Oracle has made its first move into the hardware space, unveiling a pair of
servers co-branded with HP at the OpenWorld conference in San Francisco.
The company claims that the products, which include a rack-mounted storage
appliance and a complete database server system, will enable the fastest
database performance to date.
The centrepiece of the rollout is the
Oracle/HP
Exadata Storage Server. The server combines 12 disk storage drives with two
Intel quad-core processors and Oracle's Enterprise Linux and Parallel Query
Database software offerings, as well as two Infiniband connections running at
1Gbps.
Oracle chief executive Larry Ellison told attendees during his keynote
address that the principal feature of the storage server is the ability to serve
network users with answers to their queries, rather than simply returning blocks
of data.
In doing so, the server avoids the slowdown which generally comes when
storage systems eclipse the 1TB mark, according to Oracle.
"There is a huge data bandwidth problem," Ellison said of conventional
servers. "You have storage systems that can store 10TB of data, but they can't
move that data off the disk and into the database servers very fast."
Ellison blamed much of the problem on a lack of scaling. As the amount of
storage increases, the means for managing it does not, eventually slowing
database performance.
The company hopes that the onboard processing and management muscle in the
Exadata servers solves the problem by upping the means for handling storage each
time a new unit is added.
"With the [Exadata server] every time you add another storage server you're
not just adding disk capacity, you're adding two Infiniband pipes, two
processors and more cache, so the system remains in balance," explained Ellis
on.
Not content with the storage device by itself, Oracle is also rolling out a
complete database server offering. The new
Database
Machine (PDF) will carry the same HP/Oracle co-branding, with HP assembling
and providing hardware support for the system.
The new system links the new storage server with rack-mounted database server
units and aims to consolidate multiple server units into a single enclosure.
Ellison was not hesitant to declare the Database Machine the fastest database
system on the market. He noted that in test cases, customers had found the
systems to be up to 30 times faster than previous database setups.
Both the Datacenter Machine and individual Exadata Programmable Storage
Server units for x86 Linux database systems are currently available.
The company plans to expand the Exadata units to other versions of its
database offering, although no specific dates were given.
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