IBM i
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IBM i | |
Website | IBM i 6.1 |
---|---|
Company/ developer |
IBM |
Source model | Closed source |
Latest stable release | V6R1 / Jan 29, 2008 |
Kernel type | shares many Microkernel design philosophies (SLIC) |
License | Commercial |
Working state | Current |
IBM i is an operating system used on IBM Power Systems (formerly known as System i, iSeries and AS/400) computers. IBM i was formerly known as i5/OS or OS/400. OS/400 and AS/400 were introduced in 1988. The latest version is 6.1, released on January 29, 2008 and shipping since March 21, 2008. The new name, IBM i, was revealed on April 2, 2008.[1]
OS/400, i5/OS and IBM i have built-in subsystems that provide some backward compatibility with earlier IBM general business systems, such as the IBM System/36 and IBM System/38 series.
IBM designed IBM i as a "turnkey" operating system, requiring little or no on-site attention from IT staff during normal operation. For example, IBM i has a built-in (and quite powerful) DB2 database which does not require separate installation and maintenance. System administration has been wizard-driven for years, even before that term was defined. IBM i is also well regarded for its tuned Java implementation, including hardware specific optimizations.
Though not natively a graphical operating system, the Client Access Licensed Product includes iSeries Navigator a client based and web based version for graphical system and database administration and for the Apache web server and WebSphere Application Server, there is web based administration.
In 2007, IBM, Zend Technologies and MySQL AB announced support for the PHP programming language and the MySQL open source database on the IBM i platform. The goal is to enable modern web 2.0 applications on the platform.
IBM i is one of the three operating systems supported on IBM Power Systems alongside AIX and Linux.