Open source database provider
Ingres is
preparing to launch a database appliance later this year that allows users to
provision a new server with an operating system and production-ready database
within minutes.
Project Icebreaker is referred to as a 'software appliance'. It is different
from software bundles because the components have been tweaked to work together,
and require minimal setup.
This aspect makes it similar to consumer appliances that hide most of their
complexity from the end user.
In addition to the easy set-up, software appliances are less expensive to
maintain than traditional stacks of separate software applications, according to
Ingres chief technology officer Dave Dargo.
"What is most important is the integrated maintenance aspect. There is a
single [phone] number for support, there is a single maintenance stream that is
delivered," Dargo told
vnunet.com.
"There is no longer the necessity of applying separate operating system
maintenance and server database maintenance. It's all part of a single stream."
Dargo said in an
interview
with vnunet.com earlier this year that Ingres would launch software
appliances.
Users will be able to put the appliance on a new server or as a virtual
compartment in combination with virtualisation software, Dargo suggested.
The appliance uses the regular Ingres database software on top of a stripped
down Linux version supplied by
rPath, a
company specialising in software appliances.
The Linux software is stripped of all unnecessary components, making it only
20 to 30 per cent of the size of a general purpose Linux distribution such as
Red Hat or
SuSE.
Eliminating the obsolete Linux elements increases the system's reliability
and limits the risk of security vulnerabilities, Dargo claimed.
He expects the appliance's stability to appeal to enterprises as a production
database, and to developers requiring a new database that is easy to set up for
testing purposes.
The appliance will be available to end users free of charge. Ingres has a "
business relationship" with rPath for support and the creation of the
database-tailored Linux version.
Ingres' business model is based on offering support services for its database
at a fee.
The company is rolling out the product to early customers this week, and it
should be available for download to the general public by the end of the year.
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