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Date:      Thu, 2 Jan 2003 13:13:15 -0800
From:      Robert Clark <res03db2@verizon.net>
To:        Darren Henderson <darren@nighttide.net>
Cc:        chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: mystery technologies?
Message-ID:  <20030102131315.A22650@darkstar.gte.net>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.44.0204121833110.13970-100000@jasper>; from darren@nighttide.net on Fri, Apr 12, 2002 at 06:33:31PM -0400
References:  <Pine.BSF.4.44.0204121641320.13354-100000@localhost> <Pine.BSF.4.44.0204121833110.13970-100000@jasper>

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Sounds like the "grid computing" stuff that IBM was doing.

[RC]


On Fri, Apr 12, 2002 at 06:33:31PM -0400, Darren Henderson wrote:
> 
> I just came across a banner ad on daemonnews that points to a service I'm
> a bit perplexed by, http:/johncompanies.com/collocation/
> 
> It offers "A collocated FreeBSD 4.5 server, with one IP, and 2 gigabytes
> of disk space" for $65 with 40Gb of transfer per month, tripple homed etc.
> 
> Sounds nice but... "Our steep discounts are made possible by technology
> that allows us to segment mainframe class servers into multiple,
> independent servers - each on a completely autonomous system." I don't
> believe I have heard of anyone porting FreeBSD to any big iron, perhaps
> some old Alpha mainframes? But I haven't heard of folks running multiple
> instances of the system on one box...
> 
> It further claims each machine has at least four processors and many
> gigabytes of ram. and "at any given moment you will have access to a large
> majority of these resources" and further "This is because usage is highly
> non-parallel, and because server instances can be transparently moved from
> one physical server to the next." I'm not entirely sure what this is
> saying... first it sounds like you will be sharing a single server with
> others (jailed instances of the operating system maybe?) and in the next
> its implying, to me at least, that the operating system is capable of
> floating transparently across hardware clusters.
> 
> Is this kind of stuff really out there?
> 
> There are other curious statements, "We have in place sophisticated
> methods of performance 'smoothing' between our host machines that allows us
> to transparently place each server instance in an optimal performance
> environment." Load balancing operating system instances? "...there is no
> need to 'fsck' or otherwise maintain the filesystem after a crash."
> 
> Anyone have any idea what these folks are doing or had any experience with
> them?
> 
> ______________________________________________________________________
> Darren Henderson                                  darren@nighttide.net
> 
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> 
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