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DataDirect Puts the zIIP in SOA Mainframes

10/19/2007

DataDirect has upgraded its Shadow mainframe data integration solution. The new Shadow version 7 offers performance improvements and data connectivity options for enterprises. The product supports service-oriented architectures (SOAs) on mainframes and lowers total cost of ownership when combined with IBM's latest mainframe "System z" specialty engines.

The combination of DataDirect's middleware and IBM zOS-based mainframes boosts computing capacity. It's the sort of thing that might be deployed by enterprises with large-scale transactional processing requirements, as entailed by enterprise resource planning and business intelligence-type applications, or SOAs.

In particular, this version of Shadow works with IBM's System z9 Integration Information Processor (zIIP) and System z Application Assist Processor (zAAP) products, which aim to free up overall computing capacity. IBM's zIIP is used to centralize databases on a mainframe and improve security. zAAP enhances the performance of Java- and XML-based Web applications.

The ability to leverage IBM's specialty engines is unique to DataDirect's Shadow product, according to Calvin Fudge, director of marketing for Shadow.

"Mainframe middleware as it is currently constituted is predominantly TCB (task control block) thread based," he explained. "So if anyone out there is using mainframe middleware product right now, they are using a product that cannot exploit a zIIP processor. So Shadow is unique in that it has this hybrid thread pool, this TCB/SRB thread guide, that allows it to divert workloads to the zIIP specialty engine. So customers are only going to get this type of exploitation of the specialty engines through Shadow."

Shadow 7 works with zIIP to optimize the performance of IBM's DB2 database, but it also supports "mainframe data queries to IMS, VSAM, Adabas and IDMS, was well as SOAP/XML parsing for the transformation of business logic and screen logic in Web services," according to an announcement issued by DataDirect.

The Shadow-IBM combo reduces the total cost of ownership for mainframe operators because of the relaxed licensing requirements that exist for users of IBM's zIIP and zAAP specialty engines. IBM's general purpose processor licenses are typically capped and based on a company's particular mainframe processing capacity, which is measured in million service units (MSUs) per hour. The licenses for zIIP and zAAP, however, are uncapped in terms of MSUs. Companies are not charged in terms of capacity.

The alternative to the Shadow-IBM specialty engine combo isn't a pretty one for mainframe operations with data-intensive applications, according to Greg Willhoit, DataDirect's chief software architect for Shadow.



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