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IBM System z10

Line of mainframe computers

IBM System z10

Summary

Line of mainframe computers

FieldValue
nameIBM System z10
logoFile:IBM logo.svg
logo_size120px
imageImage:IBM System Z10 mainframe.jpg
image_size270px
captionIBM System z10 EC Mainframe
typeMainframe
manufacturerIBM
release_date
discontinued2011
familyIBM Z
predecessorIBM System z9
successorIBM zEnterprise System

IBM System z10 is a line of IBM mainframes. The z10 Enterprise Class (EC) was announced on February 26, 2008. On October 21, 2008, IBM announced the z10 Business Class (BC), a scaled-down version of the z10 EC. The System z10 represents the first model family powered by the z10 quad core processing engine. Its successors are the zEnterprise System models introduced in 2010 and 2012.

Features

Processors

The number of "characterizable" (or configurable) processing units (PUs) is indicated in the hardware model designation (e.g., the E26 has 26 characterizable PUs). Depending on the capacity model, a PU can be characterized as a Central Processor (CP), Integrated Facility for Linux (IFL) processor, z Application Assist Processor (zAAP), z10 Integrated Information Processor (zIIP), or Internal Coupling Facility (ICF) processor. (The specialty processors are all identical and IBM locks out certain functions based on what the processor is characterized as.) It is also possible to configure additional System Assist Processors, but most customers find the mandatory minimum SAP allocation sufficient.

There are more physical PUs in a machine than characterizable PUs. For example, the E12 has 17 PUs, of which only 12 are characterizable. The remainder is a mixture of spares and mandatory minimum SAPs. The SAPs provide I/O assistance, system accounting, and other critical system functions.

Operating systems

The System z10 supports the following IBM operating systems: z/OS, z/VSE, z/VM, and z/TPF (and its immediate predecessor, TPF/ESA). Other operating systems available include Linux on System z, OpenSolaris for System z, UTS, and MUSIC/SP (at least in principle). A product in development by Mantissa Corporation, z/VOS, was announced in 2008 to run other operating systems developed for x86 architectures (such as Windows and x86 versions of Linux), later renamed to z86VM and the Linux support is in beta, and "has no plans to support 64 bit", but as of 2019, it has a bug for Windows so not even a beta version for it is available.

New features

As the number of cores in the System z machines has grown, IBM engineers have continued to find ways to reduce symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) effects. Adding more cores has diminishing returns in performance due to cache, memory, and I/O contention. The latest effort to reduce these penalties is HiperDispatch, a set of intelligent, cooperative dispatching strategies between the System z10 hardware and z/OS, particularly the z/OS Workload Manager and dispatcher. HiperDispatch steers more processing tasks toward the cores that are "closest" to the cached data the tasks will likely require, minimizing contention for memory and I/O. HiperDispatch helps maintain near-linear SMP scalability and is more relevant to the larger models, but it is enabled by default on all System z10 machines.

Models

IBM System z10 product line20072008200920102011Main framesz9 ECzEnterprise ECz9 BCzEnterprise BC
Dual-rackz10 E12
z10 E26
z10 E40
z10 E56
z10 E64
Single-rackz10 E10
System z10 Enterprise Class mainframe

Enterprise Class

Released on February 26, 2008, the System z10 Enterprise Class is available in five hardware models: E12, E26, E40, E56, and E64. Each is of the machine type 2097.{{cite web | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060408174201/http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/z/hardware/ | url-status=dead | archive-date=April 8, 2006 | access-date=2013-04-03}} The Enterprise Class PU cores (four per chip) operate at speeds of 4.4 GHz. The processors are stored in one to four compartments referred to as "books". Each book comprises a multi-chip module (MCM) of processing units (PUs) and memory cards (including multi-level cache memory). The number of PUs in each book is based upon the model number:{{cite web | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080911115005/http://www.personal.psu.edu/alw/shr110/IBMz10Features.pdf | archive-date=2008-09-11 | url-status=dead | access-date=2013-04-03}}

ModelBooks / PUsCPsIFLs / uIFLszAAPs / zIIPsICFsOpt SAPsStd SAPsStd SparesStandard memory (GB)Flexible memory (GB)
E121 / 170-120-12 / 0-110-6 / 0-60-120-33216 - 352NA
E262 / 340-260-26 / 0-250-13 / 0-130-160-76216 - 75232 - 352
E403 / 510-400-40 / 0-390-20 / 0-200-160-119216 - 113632 - 752
E564 / 680-560-56 / 0-550-28 / 0-280-160-1810216 - 152032 - 1132
E644 / 770-640-64 / 0-630-32 / 0-320-160-2111216 - 152032 - 1136

NOTES:

  • A minimum of one CP, IFL, or ICF must ordered with every model.
  • For each CP ordered, one zAAP and one zIIP may also be ordered.
  • Optional SAPs are required only in some situations when using TPF/ESA or z/TPF.
  • Memory figures refer to user-accessible memory. The z10 EC reserves 16GB for HSA (Hardware System Area).
  • Sub-capacity (fractional) CP configurations are also available.

Business Class

System z10 BC mainframe

Released on October 21, 2008, the z10 Business Class has only a single model: E10. Machine type is 2098. It has the same processor chip design and instruction set as the z10 EC but with higher manufacturing yields (3.5 GHz clock speed, one core per chip disabled) and lower cost processor packaging due to reduced cooling and reduced multi-chip shared cache needs. The z10 BC also introduced new, more efficient I/O packaging options. It is possible to configure a z10 BC without spare cores if desired, although such maximally configured z10s still fail gracefully in the unlikely event there's a core failure: the system will move any work from the failed core to surviving cores automatically, without operating system or software involvement, keeping all applications running, albeit at slightly reduced capacity if there are no spares remaining.

The following configuration is available:{{cite web | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090130131041/http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/z/hardware/z10bc/specifications.html | url-status=dead | archive-date=January 30, 2009 | access-date=2013-04-03}}

ModelCPsIFLszAAPs / zIIPsICFsStandard memory (GB)
E101-51-100-5 / 0-51-104 - 120 (-248 in June, 2009)

NOTES:

  • For each CP ordered, one zAAP and one zIIP may also be ordered.
  • Memory figures refer to user-accessible memory. The z10 BC reserves 8GB for HSA (Hardware System Area).
  • Sub-capacity (fractional) CP configurations are also available.

Pricing

While the baseline model of the z10 EC has a reported price starting at $1,000,000 for a new system, the z10 BC has a reported price starting "under $100,000".{{cite web | access-date=2017-02-09}} Actual prices depend on a number of factors including the configuration of the machine (amount of central memory, number of specialty engines, I/O options, etc.), maintenance contracts, government and educational discounts, and finance and leasing terms.

IBM can also upgrade machines up to two generations old using new parts, retaining the machine's serial number and numerous frame components.

References

eServer zSeries2000System z92005System z102008

References

  1. "Windows on System z".
  2. (2012-02-20). "z86VM's blog {{!}} Mantissa Corporation".
  3. "zEnterprise Virtualization with z86VM".
Wikipedia Source

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