Introduction to information systems T. Cornford, M. Shaikh is1 060 2013
Data centres, enterprise servers and mainframes
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T. Cornford, M. Shaikh-13
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- Supercomputers
Data centres, enterprise servers and mainframes: A data centre
is a large central computing resource for running programs and storing data. Big companies that operate across the world may have just a few such centres to service most of their corporate (enterprise) computing needs. ‘Mainframe’ is an older term to designate large general-purpose computers. Such machines were long the basis for large, centralised data- processing operations; the name mainframe has been used for at least 50 years. In practice today such a major computer resource would be made IS1060 Introduction to information systems 50 up of a number of computers all working in parallel and sharing a set of data storage devices – disks mostly. An example today would be the computers of a bank, which handle customer accounts, or of a government department supporting operations such as the issuing of passports, driving licences or paying people’s pensions. In each case some of the ‘transactions’ supported might be done online and directly by a customer or citizen – probably via the internet and a website or perhaps from their phone (see Figure 5.2 in Laudon and Laudon, 2013). Supercomputers: These are machines built to undertake high-speed computations that may involve vast amounts of data. They are used, for example, for performing engineering and scientific calculations. An example of a use for a supercomputer would be weather forecasting. Data centres and supercomputers are for high-volume applications with extensive data storage requirements. They generally require special buildings with air-conditioning and cooling systems to keep the computers and storage devices running. One modern example of a supercomputing facility is a GRID. For example, the computing facility that supports the big CERN physics laboratory in Switzerland and in particular the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) where the Higgs boson has been detected, is known as the LHC Computing Grid (LCG) http://public.web.cern.ch. This GRID includes computers in over 100 sites across the world, including about 20 major data centres in different countries, all connected by networks and operating together to share out the work. The way that CERN explains their GRID on their website is as follows: The grid is based on the same idea as the Web, which was invented at CERN in the beginning of the 90s: sharing resources between geographically distributed computers. But whereas the Web simply shares information on the computers, the Grid also shares computing power and storage capacity. This means that scientists can log on to the Grid from their PC, and the work they need to be done will be carried out by many machines across the planet. This allows scientists to carry out very complex calculations quickly and simply. (http://public.web.cern.ch/ public/en/spotlight/SpotlightGrid-en.html) Download 0.65 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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