Meta Group roasts Linux on mainframes

A report from an influential analyst group says Linux mainframes will soon be irrelevant, and adds that Linux is good for nothing more than simple, non-critical applications.

Market research company Meta Group has something to say about the current growth of Linux on mainframes: Don't believe the hype.

In a report published this week, Meta Group said that while mainframes running Linux have some advantages in the short term, after a two years or so they will be irrelevant, as the cost of Intel-based servers continues to drop and their management capabilities improve.

The company also said that Linux is not yet mature enough to handle critical business applications.

IBM and other vendors have recently been hawking Linux on mainframes to customers who want to consolidate many separate servers into a single, relatively low-maintenance machine. Mainframes are ideal for consolidation because of their ability to run many different partitions, each with its own operating system. They also tend to be incredibly resilient, with features such as hot-swap processors and memory meaning that zero downtime is common.

However, Intel-based servers are emerging with mainframe-like capabilities, and it is these machines that Meta Group ultimately sees dominating data centre computing. "Longer term (2005-07), as Unix/Win2000-based systems flesh out increasingly robust, mainframe-like management capabilities, the justification for paying the mainframe's significant cost premium will fade," said the report, entitled Linux on the Mainframe: Nice Place to Visit, But....

Meta Group argues that IBM's mainframes will not be able to match the price/performance improvement of systems based on commodity hardware, which it pegs at about 35 percent a year. AMD and Intel are both introducing high-end 64-bit processors, respectively the Opteron and Itanium 2, that are aimed at lowering the cost of high-end computing power.

Meta Group predicts that by 2007 the Linux-based data centre workload, which will make up 15-20 percent of the market, will be almost exclusively running on Intel-based hardware.

The company says that, at least for the moment, Linux isn't capable of running more complex, critical applications, such as email notification systems. "We caution users that current Linux incarnations are relatively immature, as evidenced by the interminable list of errors/patches on Linux providers' Web sites," the report said.

It criticised Linux vendors for requiring users to constantly update their software to fix errors. "Controlling/managing 'version churn' is an increasing Linux burden, with many users turning to vendors such as SuSE to keep Linux and future applications synchronised," Meta Group said.

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Talkback 5 comments

    Why I admire and respect IT in ...Con Zymaris -- 13/05/02

    Why I admire and respect IT industry analysts...

    Because they are so good at their analysis and predictions...

    1)"By 1995, desktop operating system shipments will be 50 per cent OS/2, 20
    per cent Unix, 15 per cent Macintosh and 10 per cent PC-Dos," analyst company the Meta Group claimed in 1990.

    http://www.infomaticsonline.co.uk/Analysis/1116989

    - - -

    2) In a report published this week, Meta Group said that while mainframes running Linux have some advantages in the short term, after two years or so these will become irrelevant as the cost of Intel-based servers
    continues to drop and their management capabilities improve.

    --From this report

    Interesting URL provided by Co ...Anonymous -- 13/05/02

    Interesting URL provided by Con, I love it.
    They got it as wrong as can be.

    "We caution users that cu ...Anonymous -- 14/05/02

    "We caution users that current Linux incarnations are relatively immature, as evidenced by the interminable list of errors/patches on Linux providers' Web sites,"

    If this makes Linux immature and incapable of running major applications, then what does the large number of patches, fixes and bugs make Microsoft's operating systems. Even mainframe software like OS/390 has bugs and fixes.
    Although I consider that the number should and MUST be at lot lower, the Operating system or any software should be judged on it's stability and functionality!!!!

    As a librarian and software en ...Dwight Walker -- 14/05/02

    As a librarian and software engineer, I sometimes doubt how journalists trot out pat lines like this one without even digging deeper. May be they need to do a software engineering course and start to see how an operating system works. It can run on any platform it is ported to. IBM is pushing their mainframe agenda - they are the main mainframe vendor of course - so they jump on the Linux band-wagon in the hope they can sell more mainframes. The other camp, the microprocessor family, are also growing faster and cheaper, so they can start to overtake the mainframe in speed and cost - two things mainframes have been very good at since the 1960s. So Linux on microprocessors will probably clean up the old dinosaurs, but it is still Linux. It makes you wonder how much of this "us vs them" approach to research is by marketing types. The Linux community as far as I can see takes on board criticism and can handle it! It has led to remarkable turnaround times for bug fixes and improvements - 3-6 mths for Linux compared to 1 year for Microsoft. Companies like Microsoft and Sun get very snakey and will not come clean on bugs and fixes and alternative ways to use their hardware than the way it was designed (e.g. running Linux on SPARCs) till some 3rd party lab reveals all. Truth is better. Let's promote truth for once. It seems to outlast lies by a long way!

    It goes to show that a lot of ...Anonymous -- 14/05/02

    It goes to show that a lot of these so -called research consultancies to the IT sector are confused, and are only saying what they think will sell. Jupiter, Forrester, Gartner, IDC: I don't know how many outrageous predictions I've seen from these companies. I don't think any of them can be believed.

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