Posted on 09/17/2002 6:55:32 AM PDT by Knitebane
HP today announced that HP ProLiant servers have delivered the first Linux TPC-C benchmark results running Oracle 9i Real Application Clusters on the Red Hat Linux Advanced Server operating system. With this benchmark, HP ProLiant servers become the first industry-standard server platform to offer enterprise-class performance for a clustered Oracle database in a Linux environment.
Demonstrating the cost and maintenance benefits of running Linux-based hardware and software in enterprise-operating environments, an 8-node cluster of HP ProLiant DL580 servers using Intel® Pentium® III Xeon processors and HP StorageWorks MSA1000 storage system achieved 138,362.03 tpmC (transactions per minute) at a cost of $17.21/tpmC with Red Hat Linux Advanced Server.
TPC is a non-profit corporation founded to define transaction processing and database benchmarks and to disseminate objective, verifiable TPC performance data to the industry.
The results demonstrate that HP ProLiant servers currently offer the best price/performance ratio for companies choosing to deploy Oracle9i Real Application Clusters on Linux. Complete benchmark results and details are available at .
"HP is committed to working with leading partners, including Oracle and Red Hat, to bring proven, enterprise-ready deployment solutions for Linux to market," said Rick Becker, vice president, Operating System Alliances, and chief technology officer of software, HP Industry Standard Servers.
"Benchmark testing of this caliber requires commitment, experience and considerable resources -- all of which HP is dedicated to providing to validate Linux-based solutions for our industry-standard ProLiant servers.
The results of the benchmark prove that HP delivers one of the most cost-effective, high-performance, and manageable Linux-based database solutions available today."
"With Linux demonstrating that it's an attractive enterprise computing option, companies are looking to deploy proven applications for Linux," said Doug Kennedy, vice president, Platform Alliance, Platform Technologies Division, Oracle Corporation. "Through our strong engineering partnership with HP and extensive testing of our combined solutions, Oracle can now deliver our flagship database solutions on industry-standard HP ProLiant servers running Red Hat Linux Advanced Server with the same levels of reliability, scalability and performance enterprises have come to rely on from other operating systems."
"The benchmark on HP ProLiant servers demonstrates that Red Hat Linux Advanced Server is ready for robust, high-performance, highly available, enterprise-level applications," said Paul Cormier, executive vice president of engineering, Red Hat. "Red Hat will continue to work with leading partners, including HP and Oracle, to test and demonstrate the viability of running enterprise-ready applications on Red Hat Linux Advanced Server."
HP parallel database cluster solutions for Oracle 9i Real Application Clusters on Red Hat will be available soon as fully pre-installed solutions (hardware, software and installation included) via HP integration partners or as a custom-designed solution direct from HP.
HP has more servers certified for Red Hat Linux Advanced Server than any other technology provider. Information about additional HP ProLiant servers certified for Red Hat Linux Advanced Server is available at http://hardware.redhat.com/hcl/.
I find it notable that it beats out the Windows 2K offering running on identical hardware.
The last bastions of Microsoft benchmarks are falling in front of the Linux competition.
Wanna be Penguified? Just holla!
Got root?
Could you throw some more management buzzwords in there?
Thanks for the ping - good news for open source!
While I know I can buy a stripped machine and add item by item the Linux system and some linux based software, I am unaware of any OEM that is selling it whole, pre-loaded. Are you aware of such a pairing?
Rank | Company | System | tpmC | Price/tpmC | System Availability | Database | Operating System | TP Monitor | Date Submitted |
1 | ProLiant DL760-900-128P | 410,769 | 13.02 US $ | 10/15/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition | Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server | Microsoft COM+ | 09/19/01 | |
2 | ProLiant DL760-900-192P | 567,882 | 14.04 US $ | 10/15/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition | Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server | Microsoft COM+ | 09/19/01 | |
3 | ProLiant DL760-900-256P | 709,220 | 14.96 US $ | 10/15/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition | Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server | Microsoft COM+ | 09/19/01 | |
4 | IBM eServer xSeries 370 | 136,766 | 16.93 US $ | 09/20/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 | Microsoft Windows 2000 Datacenter Server | Microsoft COM+ | 04/24/01 | |
5 | HP ProLiant DL580-PDC 32P C/S | 138,362 | 17.21 US $ | 03/05/03 | Oracle 9i R2 Enterprise Edition | Red Hat Linux Advanced Server | BEA Tuxedo 8.0 | 09/16/02 | |
6 | HP ProLiant DL580-0200032P c/s | 137,260 | 18.46 US $ | 06/04/02 | Oracle 9i R2 Enterprise Edition | Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server | BEA Tuxedo 6.5 CTS | 06/04/02 | |
7 | IBM e(logo) xSeries 370 c/s | 440,879 | 19.35 US $ | 12/07/00 | IBM DB2 UDB 7.1 | Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server | Microsoft COM+ | 04/11/01 | |
8 | IBM e(logo) xSeries 370 c/s | 363,129 | 21.80 US $ | 05/31/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 | Microsoft Windows 2000 Datacenter Server | Microsoft COM+ | 04/10/01 | |
9 | IBM e(logo) xSeries 370 c/s | 688,220 | 22.58 US $ | 05/31/01 | Microsoft SQL Server 2000 | Microsoft Windows 2000 Datacenter Server | Microsoft COM+ | 04/10/01 |
But running on identical hardware, Linux runs faster, as shown by the chart.
Gee, I wonder what will happen when they put Linux on the same hardware as the number one scoring system?
Nice spin attempt, but once again, your FUD doesn't stand up to the light of day.
Back into your crack, cockroach, the lightswitch is on.
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