IBM embraces - wtf - Sun's Solaris across x86 server line
Unix hatred turns to love
Posted in Servers, 16th August 2007 19:45 GMT
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A few years back, Sun abandoned its version of Solaris for x86 chips, only to regret and then reverse the decision. Sun moved to view Solaris x86 as a nice competitor to Linux and Windows and has been trying hard to create an enthusiastic developer community around the OS.
Sun's major rivals, as mentioned, have dabbled with Solaris x86 but never really backed the OS as Schwartz hoped - and often promised. But now IBM is on board and things look rosier for the code.
Zeitler sounded bullish about the prospects of running Solaris on the System Z mainframes.
"It is certainly something we would like to see happen," he said. "We don't have an agreement signed. (But) you should look to see it happen in the future for sure."
In a real shocker, Zeitler also noted that he "would like to see" some Solaris on System P work, which would have Solaris compete head-to-head with AIX.
Additionally, Sun and IBM have launched a co-engineering effort to improve the performance of Solaris on IBM's hardware.
"The short term advantage to Sun is that this widens the market for its operating system," said Gabriel Consulting Group analyst Dan Olds. "In the long-term, the advantage is less clear.
"For IBM, it will now have scalable x86 gear poised to take hardware wins away from Sun. Plus, it will get the ability in the future to host truly massive numbers of Solaris apps on the mainframe."
Solaris x86 enjoys a relatively small but devoted developer community. The Linux crowd seems to have taken notice of this with zealots bashing Solaris x86 at every chance during recent open source trade shows. Such concern is understandable given that Solaris offers a number of high-end features not found with Linux. (Note to self: Start flame war.)
IBM's support for Solaris x86 could give the developer community a real boost, since Big Blue opens up a broader market. In addition, IBM's move appears to confirm that there is strong demand for the OS among corporate customers. It's hard to imagine IBM agreeing to this arrangement without customers applying serious pressure.
"It can't be denied that Solaris x86 has reached some kind of critical mass," Olds said.
While still cynical about the broad adoption of Solaris by x86 OEMs, we can't help but wonder if Schwartz is actually onto something here. We've never taken his quips about AIX and HP-UX being dead very seriously and still don't.
But what happens if HP and Dell fall in line too? Does it make sense for IBM and HP to spend millions on their own versions of Unix in that scenario or does it make more sense to see Sun like a Microsoft or Red Hat as a true market wide OS supplier? ®
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