Hewlett-Packard is improving the availability of its servers in
compute-intensive environments through enhancements to its Serviceguard Solutions
software and HP-UX 11i operating system.
The upgrades to the two HP technologies, announced April 17, are designed to
protect servers and mission-critical applications as a business scales its Unix
environments.
HP Serviceguard A.11.19 software now offers online reconfiguration,
integrated workload balancing and predictable performance as a system scales.
Serviceguard—which is part of HP’s Virtual Server Environment software suite—is
designed to protect mission-critical applications from a wide variety of
hardware and software failures by organizing multiple servers or server
partitions into an enterprise cluster, and then monitoring the health of each
node.
In addition, the latest Serviceguard offering restores service 83 percent
faster than the previous version, eliminates all planned downtime that comes
with typical cluster maintenance and configuration tasks, integrates workload
balancing capabilities, and improves security for privacy data, in compliance
with IPv6 and mixed IPv4 and IPv6 environments, which is required by U.S. and
Japanese regulations.
The new Serviceguard release also uses a graphical display of the
relationships between applications to reduce administration costs by 25
percent.
The HP-UX 11i v3 Update 4—which runs on HP’s Integrity systems powered by
Intel’s Itanium processor—comes with greater automation and simpler management,
HP officials said. Users will be able to deploy high-bandwidth replicated
servers in hours rather than days through downloads of the HP-UX 11i system
software.
In addition, new software versions can now be installed online through HP’s
Online Operating System Update service, which will cut in half the planned
downtime that’s usually required when upgrading from older HP-UX 11i v3
releases.
The new OS, through HP’s Green Active Processors technology, also can
dynamically control the power needed by processors based on workload
requirements, which will reduce power costs. A feature called Disk Scrub also
overwrites and erases disks, protecting sensitive data.
“This new version of HP-UX will enable customers to better handle orders for
new business and reduce the costs of their technology infrastructures,” Brian
Cox, director of software planning and marketing for HP’s Business Critical
Systems group, said in a statement.