
® V5R2 and OS/400 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Linux Today Distributors iSeries Offering for Linux SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 7 (64/32) 1-4 processor 820 Turbolinux 7 (64/32) Linux Setup Wizard Red Hat 7.1 (32) References Opportunities Churchill China Server Consolidation Korea Van Communications OS/400 Integration and Expansion City of Orem Application Flexibility Key Capabilities Applications 1 to n-way Servers Included with Distributions Up to 31 Partitions Apache, Samba, Sendmail MTA, MySQL Shared Processor Open Source Tomcat, OpenOffice Granular Movement New ISVs Independent Movement eOne, Bynari, Mapics, Symantec Virtual Ethernet See: iSeries Solutions Guide for Linux Managed Storage Network Virtual I/O iSeries Linux Test Drive Simple Setup and Admin Over 550 Nominations OS/400 Integration Over 100 Completed 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries 2002 Linux Planned Deliveries January 2Q Plans SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 7 (SLES 7) SuSE SLES 7 Update 64/32-bit kernel Includes Java 1.3.1, ODBC, and Fibre Channel Includes Java 1.3.0 Direct Fibre Channel Disk Adapter Support** February For attachment to ESS - RPQ For Hardware Red Hat 7.1 for iSeries 3Q 2002 Plans 32-bit kernel Support for Globus Toolkit 2.0 March With V5R2 Java 1.3.1 ** Dynamic movement of Shared Processor Linux ODBC Driver ** Resources Technology Preview DB2 7.2 & WAS 4.0 iSeries Navigator LPAR Support iSeries Offering for Linux Shared Read Only Virtual Disk April BRMS Automation Turbolinux Server 7 for iSeries 4Q 2002 / 1Q 2003 Plans 64/32-bit kernel SuSE SLES 8* Includes Java 1.3.1 and ODBC 64/64-bit Application Support Symantec Enterprise Firewall SOD Hardware RAID Support for Direct Disk DB2 Universal Database and WebSphere DB2 8.0 and WebSphere Application Server Application Server SOD 5.0 for Linux Announcement UnitedLinux *** *SuSE SLES 8 is not announced as of June 2002 ** Available on www.ibm.com/iseries/linux *** SuSE, Turbolinux, Caldera, and Conectiva announced UnitedLinux; see http://www.unitedlinux.com/en/index.html 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: 2002 Linux Planned Deliveries On June 4, 2002, four of the Linux distributors (SuSE, Turbolinux, Caldera, and Conectiva) announced UnitedLinux. What this means to iSeries, is that two distributions will be supported in the future instead of three - Red Hat and UnitedLinux. The first UnitedLinux distribution is targeted for 4Q 2002. This is a non IBM announcement and can be viewed at the web address shown on the bottom of the foil. 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Agenda Linux library support for 64-bit Linux applications iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux Linux Partition Management Enhancements Shared read-only virtual disk I/O support Miscellaneous enhancements Linux in a PASE environment Statements of direction 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries 64/64 Bit Linux Distributions 64-Bit Application Support 64/32 provides the 64-bit kernel support, runs 32-bit applications 64/64 Linux Environment 64/64 provides 64-Bit 64-Bit Application Support 32-Bit Middleware and 32-Bit Application Support, without penalty Middleware and Applications Applications Advantages of 64-Bit Application Support 64-Bit Libraries, 64-bit32-Bit kernel Libraries, Compilers, and Larger Address Space Compilers,Hardware and Tools Tools Larger Memory Scalability 64-Bit Linux Kernel iSeries Partition Working with Distributors and ISVs to make the appropriate 64-bit applications and middleware available 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux Extending the Reach to iSeries Data Downloadable from the Web http://www.ibm.com/eserver/iseries/linux/odbc Announced with V5R1 (5722-LO1) Available since March 28, 2002 Two versions of the driver exist For Linux running in an iSeries LPAR For Intel-based Linux workstations 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux The iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux allows you to access iSeries database data from a Linux application written to the ODBC API. It is based on the ODBC driver in the Client Access Express for Windows product. As in that driver, the Linux ODBC driver uses the iSeries database Host Servers as the access point to the system, using a socket connection. The iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux is an ODBC 3.5 ANSI driver with the ability to store and process UNICODE data. Two versions of the driver exist for Linux running in an iSeries LPAR. for Intel-based Linux workstations. The iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux is a no charge iSeries licensed program -- 5733-LO1 and is available only as a web download. 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries ODBC Driver for Linux - PowerPC Version For Linux running in an iSeries LPAR It can run on Linux in any of the following environments: Red Hat, Turbo, and SuSE PowerPC - runs in an iSeries partition, pSeries, or any PowerPC Download ODBC Driver iSeriesODBC-5.1.0-0.xx.ppc.rpm 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: ODBC Driver for Linux - PowerPC Version The ODBC Driver for Linux - PowerPC Version is the version you would install on a powerPC platform. You would for example need to install it on Linux in an secondary partition to enable applications to access database data on an iSeries server, or an OS/400 partition that is at V4R5 or above. 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries ODBC Driver for Linux - Intel Version A version of the driver exists for Linux running in an iSeries LPAR It can run on Linux in any of the following environments: Red Hat, Turbo, and SuSE PowerPC - runs in an iSeries partition, pSeries, or any PowerPC Download ODBC Driver iSeriesODBC-5.1.0-0.xx.i386.rpm 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: ODBC Driver for Linux - Intel Version The ODBC Driver for Linux - Intel Version is the version you would install on a Intel platform. You would for example need to install it on your Intel PC to enable applications to access database data on an iSeries server. 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Requirements ODBC Driver for Linux OS/400 requirements for running iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux Only connect to servers running OS/400 Version 4 Release 5 or above The QUSER user profile must be enabled The host servers must be started TCP/IP must be running Linux requirements for running iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux Run one of the following versions of Linux: RedHat for Intel version 7.x RedHat for iSeries version 7.x SuSe for Intel version 7.x SuSe for iSeries version 7.x TurboLinux for Intel version 7.x TurboLinux for iSeries version 7.x UnixODBC driver manager version 2.0.11 or greater must be installed on the client 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: Requirements ODBC Driver for Linux OS/400 requirements for running iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux The following server requirements must be met to use the iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux to access database data on an iSeries server. The driver is supported only when connecting to servers running OS/400 Version 4 Release 5 or above. The driver may work to earlier releases of OS/400, but is supported only on V4R5 and above. The QUSER user profile must be enabled. The host servers must be started. TCP/IP must be running. Linux requirements for running iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux The following requirements must be met to use the iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux to access database data on an iSeries server. Beta versions of the iSeries ODBC Driver for Linux must be removed The client must be running one of the following versions of Linux: RedHat for Intel version 7.x RedHat for iSeries version 7.x SuSe for Intel version 7.x SuSe for iSeries version 7.x TurboLinux for Intel version 7.x TurboLinux for iSeries version 7.x unixODBC driver manager version 2.0.11 or greater must be installed on the client. Note: if you recompile the unixODBC driver manager, the ./configure --prefix default is /usr/local. If you use this default, you may need to update your shared library (/etc/ld.so.conf) and executable paths to include it. 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Linux Partition Management Enhancements iSeries offers flexibility and integration Dynamic Processor Movement for Linux Primary Partition must be on V5R2 Dedicated processors Processor Units Up to 10 Linux partitions per processor iSeries Navigator Create Partition Wizard Create, Delete Partitions Move Processor Resources New view Memory and processing power New Recovery options Save and Restore LPAR configurations to/from a PC file 8 2002 IBM Corporation ibm.com/eserver/iseries Notes: Linux Partition Management Enhancements Dynamic Processor Movement for Linux We can only do dynamic allocation of virtual processor units. We can't change the amount of memory that Linux has dynamically. The memory of a Linux partition can be changed, but that would require the Linux partition to be restarted. The dynamic movement of processor capacity can be done with dedicated processors or processor units. Either way, the primary partition has to be at V5R2 to utilize this function. Up to 10 Linux partitions per processor V5R2 now supports up to 4 OS/400 partitions per processor with a total of up to 10 partitions per processor. That is, a single processors can support up to 10 Linux partitions. You can use combinations of OS/400 and Linux partitions per processors. 10 times the number of processors, minus the number of OS/400 partitions, equal the number of Linux partitions allowed.
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