Itanium fans cheer Oracle's return after slamming its choice to stop porting
Users, channel partners and analysts say resuming development of Oracle software for HP Itanium servers is a good move
IDG News Service - Oracle did the right thing this week when it pledged to resume porting its software to Hewlett-Packard's Itanium-based servers, but it should never have pulled that support from a critical platform as it did in March 2011, according to users and analysts.
Oracle announced last year that it would stop adapting new versions of its database and other software to Itanium, the high-end enterprise processor architecture from Intel that is primarily used by HP. The decision surprised HP and its partners and customers, and it led some enterprises to question Itanium as a future platform, according to one system integrator.
The decision led to HP suing Oracle in June 2011, charging breach of contract. Oracle countersued, saying HP was secretly planning to phase out Itanium. Last month, the federal judge hearing the case found that Oracle was obligated to keep porting its products to the platform, and on Tuesday, Oracle announced it would do so. The company said it will introduce Itanium versions of each new generation of its software, on the same schedule as it does for IBM's Power processors, for as long as HP keeps selling the servers. The companies still need to face off in a second phase of the trial, in which a jury will consider a damages award for HP.
"I'm cautiously optimistic," said Bill Pedersen, an enterprise IT consultant who runs Computer Consulting System Services, in Gaffney, South Carolina. He was one of several users and channel partners that voiced concern about Oracle's retreat in an HP press release last year.
Oracle may not have used up all its legal options, but it looks like the company is bound by a solid contract to keep porting the software, Pedersen said.
The March 2011 announcement intensified worries about the future of Itanium that some users already had, Pedersen said. "Hopefully, that will help ease the situation," he said. "It's a big thing." Pedersen is confident HP is committed to Itanium for the long haul and hopes the company will devote more marketing effort to the platform.
Pedersen specializes in OpenVMS, an operating system with roots in the VAX minicomputer platform that Digital Equipment introduced in the 1970s. Itanium is critical to users of OpenVMS because it's the only currently shipping hardware platform that can deliver the operating system's unmatched dependability, according to Alan Winston, a systems administrator at a San Francisco Bay Area research lab.
Winston's lab still uses OpenVMS on Itanium extensively, and on that platform it runs RDB, a Digital-developed database that Oracle acquired in 1994.
"I thought it was a pretty irresponsible decision" for Oracle to declare an end to Itanium porting, Winston said. The implications of cutting off future versions of Oracle software for OpenVMS-Itanium systems could be grave, because that architecture is used in many critical systems, including stock exchanges, lotteries, and medical-records repositories, he said.
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