HP ProLiant 1850R Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative

HP ProLiant 1850R Manual

HP ProLiant 1850R manual content summary:

  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 1
    number of business-critical applications running on Intel-based systems coupled with the need for high availability and continuous data access is driving the demand for clustered servers. While clusters help solve problems systems management interface should create more value. It appears that Compaq
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 2
    of the significant components of the E2000 Platform Architecture include:  2-, 4-, & 8-processor Compaq ProLiant Servers  Intel 32-bit Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Xeon, and 64-bit Merced servers  Enterprise Management Utilities for large scale application processing  Fibre Channel-based storage
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 3
    Proliant Cluster as a base  Industry Standard Server and Operating System Support  Digital and Tandem Legacy System Support The management and administration redundancies caused by having to support six different operating system environments and two processor architectures has compelled Compaq
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 4
    problem device for further analysis and repair  Extensible for third party management system provider interfaces The Cluster Monitor, to be delivered as a subsystem of Compaq's Insight Manager XE, will be included with all Compaq servers. A major benefit to system performing a specific set of
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 5
    Cluster Manager Extensions selected for the specific cluster node or cluster itself. In order to help the administrator visualize what event(s) or device(s) are making the cluster unstable, Compaq has provided a set of selectable monitor programs for systems devices, and cluster manager health. The
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 6
    supplied a simple method of implementing the macro approach, whereby all the administrator needs to do is click on the color-coded icon for the cluster or the device, and the system specific device causing the problem. In HRG's view, the Compaq Cluster Monitor represents a significant step in Compaq
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 7
    meets their most current needs. Compaq Intelligent Cluster Administrator is an innovative cluster utility that makes cluster administration easier and to meet Compaq's Cluster Management Vision and strategy for consolidated systems and cluster management  Designed to integrate with Compaq's Insight
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 8
    allowing users to monitor and manage a Compaq Proliant Cluster from either an Internet Explorer or Server. By selecting a configuration entry from the tree structure, the administrator can:  add/change/delete a group or resource  start/stop a service, a node, a cluster  transfer a service
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 9
    export utilities are system management interface. Comparable Alternatives Both IBM and HP HP MC/ServiceGuard and Microsoft Cluster Server. This is a heavy investment in overhead if you are not committed to HP's Open View framework manager. While it has the advantage of supporting both HP-UX MC/Service
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 10
    System Management Server (SMS). It is a hardware centric tool that provides GUI based cluster administration, dynamic wizards, configurable alerts, and a single console view of a cluster. Product Summary Compaq Cluster Administrator provides significant administrative services that are unique in the
  • HP ProLiant 1850R | Compaq's Cluster Management Initiative - Page 11
    utilize to reduce learning, reduce their cost of ownership and make their most crucial operations activity even easier. Compaq's new cluster administration and monitoring tools are a significant step towards reducing system management costs, improving administrator efficiency, and minimizing system
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HARVARD RESEARCH GROUP
±
HARVARD RESEARCH GROUP
²
Box 297
²
HARVARD, MA 01451 USA
²
http:/www.hrgresearch.com
Copyright 1999 Harvard Research Group.
Reproduction is forbidden unless authorized.
For additional copies call (978) 263-3399
COMPAQ’S CLUSTER MANAGEMENT INITIATIVE
Harvard Research Group has determined through extensive primary and secondary
research that today’s business managers want Enterprise Management Systems that can
help them gain control over the business process and reduce complexity. IT managers are
increasingly looking for ways to effectively and efficiently implement new technologies
while at the same time achieve a seamless and cost effective way to manage their systems
and software. They want to "virtualize" their system environment and manage it as if it
were a single logical system.
At the same time, the rapid growth in the number of
business-critical applications running on Intel-based systems coupled with the need for
high availability and continuous data access is driving the demand for clustered servers.
While clusters help solve problems with availability and scalability, they also bring
increased complexity, immature management tools, and added cost. This situation is most
evident in the Intel server market where the use of Microsoft Cluster Server (MSCS) is
accelerating faster than the capability of the tools that manage it.
Harvard Research Group has spoken with more than 700 users of highly available
systems. Our findings and research show that users of high availability systems typically
have mixed operating system and hardware environments, and believe that current cluster
system management tools are too complex and costly.
They view the current set of
cluster administration tools as point products that are difficult to integrate, proprietary in
nature, and require too much time and money to properly implement.
Many of them have
expressed the desire to reduce the complexity of cluster configuration, administration,
and problem determination / resolution. At the same time, they have expressed a desire to
minimize the number of interfaces and tools they need to manage their system and
clustered environments.
Harvard Research Group believes that all clustered solutions, still lack adequate and
extensible cluster monitor / management tools.
While there are management tools that
partially address this issue for a particular operating environment (HP/UX, Solaris, NT),
they tend to be limited in their functionality and unable to address the larger issue of
managing multiple and dispersed cluster environments. This is contributing to the high
cost of ownership of server hardware and causing potential profits to be consumed by
increased administrative staff and lower user productivity. Studies have shown that
deploying manageable systems in concert with well managed IT processes can create
actual value for a company. It stands to reason, then, that tightly integrating cluster
management tools with the non-clustered systems management interface should create
more value.
It appears that Compaq, in concert with its acquisitions of Tandem Computer and Digital
Equipment Corporation, is building itself into an enterprise systems provider with some
key strides in changing the direction of enterprise systems management. In doing so,
Compaq has defined some interesting goals and is delivering on these goals.
Compaq’s E2000 Platform Architecture and Cluster Management Vision