Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications

Download Applications of Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Desktop, Laptop for Free or View it Online on All-Guides.com. This version of Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Manual compatible with such list of devices, as: D4315B - NetServer - LX Pro, D5970A - NetServer - LCII, NetServer LH 6000, NetServer LP 1000r, NetServer LXr 8500

Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 1
1
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 2
2
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 3
3
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 4
4
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 5
5
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 6
6
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 7
7
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 8
8
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 9
9
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 10
10
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 11
11
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 12
12
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 13
13
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 14
14
Compaq 3000R - ProLiant - 128 MB RAM Applications - Page 15
15
FXVWRPHUýXVDJHýJXLGH
8
+3ý 1HW6HUYHUý /;Uýåèíí
Nordson Corporation, a multinational manufacturer of industrial process equipment has
deployed SAP R/3, a well-known ERP application, on a HP NetServer LXr 8500 in its SAP
test and development center. The trial has been so successful that the company is going
live with three racks of HP NetServer LXr 8500s (9 servers and EMC storage). Nordson
chose these servers for three key reasons: increased computing power, superior scalability
and excellent price/performance compared to RISC/UNIX systems. More information is
available in the Nordson customer story on the HP NetServer web site. (The URLs for all
sites referenced in this paper are listed in the section titled For More Information on
page 15.)
&CVCDCUG"5GTXGTU
Relational database management systems (DBMS) are at the core of many modern
application systems. They offer ease of storage and flexible access to complex sets of
information.
ERP applications depend upon databases. Other important applications that employ
databases include transaction processing and data warehousing (discussed in more detail
below). Transaction processing is a class of computing that facilitates many types of
business needs in a wide range of industries, including on-line or ATM banking, airline and
car rental reservations, and inventory management in areas as diverse as supermarkets
and manufacturing.
Databases employ thousands of lines of software code dedicated to facilitating storage and
ad hoc retrieval of all the elements of business transactions in planned and unplanned
combination. Databases require processing power far beyond the basic demands of a file
server due to the database infrastructure of indexes and links, which are often constantly
changing but designed to provide fast entry and retrieval over large (tens of millions of
elements) volumes of data.
A database is typically designed to efficiently accommodate the addition, modification and
access to stored information. Server systems that house these databases are typically
multi-processor systems that will improve parallelism in processing a number of pending
requests for a wide variety of transactions. Large RAM memories facilitate rapid retrieval of
often used information. More memory in the server means a better chance of a fast
response.
This is another environment where the HP NetServer LXr 8500 excels, providing the
multiprocessing capability that maintains service levels during peak periods and the
memory and I/O capacity that allows fast storage and retrieval of vital data.
Couple the processing power of 8 Intel Pentium III Xeon processors with Fibre Channel
connected mass storage and the system’s ability to manage large databases is equivalent
or better than many RISC/UNIX servers. The cost/performance ratio is far superior, often
achieving hardware costs that are one-third that of RISC/UNIX servers with comparable
processing power.