IBM Power Systems

Power Systems is a family of server computers from IBM that are based on its POWER processors. These accelerated computing servers are built for modern analytics, high-performance computing HPC, and Artificial intelligence (AI).[1] The versions of System Software (AIX, IBM i, Red Hat, SUSE, Ubuntu) that are compatible with various Power Systems processors are at this link.[2]

Also known asIBM Power (2008-2009)
ManufacturerInternational Business Machines Corporation (IBM)
Release dateApril 2, 2008
CPUIBM POWER
PredecessorIBM System i,
IBM System p
WebsiteOfficial website IBM IT Infrastructure

History

Predecessors

IBM had two distinct POWER- and PowerPC-based hardware lines since the early 1990s:

  • Servers running processors based on the IBM PowerPC-AS architecture in the AS/400 family (later known as iSeries, then System i), running OS/400 (later known as i5/OS, and now IBM i)
  • Servers and workstations using IBM POWER and PowerPC processors in the RS/6000 family (later known as pSeries, then System p), running IBM AIX and Linux.

They merged to use essentially the same hardware platform in 2001/2002 with the introduction of the POWER4 processor. After that, there was little difference between both the "p" and the "i" hardware; the only differences were in the software and services offerings. With the introduction of the POWER5 processor in 2004, even the product numbering was synchronized. The System i5 570 was virtually identical to the System p5 570.

Release

Sierra supercomputer, based on Power System nodes

In April 2008, IBM officially merged the two lines of servers and workstations under the same name, Power,[3] and later Power Systems, with identical hardware and a choice of operating systems, software, and service contracts,[4] based formerly on a POWER6 architecture. PowerPC line was discontinued.

In February 2010, IBM announced new models with the new POWER7 microprocessor.

Systems

IBM Power Systems models:

  • 2008/2009
    • BladeCenter JS12 Express
    • BladeCenter JS22 Express
    • BladeCenter JS23 Express
    • BladeCenter JS43 Express
    • Power 520 Express
    • Power 550 Express
    • Power 560 Express
    • Power 570
    • Power 575
    • Power 595
  • 2010
    • BladeCenter PS700 Express
    • BladeCenter PS701 Express
    • BladeCenter PS702 Express
    • Power 710 Express
    • Power 720 Express
    • Power 730 Express
    • Power 740 Express
    • Power 750 Express
    • Power 755  for high-performance computing (HPC)
    • Power 770
    • Power 780
    • Power 795
  • 2011
    • Power 775  also known as PERCS
  • 2012
    • Flex System p260
    • Flex System p460
    • Flex System p24L (Linux only)
  • 2014
IBM Power S822LC
POWER8-based IBM Power Systems E870 can be configured with up to 80 processor cores and 8 TB of memory.
    • Power Systems S812L
    • Power Systems S822 and S822L
    • Power Systems S814
    • Power Systems S824 and S824L
    • Power Systems E870
    • Power Systems E880
  • 2015
    • Power Systems E850
    • Power Systems S812L
    • Power Systems S822LC

IBM PowerVM provides the virtualisation solution for Power Systems servers.

See also

Preceded by
IBM System i
IBM Power Systems
2008 - current
Preceded by
IBM System p

References

  1. "Accelerated Computing". IBM. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  2. "System Software Maps". IBM. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  3. Haff, Gordon. "IBM: i + p = Power". CNET. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
  4. "IBM Power Systems: What is the new Power Equation". IBM. April 2, 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-08-02.
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