IBM AIX - PowerHA and HACMP Introduction
PowerHA is the new name for HACMP, which is short for High Availability Cluster Multi-Processing, a product of IBM. HACMP runs on AIX (and also on Linux)
and its purpose is to provide high availability to systems, mainly for
hardware failures. It can automatically detect system or network
failures and can provide the capability to recover system hardware,
applications, data and users while keeping recovery time to an absolute
minimum. This is useful for systems that need to be online 24 hours a
day, 365 days per year; for organizations that can't afford to have
systems down for longer than 15 minutes. It's not completely
fault-tolerant, but it is high available.
In comparance to other cluster software, HACMP is highly robust, allows for large distances between nodes of a single cluster and allows up to 32 nodes in a cluster. Previous version of HACMP have had a reputation of having a lot of "bugs". From version 5.4 onwards HACMP has seen a lot of improvements.
IBM's HACMP exists for over 15 years. It's not actually an IBM product; IBM bought it from CLAM, which was later renamed to Availant and then renamed to LakeViewTech and nowadays is called Vision Solutions. Until August 2006, all development of HACMP was done by CLAM. Nowadays IBM does its own development of HACMP in Austin, Poughkeepsie and Bangalore.
Competitors of HACMP are Veritas Cluster and Echo Cluster. The last one, Echo Cluster, is a product of Vision Solutions mentioned above and tends to be easier to set-up and meant for simpler clusters. Veritas is only used by customers that use it already on other operating systems, like Sun Solaris and Windows Server environments, and don't want to invest into yet another clustering technology.
In comparance to other cluster software, HACMP is highly robust, allows for large distances between nodes of a single cluster and allows up to 32 nodes in a cluster. Previous version of HACMP have had a reputation of having a lot of "bugs". From version 5.4 onwards HACMP has seen a lot of improvements.
IBM's HACMP exists for over 15 years. It's not actually an IBM product; IBM bought it from CLAM, which was later renamed to Availant and then renamed to LakeViewTech and nowadays is called Vision Solutions. Until August 2006, all development of HACMP was done by CLAM. Nowadays IBM does its own development of HACMP in Austin, Poughkeepsie and Bangalore.
Competitors of HACMP are Veritas Cluster and Echo Cluster. The last one, Echo Cluster, is a product of Vision Solutions mentioned above and tends to be easier to set-up and meant for simpler clusters. Veritas is only used by customers that use it already on other operating systems, like Sun Solaris and Windows Server environments, and don't want to invest into yet another clustering technology.
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