>From Enterprise Strategies Journal

TODAY'S TOP NEWS: Consolidation Projects Push Linux on Big Iron

More than cost, server consolidation efforts are helping push Linux
into IBM mainframe environments.

**This Story is also available on the Web at:**
http://www.esj.com/news/article.asp?EditorialsID=265

Mainframe shops aren't simply deploying Linux because it's free. In
fact, Big Iron Linux adoption is succeeding in spite of the fact
that Linux running on S/390 or z/OS is by no means an inexpensive
proposition.

"[Linux on the mainframe] has costs associated with it ? We're
saying go into this with your eyes wide open, go into this with
these costs in your plan," asserts David Mastrobattista, a senior
analyst with consultancy Giga Information Group Inc. However, he
says, "Even with these costs, when you're looking to do heavy-duty
server consolidation, the mainframe is still going to be the lowest
TCO alternative."

Mainframe shops can run 15 Linux LPARs on their systems without
violating the terms of their IBM licenses, notes John Phelps, vice
president and research director of servers and storage with Gartner
Inc. After that, however, they must expend $45,000 for IBM's z/VM
virtual environment, which enables them to deploy as many Linux
partitions as they can support on a single processor.

Even here, Phelps notes, IBM has made significant changes to the
pricing and licensing of z/VM in its z/OS and z/OS.e operating
environments. "[z/]VM does cost something; however, its costs have
been dramatically reduced in order to make [Linux] a more viable
option. The cost is $45,000 per [z/VM] engine, and the maintenance
is $11,000," he explains.

IBM has tried to soften the pricing blow in other ways as well.
Recently, for example, the company relaxed its z/VM licensing and
maintenance pricing requirements to push Linux on mainframe systems.
The upshot of it all is that on its new z800 systems, Mastrobattista
says, IBM has "actually packaged the z/VM licensing fees [for the
z800] and the maintenance of the box in a three-year package for
under $400,000."

For massive server consolidation efforts on larger, multiprocessor
mainframe systems, IBM's Integrated Facility for Linux (IFL) --
which ranges in cost from $125,000 to $200,000 -- is a requirement:
"For customers who run, say, a 10-way z900 system, if they want to
run [z/]VM, they're going to have to pay 10 times the cost of [z/]VM
and 10 times the cost of maintenance," asserts Gartner's Phelps.
"But if they install the IFL engine, then they don't have to worry
about it."

According to Lionel Dyck, a systems programmer with a large
healthcare provider based in California, it's usually impractical to
acquire an IFL for anything less than a full-scale Linux server
consolidation effort.

"It's not cost-effective to run a single Linux server on an IFL,"
Dyck comments, noting that his company is currently in the midst of
a proof-of-concept test involving Linux server consolidation on a
mainframe IFL. "We're currently doing a financial analysis for TCO
unanticipated costs. We're a mainframe shop and understand the need
for management software, service, and support."

Mainframe shops aren't necessarily adopting Big Iron Linux because
it's free, according to a mainframe systems programmer with a global
IT services company based in the Southwest. "Any shop that did their
homework would know in advance that they need to acquire software
support contracts, system management tools, etc," he points out.

Instead, he argues, mainframe shops are embracing Linux on the
mainframe because it lets them exploit one of the most stable
platforms in the open systems space (Linux) on the most stable
hardware platform in existence (S/390 or zSeries).

"Consolidating multiple server images on an S/390 system [makes]
even more sense, economically, and in terms of reliability. S/390
hardware is much more reliable than anything based on an Intel
architecture," he concludes.

 --Stephen Swoyer

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