SEQUENT: Sequent showcases performance and scalability of NUMA-Q 2000 at OOW
* NUMA-Q 2000 supports 10,000 concurrent users in three-tier environment demo of high-end network computing solutions
LOS ANGELES - Sequent Computer Systems,has announced its first public demonstration of a multi-tier, production application supporting 10,000 concurrent users on its highly-scalable NUMA-Q 2000 data centre server. The mid-sized system will be demonstrated all week for Oracle OpenWorld (OOW) '97 attendees in Los Angeles. The week-long demonstration utilises a Web-enabled version of Oracle's own internal Worldwide Support Incident Tracking System (ITS) client/server application and incorporates Sequent's mid-range, Windows NT-based NTX 2000 servers at the middle tier.
Showcasing the high-end capacity and performance of NUMA-Q 2000, the demonstration will show Sequent supporting 10,000 thin-clients connected to a single, mid-sized 16-processor NUMA-Q 2000 data centre server. The proof-of-concept, intranet version of Oracle's production ITS application system has supported up to 20,000 users simultaneously in a "stress test" of NUMA-Q 2000. Its viability now proven on the NUMA-Q architecture, the Web-based ITS system is planned for production use within Oracle.
"Sequent's NUMA-Q 2000 is the perfect complement to Oracle8 for building huge Web-enabled and client/server systems for businesses the world over," Casey Powell, chairman and CEO, Sequent Computer Systems, said. "In similar demonstrations, our competitors have required complex clustering set-ups to achieve the same scalability and system overhead. NUMA-Q clearly demonstrates here that it's ideal for a world where processing requirements are moving away from the client to powerful mainframe-scale systems at the back-end of the network."
Sequent's NUMA-Q 2000 system is designed to take full advantage of the Oracle8 database's scalability and performance, supporting tens-of-thousands of users and tens-of-terabytes of data. The NUMA-Q architecture, based on four-processor building blocks, called quads, enables companies to build systems of up to 252 microprocessors in a single server.
The OOW demonstration system features one 8-quad (32 Intel Pentium Pro microprocessors) NUMA-Q 2000 system partitioned so that four quads act as the back-end Oracle8 data server and the remaining four quads generate a workload of 10,000 concurrent users through Rational Software's PreVue application.
At the middle tier, Sequent will use its four-processor NTX 2000 application servers. Also in the booth, Sequent will provide several network computers so that visitors can view a thin-client front-end accessing the Oracle8 ITS database via NUMA-Q 2000. Disk drives from EMC Corporation provide the storage subsystems for the demonstration.
About Sequent Computer Systems
Sequent Computer Systems is uniquely capable of delivering robust and scalable Data Centre Ready open systems solutions. Sequent minimises customers' risk, enabling implementation of complex business applications that support critical needs, based on the breakthrough Sequent NUMA-Q architecture, a comprehensive portfolio of proven migration services and offerings, and an established set of partnerships with the industry's best in class.
Sequent has installed over 1,200 high-end open computer systems in the UK with customers including: BT, Lloyds TSB, Employment Service, Lombard North Central, Norwich Union, Reuters, European Passenger Services (Eurostar), Virgin Atlantic, NEXT, Mercury One2One, Milk Marque, Tate & Lyle, Essex Police and the Inland Revenue.
Sequent's NUMA-Q 2000 customers include: Boeing, Burlington Coat Factory, Ford Motor Company, Millipore Corporation, National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., Polizei HH, Source Informatics, Telkom South Africa, University of Auckland and Unocal 76 Products Company. |