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Linux is the cloud’s future: IBM Canada

Linux is the cloud’s future: IBM Canada

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 09 Mar 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

At a ComputerWorld Canada Tech Insights panel discussion about Linux-based clouds, IBM Canada Linux champion tells how Linux is the past, present and future of cloud computing. University of Toronto’s SciNet HPC consortium spoke about its use of Linux. WITH VIDEO

TORONTO--While cloud computing is merely a label given to the latest evolution of what organizations have been doing for a long time, one consistent component in the cloud has been Linux, said Jim Elliott, IBM Canada Ltd.’s Linux champion.

 

“Linux is the past, present and future,” said Elliott to an audience of IT pros during a ComputerWorld Canada Tech Insights event entitled The Linux-Powered Cloud.

 

Low-cost Linux-based systems were what dot.com-era startups in the late 1990s were built on, said Elliott. Today, Linux is the dominant cloud computing operating system with large and well-known public cloud infrastructures like Google and Amazon using Linux, he said. And, in the future, the role of Linux isn’t changing, said Elliott: “Linux will be the cloud’s future.”

 

The benefits of Linux, said Elliott, include the ability to scale across the smallest to largest of systems, available patch management and security software, attractive licensing costs and terms, and the extensive application and partner ecosystem.


http://video.itworldcanada.com/?bcpid=7044989001&bctid=71186621001

 
While Elliott believes Linux is the ideal choice for cloud computing, he said any operating system will work because it’s really just a matter of making applications available.

 

Elliott breaks down cloud computing into three essential components. One, virtualization allows resources to be shared in a dynamic fashion. Two, standardization lets systems in a heterogeneous environment communicate. Third, automation to manage the plethora of servers whether physical or virtualized.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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Comments (1)

Ron Van Holst
by Ron Van Holst 3/12/2010 12:57:19 PM

This article opens the subject of HPC and the cloud. The video states that Linux is dominant in the cloud because it's cheap and was the choice of innovators who started small and have now become leaders in cloud computing. Although this article compares the new SciNet machine to cloud computing that comparison is very weak as research machines at universities have always been shared by researchers from different universities, they just need to register for an account, log in, ftp their data, and submit there research jobs to the batch scheduler. Cloud computing abstracts the computational hardware from the software using layers of virtualization middleware. Most HPC applications require close coupling to very specific computing requirements (number of cpus, memory allocation, IO bandwidth, IPC bandwidth etc..), the abstractions of cloud computing necessary to provide its benefits currently are incompatible with the tight requirements of HPC. Note that the new SciNet system has a general purpose cluster and a "tightly coupled" cluster for that reason. In the context of this article, it's not specified which of these machines is AIX or Linux. The video noted that the users could specify the OS they needed, and that it could be provided on demand with a reboot - that means the application is running native, not on a virtual machine. Although the SciNet website has a nice photo gallery of the construction of their new machine there is little detail on the architecture of this system. It would also be nice to see more detail on how they achieved a PUE of 1.16. Another university system in Quebec has provided lots of very interesting material online on the architecture of their new HPC system, and how they achieved a very low PUE. It would be great to hear more about the new SciNet machine and how it is helping enable Canadian innovation.

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