Posts Tagged ‘Servers’

Storage, Servers, Software Boom for Avnet in Q2

January 28th, 2012

The big data explosion and a growing concern in the C-suite that IT drive efficiency and productivity mean that storage is selling. And it’s selling well, according to value-added distributor Avnet Technology Solutions.

The Phoenix, Ariz.-based company announced its second quarter earnings for fiscal year 2012 on Jan. 26, and storage was its big seller around the world, followed by industry-standard servers and software. Servers and software grew by 35 percent, year over year, and storage was up more than 20 percent, the company said.

“Overall we saw terrific growth in storage. We saw growth in storage for Avnet TS globally north of 20 percent and that continues to be strong,” ATS Global President Phil Gallagher said.

Phil Gallagher, AvnetWhen analysts on a Jan. 26 call questioned whether the company was satisfied with 20 percent growth, Gallagher responded in the affirmative. “Storage is our largest technology. Larger than servers. When you get into that size numbers, 20 percent? We were pretty pleased,” he said.

Gallagher said the company sold between $600 million and $900 million worth of storage solutions during the quarter. He declined to be more specific.

Driving the storage growth, he said, were industries like banking, retail and health care that are creating larger stores of digital data. “It’s naturally going to continue to grow, but the key is how to continue to grow the value around storage as a total solution,” he said. “A lot of the things we’re driving around solutions and they’re driven by services and software.”

Business leaders leveraging IT to become more efficient and productive are helping drive solutions growth, Gallagher said.

“I think if you take a step back and you look at what’s happening in the C-level suites today of our end users, everybody is trying to become more efficient and they’re looking to protect threat and protect their information and become more productive,” he said.

Avnet itself is trying to become more efficient through IT. “If we can invest in IT that’s going to make us more competitive in the market, we’re going to go do it,” he said.

Industries such as health care, finance, government and retail are growing. Avnet’s health care solutions practice grew between 20 and 30 percent last quarter, Gallagher said. “They’re the verticals we’re continuing to drive our energies around.”

To help solution providers looking to grow their businesses in these vertical markets, on Jan. 24, Avnet launched its new SolutionsPath Engagement Service, a consulting service that will help VARs create tailored business plans and become market experts.

“I think the big opportunity there is how do we continue to work with our partners to enable them and to continue to better understand the need and the opportunity there,” Gallagher said. “And we enable them, so with their success, we’re going to win.”

The Technology Solutions group reported revenue of $3.1 billion, down 3.5 percent year over year, but revenue in the Americas was up 19 percent sequentially. The company’s overall revenue for the quarter was $6.69 billion, down 1.1 percent year over year.

Source:http://www.channelinsider.com/c/a/Distribution/Storage-Servers-Software-Boom-for-Avnet-in-Q2-720751/

Cisco data center revamp cuts across switches, servers, storage

March 30th, 2011

Cisco this week is expanding its data center product portfolio with a new switch, extensions to existing ones, and enhancements to its servers and software.

The new and enhanced products stretch across Cisco’s Nexus switching line, MDS SAN platform, Unified Computing System server offering and NX-OS operating system software, among others. They are intended to more tightly integrate and unify servers, storage and networks into a data center fabric designed to simplify operations and scale into the cloud.

Cisco’s feeling the heat from multiple fronts in the data center and, conversely, other vendors are feeling the heat from Cisco. Cisco’s revamped data center portfolio will go up against Juniper’s recently unveiled QFabric line, Brocade’s Brocade One products, Arista’s 7000 series switches, Avaya’s VENA architecture, Alcatel-Lucent’s “Application Fluent” switches, platforms from Enterasys, Extreme and Force10, and server/storage/switching and virtualization architectures from HP, IBM and Dell.

“Cisco needs a broader fabric story for their architectural approach” to data center sales, says Zeus Kerravala, an analyst at The Yankee Group. “But it comes down to execution and providing proof points that that it works like Infiniband,” the data center fabric technology deployed for lossless data transmission.

“Any amount of risk is too much risk for the buyer,” Kerravala says.

Cisco is still, however, expected to launch a new data center fabric line under the code-name “Jawbreaker.” This week’s product rollout did not include Jawbreaker.

CISCO TURNS ON NEXUS 3000 SWITCH

It did, however, include the new Nexus 3000 switch. As expected, the Nexus 3000 is a low-latency, high-density 10 Gigabit Ethernet switch specifically designed for market trading. The one-rack-unit switch supports Layer 2/3 wire-rate switching for both unicast and multicast transmissions.

The Nexus 3000 sports 48 1G/10G Ethernet ports with 1 microsecond port-to-port latency.

Enhanced products include so-called Universal Port capabilities on the Nexus 5548 and 5596 switches. Unified Port allows users to designate any port to be 1G or 10G Ethernet, 2/4/8G FibreChannel or FibreChannel-over-Ethernet. The products support Layer 2/3 switching and the IEEE 802.1Qbh standard for port extension of remote physical switches doing heavy duty processing on behalf of virtualized switches in blade servers. The switches are also capable of supporting Cisco’s FabricPath software for building large data center fabrics with multiple active paths to accommodate increasing “east-west” traffic flows across multiple server racks.

FABRIC EXTENDERS

Cisco also rolled out three additions to its fabric extender (FEX) line designed to stretch the data center fabric from Nexus switches to UCS servers to adapters and virtual machines. FEX is also based on 802.1Qbh.

The three new FEX products include Adapter FEX, VM-FEX and FEX Support for Nexus 7000. Adapter FEX splits a physical NIC into multiple logical ones to accommodate multiple VMs per NIC, while maintaining a single point of management. Cisco says Broadcom, Emulex and QLogic plan to put Adapter FEX on their silicon and NICs.

VM-FEX extends switching to the server hypervisor to forward VM traffic with a physical switch instead of a virtual switch in the hypervisor. This enables IT managers to consolidate the virtual and physical access layers for better performance, and allow for network and security policy mobility with VMs.

FEX on the Nexus 7000 is comprised of the Nexus 2232PP 32-port 10G fabric extender, which is now supported by the 7000. This provides a single point of management for up to 1,500 ports per chassis by effectively extending the Nexus 7000 to the top of a server rack vs. deploying a Nexus 5000 switch.

Another enhancement is a capability Cisco calls director-class, multi-hop FibreChannel-over-Ethernet (FCoE) for the Nexus 7000 and the MDS 9500 SAN switch. Essentially, it’s FCoE on each platform. This brings a unified fabric not only to the access layer – with existing support on Cisco’s Nexus 5000 top-of-rack switch – but to the core of the network as well. This allows all platforms to support all types of storage traffic –FibreChannel, FCoE, iSCSI, and NAS — over loss-less 10 Gigabit Ethernet, Cisco says.

Director-class multihop FCoE support has also been added to the Nexus NX-OS operating system. Cisco has added MPLS to NX-OS and the Nexus 7000 to support Layer 3 VPNs.

Cisco also extended the venerable Catalyst 6500 switch with an application control engine (ACE)-30 module for workload scaling with the company’s Overlay Transport Virtualization (OTV) Layer 2 data center interconnection technology. This provides 54% higher performance for application delivery, Cisco says.

In addition, Cisco rolled out for the Catalyst 6500 the ES-40 module, which provides 40 Gigabit line-rate performance for data center interconnection using MPLS or VPLS; and a new ASA firewall and security services module.

What’s more, Cisco unveiled the MDS 9000 Storage Media Encryption fabric service, which offers secure media encryption for disks and tapes to meet security requirements for regulatory compliance. Cisco added two new services to its Nexus 101 appliance: Virtual Security Gateway, which provides VM-level segmentation in a multi-tenant virtualized data center; and Cisco Data Center Network Management.

In its UCS server portfolio, Cisco added the C260 M2 rack-mount server for performance-intensive applications and twice the memory capacity of comparable 2-socket traditional servers. Cisco introduced new versions of UCS B230 M2, B440 M2, and C460 M2 servers based on the next generation Intel Xeon processor, code-named Westmere EX.

Cisco enhanced its Data Center Network Manager (DCNM) to now enable converged SAN, LAN, and server management for up to 150,000 ports. It also offers integration with VMware vCenter for provisioning, performance, and trouble-shooting.Most products will be available in the second quarter. The C260 M2 server will be available in the third quarter. The 5548UP and 5596UP switches are shipping at $750 per port. The ACE 30 module is shipping at a cost of $40,000. The director-class FCoE license on the Nexus 7000 costs $10,000. The data center interconnect line cards for the Catalyst 6500 cost $50,000 for a two-port 10G version and $95,000 for a four-port 10G configuration.

Source:http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=3389A8FD-1A64-67EA-E468F8848EFA4A05

OpenWorld: HP bundles Oracle software with private cloud servers

September 20th, 2010

HP is preparing to offer Oracle applications bundled with its private cloud hardware platform.

The company said that it would be offering Oracle’s PeopleSoft platform on its BladeSystem server hardware. HP is also planning to add Oracle E-Business Suite and Fusion Infrastructure to the platform by the end of the year.

The HP Private Cloud Solution bundles will include not only the hardware and Oracle software, but also HP’s Cloud Service Automation and StorageWorks platforms as well as the Cloud Maps management tool.

Additionally, HP said that it will provide customers with whitepapers and service experts to help deploy and support the systems.

HP director of solutions alliances for enterprise server storage and networking Kevin Lyons told V3.co.uk that the company is aiming to not only provide Oracle applications but also provide firms with the basis for transitioning other parts of the IT infrastructure to private cloud systems.

“This is not an appliance, it’s a flexible bundle that is built on an architecture from years of experience,” Lyons said.

“This is the beginning you are going to want to merge your environments and build on this starting point.”

The company plans to launch the Private Cloud Solution for PeopleSoft systems in October.

Source:http://www.v3.co.uk/v3/news/2270014/hp-offer-oracle-software

Oracle unveils next-generation servers to enhance communications services

September 6th, 2010

New Sun Netra Servers and Blades Extend Oracle’s Leadership with Most Complete, Open and Integrated Hardware and Software Portfolio for Communications Service Providers

News Facts

· Extending its leadership in the communications industry, Oracle announced the introduction of two new Sun Netra servers that help network equipment providers and communications service providers keep pace with rapidly growing demands for new services such as 3G- and 4G-wireless data and voice-over-IP.
· The Sun Netra servers expand Oracle’s complete, open and integrated portfolio of industry-leading software and hardware for the communications industry, including carrier-grade SPARC and x86-based blade and rack servers, storage and networking infrastructure.

· Sun Netra servers, combined with the Oracle Database 11g, Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database and Oracle Fusion Middleware, provide a comprehensive hardware and software foundation for communications infrastructure.

· Coupled with the mission-critical Oracle Solaris operating system, Sun Netra servers deliver extremely high reliability and scalability for running demanding communications services with 24×7 availability.

· Oracle’s Sun Netra CP3270 Advanced Telecom Computing Architecture (ATCA) blade server meets the increasing requirements for greater performance and memory-in-infrastructure networks while also maintaining a low power and thermal footprint to cut operating costs for mission-critical environments.
· Oracle’s Sun Netra X4270 AC and DC carrier-grade rack server features high performance and unprecedented density in a rugged, energy-efficient and compact form.
Sun Netra CP3270 ATCA Server Details

· Enhancing the performance of the previous generation of x86 ATCA blade servers, the Sun Netra CP3270 ATCA server is designed to enhance application performance while reducing the overall system power and cooling demands.
· The server has earned Network Equipment-Building System (NEBS) level 3-certification, meeting stringent specifications for fire suppression, high temperature environments and vibration resistance for earthquakes.
· To help communications service providers maintain network efficiency as data usage continues to grow, the Sun Netra CP3270 ATCA supports 32GB of accessible memory through eight Dual In-line Memory Module (DIMM) slots.
· The server is easy to manage and runs Oracle Solaris, Oracle Enterprise Linux, OracleVM and other operating systems and virtualization infrastructure software.
Sun Netra X4270 Server Details

· The Sun Netra X4270 doubles computing resources and reduces system power and cooling requirements over previous generation systems, helping improve network cost efficiencies.
· The server’s 18 DIMM slots make it ideally suited for memory-intensive applications, such as Oracle TimesTen In-Memory database, and support for eight central processing unit (CPU) cores doubles the number of compute threads when compared to previous Sun Netra x86 servers.
· The Sun Netra X4270 is NEBS level 3-certified, reducing risk for mission-critical workloads.
· The server is easy to manage and runs Oracle Solaris, Oracle Enterprise Linux, OracleVM, and other operating systems and virtualization infrastructure software.

Supporting Quotes
· “Communications service providers are under constant pressure to increase operational efficiency and maximize revenue. Coupled with our number-one position in communications software, Oracle’s new Sun Netra servers are designed to deliver greater performance and memory capacity while lowering power consumption and overall cost,” said Dan Ford, vice president of product marketing, Oracle Communications.
· “Oracle’s Sun Netra carrier-grade servers are a key component of our service provider solutions, which run mission-critical applications like new converged services, media gateway controllers and subscriber data management. The Sun Netra servers provide high performance and energy efficiency, enabling us to deliver differentiated solutions cost effectively to our customers,” said Kumar Vishwanathan, vice president of engineering and chief architect, Sonus Networks.

Source:http://press-releases.techwhack.com/103725-sun-netra

Activexperts software released activexperts sms messaging server monitor 5.1

July 3rd, 2010

ActiveXperts Software Released ActiveXperts SMS Messaging Server Monitor 5.1

ActiveXperts Software released ActiveXperts SMS Messaging Server Monitor 5.1, with improved database compatibility and maximum performance.

(PRWEB) July 3, 2010 — Today, ActiveXperts Software B.V. released a new version of its SMS messaging suite: ActiveXperts SMS Messaging Server v.5.1.

Users can now benefit from numerous user interface and usability improvements. The Manager interface has improved. It is easier to deal with a few thousand messages in one view. Projects can be created and managed in a more efficient way.

Many new sample projects are included with the product.

The new version has improved database migration wizards, and uses a more advanced database locking technique to boost performance.

Version 5.1 now supports secure SMTP and POP3 servers (in previous versions of SMS Messaging Server, only unsecure mail servers were supported). Also supported are free mail servers like Gmail and Windows Live.

Besides new sample product, new API samples are included. Together with C#, VB.NET, ASP.NET, C++, ASP, HTML, VBScript samples, new samples are included for MS Excel, MS Access, Delphi and PHP.

“SMS Messaging Server 5.1 is more scalable product, with improved performance”, said Mr. Sirp Potijk, CTO at ActiveXperts Software. “There are many user interface improvements, and the new sample projects show how the product can be used in different scenario’s.”

ActiveXperts SMS Messaging Server runs on the following Operating Systems: Windows 2008 R2, Windows 2008, Windows 2003, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP and Windows 2000. It runs on x86 and x64 workstations and servers.

Source:http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/07/prweb4218164.htm

HP announces new ProLiant servers

June 23rd, 2010

HP this week unveiled a slew of new servers, storage and networking gear to advance its “converged infrastructure” blueprint for streamlining IT infrastructure and operations.

The intent is to automate and simplify IT so that enterprises can free more time to focus on new initiatives, says Bethany Mayer, vice president of marketing for HP’s enterprise servers, storage and networking division. “The idea is to take technologies and converge them in a way that helps our customers save money and allows them to spend less time on maintenance,” she says.

At the HP Tech Forum, going on in Las Vegas, the company announced several new servers, upgrades to its Virtual Connect connectivity portfolio, and new capabilities for its BladeSystem Matrix provisioning software. HP also added new software to its power management portfolio and announced a unified data-deduplication architecture for its storage gear.

The ProLiant server additions include three new rack-mount systems and seven new blade servers. The rack-mount servers offer up to 2TB of memory, and the new server blades support up to 1TB of memory.

A common thread among the new servers is the inclusion of greater automation options and self-healing capabilities, says Jim Ganthier, vice president of marketing for industry standard servers at HP.

For instance, HP added “virtual machine isolation” capabilities that allow users to isolate a virtual machine with a problem and automatically repair it without bringing down the physical server and other VMs. “We can find that one offending VM out of the 15 or 25 that reside on a server, isolate it, quietly shut it down, and allow you to do maintenance on it while still allowing the other VMs to continue to run,” Ganthier says.

In addition, HP’s Virtual Connect FlexFabric technology is now built into its ProLiant G7 server blades.

HP’s Virtual Connect technology is designed to automate the process of connecting servers to networks and storage. Enterprises can reconfigure connections to LANs and storage-area networks (SAN) by moving workloads or adding and replacing servers on the fly, for instance.

The latest Virtual Connect FlexFabric module is a 10GB, 24-port device that connects BladeSystem server blades to any Fibre Channel, Ethernet and iSCSI network, eliminating the need for multiple interconnects.

“For the first time we’re able to give folks a wire-once, change-ready infrastructure that connects to both LANs and SANs,” Ganthier says. “You can connect to Fibre Channel, Ethernet and iSCSI, all with one device. Any connection, any network. And you can do it at any speed. We’ve got two 10GB ports, but you can now carve up those ports into four separate bands and assign priorities to them.”

In other server news, HP’s BladeSystem Matrix software is now integrated with HP’s server automation technology to enable self-service provisioning of applications.

BladeSystem Matrix is software for provisioning blade servers with the corresponding storage and network connections. Integrated capacity planning tools let users adjust their infrastructure as business requirements change. The new version of HP BladeSystem Matrix also features automated storage tiering, which assigns storage based on application performance and availability requirements.

“BladeSystem Matrix allows you to provision everything from the boxes to the power to cooling, all the way to the application,” Mayer says.

On the power management front, HP unveiled software that’s designed to automate energy monitoring and control across the data center and eliminate unnecessary over-provisioning. HP Intelligent Power Discovery can collect and analyze data related to power usage from sources across the data center. The software culls data from IT systems, as well as third-party facility management tools (such as nlyte Software’s data center management software and Eaton Corporation’s Foreseer facilities software).

With the software, IT pros can view a real-time, graphical map of energy usage across servers and facilities. HP Intelligent Power Discovery also provides a view of each server’s physical location, the server rack and an analysis of power, thermal and electrical configurations. The software can automatically verify power redundancy and identify equipment connections to prevent errors and potential circuit overloads.

Upgrades to HP’s storage software are focused on simplifying data deduplication. Instead of requiring companies to deploy multiple products to tackle dedupe on different applications and platforms, the new HP StoreOnce can be deployed at multiple points in a converged infrastructure, reducing the number of times data has to be deduplicated.

StoreOnce is a single, unified deduplication architecture that companies can use on backup clients virtual appliances, inline appliances, and scale-out storage systems, Mayer says. Designed by HP Labs, the company’s research arm, this new class of deduplication software can improve data management efficiency and performance.

Source:-http://news.techworld.com/virtualisation/3227957/hp-announces-new-proliant-servers/

HP intros new intel servers, data center offerings

June 22nd, 2010

Hewlett-Packard is pushing forward its converged infrastructure initiative with a refreshed ProLiant server portfolio powered by the latest Xeon processors from Intel and host of new software products that offer greater manageability, networking capabilities and energy efficiency.

The refresh of the ProLiant G7 server and blade lines incorporates 10 systems—seven blade system and three rack-mount servers—including some powered by Intel’s high-end eight-core Xeon 7500 Series “Nehalem EX” chips, which are aimed at servers with four or more sockets.

The announcements made June 21 at the opening of the HP TechForum 2010 show in Las Vegas also includes new HP BladeSystem Matrix software that makes it easier for IT administrators to provision applications on the all-in-one data center system, expanded capabilities in HP’s Virtual Connect software, and improved use of power in the data center through a new greater automation and awareness within the network connecting HP servers.

The goal is to further HP’s vision of a converged data center, in which silos are broken down, and entire data center resources can be more easily managed, provisioned and deployed.

“The converged infrastructure is fundamentally how we believe the data center infrastructure will be delivered in the future,” Gary Thome, vice president of strategy and architecture for HP’s Infrastructure Software and Blades group, said in an interview.

HP is not alone in this thinking. IT vendors from Cisco Systems to Dell to IBM, as well as networking vendors like Juniper Networks and Enterasys, are pushing their own strategies around the idea a converged data center infrastructure, which essentially is the tight integration of server, storage, networking, management software and virtualization technologies. All of data center components can then be managed as a single resource.

For HP, the ProLiant servers form a key foundation for the vision, which also includes its Pro Curve networking business—recently augmented by the acquisition of 3Com—its storage business and management software.

HP is bringing the latest Intel Xeon processors into the mix. The company in March rolled out new ProLiants powered by Advanced Micro Devices’ new eight- to 12-core Opteron 6000 “Magny-Cours” processors. Now HP is bringing Intel’s Xeon 5600 and 7500 chips onto the scene.

HP’s rollout comes at the same time that Dell officials are boasting that they have already shipped tens of thousands of servers running the latest AMD and Intel processors. The new servers—both those powered by Intel chips and by the Opteron 6000 series—can offer up to a 200 percent boost in server availability.

The rack-mount servers offer up to 2 terabytes of memory and a 91:1 consolidation ratio. The new ProLiant G7 blades offer up to 1 TB of memory and can support up to four times more virtual machines than similar systems from other vendors, according to HP.

The blades also come with an integrated 10Gb Virtual Connect FlexFabric module that connects to various networks—including Ethernet, Fibre Channel and iSCSI—with one device, rather than many. The blades can support many more virtual machines while requiring much less hardware, Thome said.

HP also is making it easier for enterprises to get their applications deployed on the HP BladeSystem Matrix all-in-one data center offering. The Matrix software integrates more tight with HP Server Automation software, enabling one-touch self-provisioning of applications. Such capabilities can reduce TCO for businesses by as much as 56 percent, according to HP.

“In a matter of moments, I have my applications up and running on my infrastructure,” Thome said.

HP also unveiled its Intelligent Power Discovery offering, which is part of HP’s Data Center Smart Grid portfolio. Intelligent Power Discovery creates what HP officials are calling an energy-aware network that between ProLiant systems, third-party facility management solutions and data center power grids to give users a real-time look into their data center power use.

“You have a full view of what’s going on with [power consumption],” Thome said.

The solution lets businesses better provision energy in the data center, which HP says can save up to $5 million for every 1,000 servers in a year.

Source:http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Infrastructure/HP-Intros-New-Intel-Servers-Data-Center-Offerings-834730/

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