Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

You have successfully unsubscribed! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates about Ubuntu and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Ubuntu with Redis Labs, Altera and IBM Power supply new NoSQL data store solution

John Zannos

on 10 October 2014

Tags: cloud , IBM , Juju , OpenPower , power , POWER8

This article was last updated 8 years ago.


Big Data, scale and cloud are the big topics of technology today. Canonical with Ubuntu continues to drive innovation through commitment to openness and building a collaborative ecosystem. The key elements of this disruption include: innovation, automation, lower TCO, greater density, optimised power/performance ratios and new architectures like OpenPOWER.

Earlier this month, as part of its POWER portfolio, IBM announced new IBM Power S824L servers that are built on IBM’s POWER8 processor, the world’s first processor optimised for the most demanding Big Data workloads. Powering each of these servers is the latest Ubuntu Server OS 14.04, which is the only operating system ready to run every class of Linux-only POWER8 scale-out server. Also, IBM announced, the IBM Data Engine for NoSQL, bringing together innovation from OpenPOWER members IBM, Redis Labs, Altera and Canonical. This solution enables a significantly lower cost basis for deploying NoSQL data stores. The solution combines Redis Labs software, Canonical’s Ubuntu operating system, Altera’s FPGAs and IBM’s unique CAPI-enabled Power Systems S822L with IBM’s FlashSystem 840.

Managing tens to hundreds of nodes of a scale-out architecture in a cost-effective way benefits from a completely new approach to provisioning and management. This is exactly what Canonical and IBM have partnered to deliver on the new POWER systems with Juju service orchestration and MAAS (Metal-as-a-Service) automated provisioning. These tools make it simple to deploy, manage and grow complex workloads like LAMP, OpenStack and Hadoop.  It’s now possible to get full deployments running in minutes.

At IBM Enterprise 2014, IBM with Canonical demonstrated a TurboLAMP solution based on Ubuntu, along with fellow OpenPOWER Foundation partners – Mellanox, MariaDB and Zend. This is the first time this unique set of companies have come together to create a LAMP solution tailored and optimised to take advantage of a hardware platform.  The ultimate goal is to make mobile and web apps like Magento and WordPress run faster and better.  TurboLAMP is a solution stack based on Ubuntu, the Apache web server, an open source relational database MariaDB, and the PHP programming language.  The TurboLAMP Stack is unique, with its tight level of integration across LAMP, and with the optimisation of each component for the Power hardware platform.  To further accelerate the deployment of the stack, Ubuntu’s Juju orchestration tool is used to deploy the optimised LAMP charm bundle.  Deployment experts from MariaDB, Mellanox and Zend documented their operational best practices and knowledge from past customer engagements into software patterns distilled into a Juju charm. The unique interactions and dependencies between the software packages were captured and built into a charm bundle that makes it a single (and simple) deployable stack. Overall the speed and performance experience of the Power TurboLAMP solution make it live up to its TURBO name – read more about it TurboLAMP Whitepaper.

We have partnered with IBM to meet customer demand for performance, openness and choice. With Power’s new scale out servers, we are bringing new innovation to the server marketplace. This partnership has led to Ubuntu being the first, and currently only OS available for the new POWER8 scale-out servers, and will enable our joint customers to confidently deploy massively scaled-out workloads. Our goal continues to be to provide best in class solutions and an excellent customer experience.

 

Ubuntu cloud

Ubuntu offers all the training, software infrastructure, tools, services and support you need for your public and private clouds.

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

Canonical and OpenAirInterface to collaborate on open source telecom network infrastructure

Canonical is excited to announce that we are collaborating with OpenAirInterface (OAI) to drive the development and promotion of open source software for open...

Data Centre AI evolution: combining MAAS and NVIDIA smart NICs

It has been several years since Canonical committed to implementing support for NVIDIA smart NICs in our products. Among them, Canonical’s metal-as-a-service...

Migrating from CentOS to Ubuntu: a guide for system administrators and DevOps

CentOS 7 is on track to reach its end-of-life (EoL) on June 30, 2024. Post this date, the CentOS Project will cease to provide updates or support, including...