Red Hat and HP Establish Linux Storage Lab
Rob writes "Linux distributor Red Hat has teamed up with Hewlett-Packard to create a new
performance test lab to help customers deploy enterprise storage across Linux
environments. The lab will focus on performance and integration testing in order to
produce best practices and solutions guides, the companies said, and
will also enable customers to preview new technological developments."
It's interesting to watch the Linux market mature. With IBM putting so many resources behind Linux of course HP is going to want to continue to work with Red hat.
Bradley Holt
they do performance tests on
1) postgres with large data sets over SATA and IDE hard drives.
2) mysql with large data sets over SATA and IDE hard drives.
3) both of the above over www.coraid.com.
p.s.
coraid drivers are gpl and part of the kernel already.
Some information on the Global File System can be found here and here.
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~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Is that too much to ask from a major computer vendor that claims to support Linux? I do not think so.
Red Hat Global File System now supported by Oracle, EMC and NetApp
e /clustering/certify/tech_generic_linux.html/ prarchive/2005/press_rh-gfs_support.html
http://www.oracle.com/technology/products/databas
http://www.redhat.com/en_us/USA/home/company/news
Another option for HP could be selling a blank system, and let the end user worry about the OS. With this approach, HP neatly avoids any liability, and still can be seen to be tacitly suppporting Linux.
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~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Integration testing? Best practices? Performance guides?
:-P
Ugh, I have to be at work in ten minutes, please don't pollute my pre-work morning with corporatespeak.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
People start shedding fears of the penguin. It's an alternative and it's very much user friendly. I predict that soon the users community will shift/accept it even at home. Although I see Novell(suse) making more progress there. Red Hat recently announced that GFS is now supported by Oracle for use with Real Application Cluster database configurations, and has been certified for use with EMC's Clariion networked storage systems, and Celerra iSCSI network attached storage systems, as well as Network Appliance's SAN interfaces BTW HP has been offering RAC on RHEL already for a long time now. Althoug hte GFS will certainly avoid the need of running the HP clsuterware(I hope) tool.
Scott McNealy to Michael: "Suck my Sun!" Michael Dell to Scott : "Lick my Dell!"
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So, RedHat teamed up with the devil? Hm. Thats odd. I'd always seen them as the advocate of everything as good. I've never been pleased with ANY HP Product (Minus their Printers). I hope they can be influenced in a good way.
This is mostly a webvertisment/reference for deploying GFS on HP Proliant server hardware.
Platform advocacy is like choosing a favorite severely developmentally disabled child.
to announce a Linux partnership?
It was almost a given that HP would team up with some major Linux distro, given that they have a fair sized share of the corporate market. I'd open my eyes a little more if Dell or another primarily HSB (Home and Small Business) OEM were to start to offer Linux systems.
Of course, it'd also be nice if some of those manufacturers would also add Linux support for their peripheral products. There's so few good drivers for printers/scanners/all-in-ones, especially from HP (which I do tech support for), and tbh I don't have the coding skills to build my own. It's probably a big reason that Linux use is still relatively light on the HSB side.
SATA disks is possibly true. To those of you who say "What??! Ordinary SATA disks on mission critical servers??!" - even high end enterprise storage systems (like EMC Symmetrix) use ordinary disks.
Imagine you have several remote sites accessing files on a centralised storage server. Just as an example, say it is a samba server which remote computers accessing it over SSH (like this).
If you have a slow upload link (who doesn't), working with such a remote storage solution quickly becomes a problem.
Is there anything in the way of:
If I'm thinking this one right, that would give you instantaneous read/write access to unlocked files on the server (since access is local), the only slow down being how long it takes to get a file updated/unlocked on all the servers.
I have a fear for a blank system because HP could, on dancing to M$'s whims, load this blank desktop with very obscure hardware not fully unusable by the Linux kernel.
Being seasoned in Linux enterprise deployments, I've had more than my share of frustration with some of HP's own storage appliances. Their entry-level storage appliances, the MSA series (which IIRC, they inherited from Compaq), seem to be pretty ok, but they're no good when you start growing to the point when more than several machines need to attach to the SAN. The VA series of high-end storage appliances are in contrast the very devil to deal with. I remember the problems a client of ours was having with these monsters when they were using it for Oracle 9i RAC. Their RAID management started having problems once the disks started filling up to more than 75% capacity, and HP never was able to give us a satisfactory solution, except to replace the damn storage array with something bigger and much more expensive. And so overtures from the likes of EMC began to reach much more receptive ears...
I certainly hope this helps with the engineering of HP's storage appliance line, and they can fix some of the brain damage that some of them have.
Qu'on me donne six lignes écrites de la main du plus honnête homme, j'y trouverai de quoi le faire pendre.
I think it would be much more likely that if MS was going to strongarm them, they would just not sell blank systems, rather than sell useless systems that no one will buy.
You have to run 9.2 and use specific version. GFS 6.1 looks like a life saver, but it could be years before that is certified against Oracle.
Infact the entire Redhat/Oracle certificaition process is a nightmare.
Can we use this to deploy MS' patches? that would be its regression testing...(Just a thought!!)
I'm surprised that they based it in NC. HP already has a world-class storage division based in Colorado Springs (it was the old Compaq storage division).
When I worked at a FibreChannel startup, we did a lot of work with those guys.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
I've heard of some shady tactics in my time working for a larger PC OEM, but *never* a mention of this. The shipping out of winmodems (and similar components) was done for reasons of cost, not to reduce interoperability.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
MS would throw a fit. Anyone who doesn't want windows on their box is clearly going to pirate windows. Therefor the logic is to charge you even more when you don't get windows preinstalled as you're going to be pirating it anyway.
SearchIRC - Now with live chat directory!
>To those of you who say "What??! Ordinary SATA disks on mission critical servers??!" - even high end enterprise storage systems (like EMC Symmetrix) use ordinary disks.
WTF are you blathering about?
The fact that those disk arrays can use SATA disks doesn't mean that they recommend running mission critical databases on SATA disks.
They do that for simple reasons such as:
a) if you need cheap storage, you don't have to buy two disk arrays (e.g. Symmertrix for FC SCSI and CORAID for SATA)
b) you can put shit data on SATA and important data on SCSI (e.g. database files on SCSI, database backup files on SATA)
no no no you got that all wrong.
:P
a) The high end disks are for caching the most used portions of the DB,
b) which is on SATA.
c) The backups are on refurb UDMA100 disks.
a sub 1) The rest of the high speed and availability disk space is devoted to a hidden share of MP3s XVIDs and porn for the BOFH admin staff.
-nB
whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
"Today Oracle announced a new world record TPC-H 300 gigabyte (GB) data warehousing benchmark for Oracle(r) Database 10g Release 2 and Oracle Real Application Clusters on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, overtaking IBM DB2's best benchmark performance in the same category.
Running atop an eight-node HP BladeSystem cluster of ProLiant BL25p server blades, each with one AMD Opteron 2.6 GHz processor and Red Hat Enterprise Linux v.4, Oracle Database 10g Release 2 and Oracle Real Application Clusters achieved record-breaking performance of 13,284.2 QphH@300GB with a price-performance ratio of $34.20/QphH@300GB. This new industry-leading result surpasses IBM DB2's best TPC-H 300 GB benchmark running on IBM hardware using half the number of processors."
Sounds like this can only be shared between linux boxen, is there any cross-platform support with GFS? Even third-party, like SANergy.
This has NOTHING to do with Linux. It's a deal between HP and RedHat - just two croporations making bussines. And Yes, for the record, you can buy Red Hat on HP Workstations and Servers, and, also, on some corporate desktops you can go for SuSE or FreeDos.
The point of this deal is for the HP to have at least an Unix-like (Please no flame here - Linux is GNU, and GNU is Not Unix) OS with full storage support in it's control. IBM allready has a full Unix with Storage access (AIX), Sun too. Even Apple has an offer. This is just something that HP needs, and Red Hat gets a nice deal too. It has nothing to do with Linux, or something an enthusiast can use - it's just bussines.
The fact that those disk arrays can use SATA disks doesn't mean that they recommend running mission critical databases on SATA disks.
They don't recommend anything, they provide a storage system and it really doesn't matter what kind of disks are under the hood. Yes, even fibre channel EMC Symmetrix (the most high end enterprise storage system) has regular, ordinary disks under the hood. You don't get to choose which disks you put there - it's a complete solution they provide and it's anything but cheap! Now, how can a system like that cost that much if it uses regular disks? You pay for the hardware&software solution that makes a solid proof, fast storage system out of those regular disks.
Did you try entering "linux drivers" in the search field on the www.hp.com page? The fourth link down in the results is printer drivers, and there are links for various other HP (and ex-Compaq) hardware drivers.
-- Alastair
Well, HP already has too -- HPUX. But a lot of HP customers (or potential customers) want an x86-based solution, or at least Linux based. (There are a few people out there running Linux on Itanium.)
-- Alastair
Oh, right. Because computers are so perfect nowadays, that programmers should spend their efforts on buildling a better graphical installer.
NEWS FLASH: You USE the computer's software more times than you INSTALL it. If you are doing anything productive, that is.
Put MY money in making an OS that doesn't SUCK, instead of a glitzy installer that won't run on non-graphical hardware anyway....
Reviewers should automatically give any OS +100 points (on a scale of 0-500) if it has a nice simple text interface that lets you CHOOSE whether to install some unreliable graphical abomination. Red Hat has been steadily losing ground on this, incidentally, their once-sleek text installer is eroding into a disorganized mess.
The short list:
http://malfeasance.50megs.com/
Linux HP printers drivers ? :) I think they already did that ;)
hpinkjet.sourceforge.net
With a company supporting linux I find it odd that its so difficult to get printer drivers and I can't imagine having an install script from HP
I've been a Linux geek for about 10 years now, and recently got my first enterprise gig. Part of this meant working with both Linux and Solaris to deploy our new SAN (HDS if it matters). One of the first things that blew my mind was how much better Solaris is when it comes to storage. Just make sure you've got all the possible LUNs you'll be allocated by the SAN both now and in the future in your config file, and that's it.
:(
When new storage is allocated to the Sun, just run devfsadm and you'll be able to see it. With Linux, reboot. WTF ? I've still not found a way around this.
Because we've gone for an Enterprise solution with Red Hat, I raised a support call. Their final response was that they do not support adding new LUNs to a machine without a reboot, and that was that.
Earlier on I'd had a run-in with RH support because they wouldn't support hotswapping disks in an HP DL380. These machines are built to do this, but I was having issues detecting the replaced disk and rebuilding my software RAID array. Again Red Hat said that they did not support hot-adding disks to the machine and that I should reboot. I finally found a solution to this one on my own, making the grand I'd paid for RH support on that machine a bit of a joke
So yeah, Sun kicks ass on this front, and anything that RH can do to catchup would be useful!
Pretty much what Compaq used to do with their 'servers' back when I used to install and commision them (it may be different now). I forget the brand name, but you'd stick this CD in which would "configure the hardware" (no indication of what it was doing) and then ask for the OS disk, and the licencing info. Too bad the vendor-specific versions of the OSes (NT, SCO OpenServer, ah those where (NOT) the days...) then led you down the road to dependancy hell... ah yes, SmartStart, that was it. Anyone else unfortunate enough to remember that?
I reserve the right to be wrong.
Thats not been my experience with EVAs. I've worked on dozens of installations with EVAs on the back end. Mostly Tru64/Alpha and some HP-UX, and problems have been very rare. I really like them. The ability to create Vdisks of almost any size without having to keep track of what disks are or aren't free is very powerful. And I like being able to assign any UDID value I like to a Vdisk, and assign aliases to groups of HBA wwids for easy host/cluster management.
The XP range are clunky old pigs by comparison. They don't support virtualization so its not as easy to make the most of the storage you have. You can't pick your own UDIDs, they're calculated for you. So you can't use that as a tool to help keep track of which storage cab your unix disks are located in (e.g. 1000+ for cab1, 2000+ for cab2, etc). And have you ever tried to unpresent a disk from an XP that has a Persistent Reservation on it
http://www.hp.com/workstations/risc/standard/oper
http://h71000.www7.hp.com/openvms/index.html
http://h30097.www3.hp.com/index.html
http://docs.hp.com/en/32650-90421/ch01s02.html
http://www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/mcds/times
And it's spelled "analysis".
It's pretty hard to take you seriously.