Re: Scaling noise

From: John Bradford
Date: Wed Sep 10 2003 - 04:49:03 EST


> | Once the option of running a firewall, a hot spare firewall, a
> | customer webserver, a hot spare customer webserver, mail server,
> | backup mail server, and a few virtual machines for customers, all on a
> | 1U box, why are you going to want to pay for seven or more Us in a
> | datacentre, plus extra network hardware?
>
> If you plan to run anything else on your firewall, and use the same
> machine as a hot spare for itself, I don't want you as my ISP.
> Reliability is expensive, and what you describe is known as a single
> point of failure.

Of course, you would be right if we were talking about current
microcomputer architectures. I was talking about the possibility of
current mainframe technologies being implemented in future
microcomputer architectures.

Today, it is perfectly acceptable, normal, and commonplace to run hot
spares of various images on a single Z/Series box. Infact, the
ability to do that is often a large factor in budgeting for the
initial investment.

The hardware is fault tollerant by design. Only extreme events like a
fire or flood at the datacentre are likely to cause downtime of the
whole machine. I don't consider that any less secure than a rack of
small servers.

Different images running in their own LPARs, or under Z/Vm are
separated from each other. Assessments of their isolation have been
done, and ratings are available.

You absolutely _can_ use the same physical hardware to run a hot
spare, and protect yourself against software failiures. A process can
monitor the virtual machine, and switch to the hot spare if it fails.

Add to that the fact that physical LAN cabling is reduced. The amount
of network hardware is also reduced. That adds to reliability.

John.
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