Steve's Power Systems BlogPower BlogContactLog inRegister
  • Power Blog
  • Contact

  • Register

IBM Power Systems Blog

Power Systems
  • Front Page
  • Categories
  • Archives
  • Latest comments
  • « Configure AIX and Oracle to use 16MB large pages.
  • Datastage ETL (Extract Transform & Load) Tuning. »

IBM Power6 to Power7 Upgrade

Posted by steve on 26 Mar 2011 in AIX Tuning, AIX Tips

The Scope

The scope of this project was to upgrade the existing Power6 p570's to Power7 p770's.

 

The Challenge

Reduce the overall cost of the hardware and software upgrade.

Allow sufficient headroom to cater for future planned and unplanned growth.

Improve the return on investment and hardware utilisation.

 

The Initial IBM Proposal

IBM submitted the initial proposal for 2 new Power7 p770's and a CEC hardware upgrade to the two existing Power6 p570's.

Power7 p770 summary of specifications:

Dual Power7 CEC p770.

32 Processors (3.1GHz) - 28 Active / 4 CUOD.

512GB of Memory - 448GB Active / 64GB CUOD.

6x 146GB Internal Disk.

8x 2-Port 8 Gigabit Fibre Channel Adapters.

2x 1-Port 10GB SR Ethernet Adapters.

 

The Investigation

Utilising the performance and capacity planning graphs produced from all the NMON data we had collected over the previous 6 months, we started to analyse the workload and utilisation profile of the application running on existing Power6 p570 hardware.

CPU Utilisation for day to day running was 12 CPUs.

CPU Utilisation for the one off peak data load would be 20 CPUs.

Memory Utilisation for the current system was 200GB.

IP Network and SAN Network Utilisation was approximately 40% of adapter bandwidth.

 

Our Proposal

Our initial proposal was to purchase the Power7 p770 with 32 CPUs installed, 16 would be active and 16 for CUOD (future planned growth). Memory would be 512GB installed with 256GB active and 256GB for CUOD. We did propose that during the initial peak data load, the client could (if needed), switch on the CUOD resource using the 'free' one-off 30 day trial.

After several discussions with the client, they decided to purchase the new Power7 p770s with the following specification as they wanted to guareentee that current and immediate future performance would not be impacted. They did not want to activate any CUOD resources, with the exception of possibly using the 30 day trial if required.
Dual Power7 CEC p770.

32 Processors (3.1GHz) - 20 Active / 12 CUOD.

512GB of Memory - 320GB Active / 192GB CUOD.

6x 146GB Internal Disk.

8x 2-Port 8 Gigabit Fibre Channel Adapters.

2x 1-Port 10GB SR Ethernet Adapters.

 

The Savings

Total Cost Savings: AUD 220,000

 

Tags: PowerPower6Power7Upgrade

No feedback yet


Form is loading...

May 2025
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
 << <   > >>

IBM Power Systems Blog

IBM Power Systems - Administration, Tuning and Optimisation. These posts are my own personal opinions and comments only.

Search

Categories

  • All
  • AIX Tips
  • AIX Tuning
  • Command Line Tips
  • HMC Tips
  • LPM Information
  • NIM Tips
  • Performance Testing
  • Power System Affinity
  • PowerHA Tips
  • SRIOV and vNIC
  • Scripts and One Liners
  • VIO Server Tips

Recent Posts

  • AIX NIM Hints and Tips
  • Finding Multiple Install Sources for AIX
  • PowerHA and EMC Busy Devices
  • AIX Random Password Generation
  • VIO Server 3.1.0 and ssh host keys
  • VIO Server 3.1.0 Items to Review
  • Just when you thought you understood idle CPU time!!
  • 40Gbit Adapter Performance Testing
  • LPM Copy Time Statistics
  • IBM HMC Upgrades

Recent Comments

  • steve on How to configure IBM SRIOV Adapters
  • Howard Coles on How to configure IBM SRIOV Adapters
  • steve on AIX mpstat and lssrad part 1
  • Charin Kumjudpai on AIX mpstat and lssrad part 1
  • Gagandeep on LPM and multiple vSwitches
  • Fant Steele on VIO Server 3.1.0 and ssh host keys
  • steve on AIX NIM Hints and Tips
  • alan wilcox on AIX NIM Hints and Tips
  • steve on AIX buf_mode attribute for Virtual Ethernet Adapters
  • Bernhar on AIX buf_mode attribute for Virtual Ethernet Adapters
  • Gery on Reading VLANs from the SEA Adapter
  • steve on Reading VLANs from the SEA Adapter
  • patrice on Reading VLANs from the SEA Adapter
  • steve on Reading VLANs from the SEA Adapter
  • steve on AIX buf_mode attribute for Virtual Ethernet Adapters
  • Chris K. on AIX buf_mode attribute for Virtual Ethernet Adapters
  • jovi on AIX or VIOS Errors: 29FA8C20 and 7BFEEA1F
  • steve on AIX or VIOS Errors: 29FA8C20 and 7BFEEA1F
  • jovi on AIX or VIOS Errors: 29FA8C20 and 7BFEEA1F
  • steve on Creating EtherChannel Devices from Command Line

This collection ©2025 by Stephen Diwell • Contact • Help • Multi-blog engine

Forums software
Cookies are required to enable core site functionality.