Cloud Computing: Univa’s Grid Engine Software to Support ARM

February 15, 2013 Off By David

Grazed from Sys Con Media. Author: Maureen O’Gara.

Something very exciting and provocative just happened to ARM and its server wannabe Calxeda. Univa, which can claim sprawling infrastructures, has ported its Grid Engine software to the Calxeda widgetry in support of its fancy high-brow dynamic workloads.

The stuff is in beta but Univa CEO Gary Tyreman says his customers are already testing it and that although the ARM chip is only 32-bit it can be used in production for integer apps, even Hadoop and protein folding, ahead of the eventual advent of the promised 64-bit ARM chip that will probably be out next year. They are trying to get ahead of the market, he says. They want to explore its potential and see what apps run best on the stuff…

It took all of four day for Univa’s VP of engineering, working part-time, so maybe it was more like three days, Gary said, to port Univa’s widgetry because Calxeda had done so much work with Linux. Univa used Debian and hooked into Calxeda’s systems remotely. "Large enterprise users have become increasingly interested in using ARM-based chips in the data center as the focus shifts from performance to making their servers more energy efficient," Univa CTO Fritz Ferstl said in a statement…

Read more from the source @ http://www.sys-con.com/node/2541998