HP BladeSystem
BladeSystem is a brand name used by Hewlett Packard for blade server machines, that was introduced in October 2004. [1] [2] [3]
The BladeSystem forms part of the HP Converged Systems, which use a common Converged Infrastructure architecture for server, storage, and networking products.[4] Designed for enterprise installations of 100 to more than 1,000 Virtual machines, the HP ConvergedSystem 700 is configured with BladeSystem servers.[5] When managing a software-defined data center, a System administrator can perform automated lifecycle management for BladeSystems using HP OneView for converged infrastructure management.[6]
The BladeSystem allows users to build a high density system, up to 128 servers in each rack.[7]
Contents
Components[edit]
Enclosures[edit]
Currently HP offers 2 types of enclosures in its Bladesystem lineup:
c7000[edit]
HP c7000 enclosure was announced in June 2006. In 2007 there was a minor update including larger Onboard Administrator display (3 in up from 2 in). The next update was in 2009 and brought RoHS compatibility, increased backplane speed (5Tbit/s up from 4Tbit/s) and 1Gbit/s Outboard Administrator connectivity. Fourth version – c7000 Platinum was announced in February 2013. It features location discovery services, thermal discovery services and redesigned backplane. The new backplane increased aggregate bandwidth 40% from 5 to 7 Tbit/s to allow use newest high-speed interconnect modules (such as 16Gbit/s FC and 56Gbit/s FDR InfiniBand). Also the new Platinum Plus rating power supplies were announced with higher efficiency than previous Gold Plus rating power supplies.[8]
All versions of the enclosure occupy 10 rack units and can accommodate up to 16 half-height blade servers. It includes space for 6 power supplies (single-phase, three-phase or a −48V DC), 10 cooling fans, 8 single-wide (such as Gigabit Ethernet or FC) or 4 double-wide (such as 40Gb Ethernet or Infiniband) interconnect modules (that allows for up to 4 redundant interconnect fabrics)
c3000[edit]
HP c3000 enclosure was announced in August 2007. Updated version of the enclosure called c3000 Platinum was announced in February 2013
All versions of the enclosure occupy 6 rack units or can be used as a standalone unit (with optional tower conversion kit) It can accommodate up to 8 half-height blade servers. It includes space for 6 power supplies (single-phase, or a -48V DC), 6 cooling fans, 4 single-wide or 2 single-wide and one double-wide interconnect modules
Server blades[edit]
HP offers general-purpose Proliant server blades as well as Integrity (based on Intel Itanium CPU) and specialized Proliant aimed at workstation virtualization. Servers can use half-height/full-height and single-wide/double-wide/quad-wide form factors. Apart from built-in Ethernet network adapters, optional mezzanine cards can be installed to further increase connectivity options.
In current generation (Gen9) half-height Proliant blade servers with up to 2 CPU and full-height 4 CPU servers are available.
Networking[edit]
Several networking options are available for the HP Bladesystem, these include but are not limited to :
- HP's proprietary Virtual Connect modules
- Cisco switches and fabric extenders
- Gigabit networks switches
- HP Procurve switches
- HP Comware based switches
- Passthrough modules
- Mellanox Infiniband
- Brocade SAN-switches
- Cisco SAN-switches
Storage[edit]
Storage options include:
- Internal server HDD's (usually 2 to 4 with hot-swap capability)
- Internal USB, SD or microSD slot (can be used for installing hypervisor)
- Connecting to external SAN via FC, SAS or iSCSI mezzanine card
- Storage blade (with large number of internal HDD's)
- Tape blade (half-height blade unit hosting LTO tape drive and designed to connect to adjacent blade server)
External links[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ http://www.hp.com/go/bladesystem
- ^ http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/042009-hp-bladesystem.html
- ^ http://archive.is/20120717211616/http://whitepapers.techrepublic.com.com/abstract.aspx?docid=1930905
- ^ Rouse, Margaret. (2013–12). “Definition: Converged Infrastructure,” TechTarget.com. [1]
- ^ Morgan, Timothy Prickett. (2013-4-29). “HP mashes up ProLiant, Integrity, BladeSystem, and Moonshot server business,” The Register.com. [2]
- ^ Tiano, Luigi. (2013-9-28). “HP OneView Managing the Converged Infrastructure Data Center,” 1CloudRoad. [3]
- ^ "HP Puts 1000 Cores in a Single Rack". Tom's Hardware. June 11, 2008. Retrieved 14 Apr 2013.
- ^ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/02/19/hp_bladesystem_chassis_switch_workstation/. Missing or empty
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