBM Power Systems

The IBM benchmarks results shown herein were derived using particular, well configured, development-level and generally-available computer systems. Buyers should

consult other sources of information to evaluate the performance of systems they are considering buying and should consider conducting application oriented testing. For additional information about the benchmarks, values and systems tested, contact your local IBM office or IBM authorized reseller or access the Web site of the benchmark consortium or benchmark vendor.

IBM benchmark results can be found in the IBM Power Systems Performance Report at http://www.ibm.com/systems/p/hardware/system_perf.html .

All performance measurements were made with AIX or AIX 5L operating systems unless otherwise indicated to have used Linux. For new and upgraded systems, AIX Version 4.3, AIX 5L or AIX 6 were used. All other systems used previous versions of AIX. The SPEC CPU2006, SPEC2000, LINPACK, and Technical Computing benchmarks were compiled using IBM's high performance C, C++, and FORTRAN compilers for AIX 5L and Linux. For new and upgraded systems, the latest versions of these compilers were used: XL C Enterprise Edition V7.0 for AIX, XL C/C++ Enterprise Edition V7.0 for AIX, XL FORTRAN Enterprise Edition V9.1 for AIX, XL C/C++ Advanced Edition V7.0 for Linux, and XL FORTRAN Advanced Edition V9.1 for Linux. The SPEC CPU95 (retired in 2000) tests used preprocessors, KAP 3.2 for FORTRAN

and KAP/C 1.4.2 from Kuck & Associates and VAST-2 v4.01X8 from Pacific-Sierra Research. The preprocessors were purchased separately from these vendors. Other software packages like IBM ESSL for AIX, MASS for AIX and Kazushige Goto’s BLAS Library for Linux were also used in some benchmarks.

For a definition/explanation of each benchmark and the full list of detailed results, visit the Web site of the benchmark consortium or benchmark vendor.

TPC http://www.tpc.org

SPEC http://www.spec.org

LINPACK http://www.netlib.org/benchmark/performance.pdf

Pro/E http://www.proe.com

GPC http://www.spec.org/gpc

VolanoMark http://www.volano.com

STREAM http://www.cs.virginia.edu/stream/

SAP http://www.sap.com/benchmark/

Oracle Applications http://www.oracle.com/apps_benchmark/

PeopleSoft - To get information on PeopleSoft benchmarks, contact PeopleSoft directly

Siebel http://www.siebel.com/crm/performance_benchmark/index.shtm

Baan http://www.ssaglobal.com

Fluent http://www.fluent.com/software/fluent/index.htm

TOP500 Supercomputers http://www.top500.org/

Ideas International http://www.ideasinternational.com/benchmark/bench.html

Storage Performance Council http://www.storageperformance.org/results

Revised March 12, 2009

Notes on benchmarks and values

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© 2010 IBM Corporation23

IBM Power Systems

This document was developed for IBM offerings in the United States as of the date of publication. IBM may not make these offerings available in

other countries, and the information is subject to change without notice. Consult your local IBM business contact for information on the IBM

offerings available in your area.

Information in this document concerning non-IBM products was obtained from the suppliers of these products or other public sources. Questions

on the capabilities of non-IBM products should be addressed to the suppliers of those products.

IBM may have patents or pending patent applications covering subject matter in this document. The furnishing of this document does not give

you any license to these patents. Send license inquires, in writing, to IBM Director of Licensing, IBM Corporation, New Castle Drive, Armonk, NY

10504-1785 USA.

All statements regarding IBM future direction and intent are subject to change or withdrawal without notice, and represent goals and objectives

only.

The information contained in this document has not been submitted to any formal IBM test and is provided "AS IS" with no warranties or

guarantees either expressed or implied.

All examples cited or described in this document are presented as illustrations of the manner in which some IBM products can be used and the

results that may be achieved. Actual environmental costs and performance characteristics will vary depending on individual client configurations

and conditions.

IBM Global Financing offerings are provided through IBM Credit Corporation in the United States and other IBM subsidiaries and divisions

worldwide to qualified commercial and government clients. Rates are based on a client's credit rating, financing terms, offering type, equipment

type and options, and may vary by country. Other restrictions may apply. Rates and offerings are subject to change, extension or withdrawal

without notice.

IBM is not responsible for printing errors in this document that result in pricing or information inaccuracies.

All prices shown are IBM's United States suggested list prices and are subject to change without notice; reseller prices may vary.

IBM hardware products are manufactured from new parts, or new and serviceable used parts. Regardless, our warranty terms apply.

Any performance data contained in this document was determined in a controlled environment. Actual results may vary significantly and are

dependent on many factors including system hardware configuration and software design and configuration. Some measurements quoted in this

document may have been made on development-level systems. There is no guarantee these measurements will be the same on generally-

available systems. Some measurements quoted in this document may have been estimated through extrapolation. Users of this document

should verify the applicable data for their specific environment.

Revised September 26, 2006

Special notices

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© 2010 IBM Corporation24

IBM Power Systems

IBM, the IBM logo, ibm.com AIX, AIX (logo), AIX 6 (logo), AS/400, Active Memory, BladeCenter, Blue Gene, CacheFlow, ClusterProven, DB2, ESCON, i5/OS, i5/OS (logo), IBM Business Partner (logo), IntelliStation, LoadLeveler, Lotus, Lotus Notes, Notes, Operating System/400, OS/400, PartnerLink, PartnerWorld, PowerPC, pSeries, Rational, RISC System/6000, RS/6000, THINK, Tivoli, Tivoli (logo), Tivoli Management Environment, WebSphere, xSeries, z/OS, zSeries, AIX 5L, Chiphopper, Chipkill,

Cloudscape, DB2 Universal Database, DS4000, DS6000, DS8000, EnergyScale, Enterprise Workload Manager, General Purpose File System, , GPFS, HACMP, HACMP/6000, HASM, IBM Systems Director Active Energy Manager, iSeries, Micro-Partitioning, POWER, PowerExecutive, PowerVM, PowerVM (logo), PowerHA, Power Architecture, Power Everywhere, Power Family, POWER Hypervisor, Power Systems, Power Systems (logo), Power Systems Software, Power Systems Software (logo), POWER2, POWER3, POWER4, POWER4+, POWER5, POWER5+, POWER6, POWER7, pureScale, System i, System p, System p5, System Storage, System z, Tivoli Enterprise, TME 10, TurboCore, Workload Partitions Manager and X-Architecture are trademarks or registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both. If these and other IBM trademarked terms are marked on their first occurrence in this information with a trademark symbol (®or ™), these symbols indicate U.S. registered or common law trademarks owned by IBM at the time this information was published. Such trademarks may also be

registered or common law trademarks in other countries. A current list of IBM trademarks is available on the Web at "Copyright and trademark information" at www.ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml

The Power Architecture and Power.org wordmarks and the Power and Power.org logos and related marks are trademarks and service marks licensed by Power.org.

UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the United States, other countries or both.

Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries or both.

Microsoft, Windows and the Windows logo are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States, other countries or both.

Intel, Itanium, Pentium are registered trademarks and Xeon is a trademark of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States, other countries or both.

AMD Opteron is a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

Java and all Java-based trademarks and logos are trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States, other countries or both.

TPC-C and TPC-H are trademarks of the Transaction Performance Processing Council (TPPC).

SPECint, SPECfp, SPECjbb, SPECweb, SPECjAppServer, SPEC OMP, SPECviewperf, SPECapc, SPEChpc, SPECjvm, SPECmail, SPECimap and SPECsfs are trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corp (SPEC).

NetBench is a registered trademark of Ziff Davis Media in the United States, other countries or both.

AltiVec is a trademark of Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.

Cell Broadband Engine is a trademark of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.

InfiniBand, InfiniBand Trade Association and the InfiniBand design marks are trademarks and/or service marks of the InfiniBand Trade Association. Other company, product and service names may be trademarks or service marks of others.

Revised February 9, 2010

Special notices (cont.)