IBM Parallel Sysplex
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In computing, a Parallel Sysplex is a cluster of IBM mainframes acting together in a single system image, usually with z/OS. A Parallel Sysplex combines data sharing (typically using Peer to Peer Remote Copy) and parallel computing to allow a cluster of up to 32 computers to share a workload for high performance and high availability. Parallel Sysplex provides horizontal scaling.
The forerunner to Parallel Sysplex was Virtual Coupling, a technique which allowed up to 12 IBM 3090 systems to execute jobs in parallel. The true Parallel Sysplex was introduced with then-new mainframe models in April 1994. IBM continues to improve and enhance Parallel Sysplex.
Major components of a Parallel Sysplex include:
- Coupling Facility (CF or ICF) hardware, allowing multiple processors to share, cache, update, and balance data access;
- Sysplex Timers or Server Time Protocol to synchronize the clocks of all member systems;
- High speed, high quality, redundant cabling;
- Software (operating system services and, usually, middleware such as DB2).
The Coupling Facility may be either a dedicated external system (a small mainframe specially configured with only coupling facility processors) or integral processors on the mainframes themselves configured as ICFs (Internal Coupling Facilities). Both are popular — there are minor technical advantages and disadvantages between external CF and ICF installations.
A Parallel Sysplex has at least two CFs or ICFs for redundancy (or at least one of each). Every mainframe participating in a Parallel Sysplex does not need an ICF or its own external CF — mainframes merely attach, via cables, to the external CFs or ICFs.
Server Time Protocol (STP) replaced the Sysplex Timers beginning in 2005 for newer mainframe models. While the Sysplex Timers are physically separate machines, STP is an integral feature within the mainframe itself. With STP and ICFs it is now possible (and common) to construct a complete Parallel Sysplex installation solely with two mainframes and cabling. Moreover, a single mainframe can contain the internal equivalent of a complete physical Parallel Sysplex, so there is no technical requirement to have an actual Parallel Sysplex for application testing and development purposes.