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A LAG is a method of inverse multiplexing over multiple Ethernet links, thereby increasing bandwidth and providing redundancy. It is defined by the IEEE 802.1AX-2008 standard, which states, "Link Aggregation allows one or more links to be aggregated together to form a Link Aggregation Group, such that a MAC client can treat the Link Aggregation Group as if it were a single link."
BladeSystem is a line of blade server machines from Hewlett Packard Enterprise (Formerly Hewlett-Packard) that was introduced in June 2006. [1] [2] [3]The BladeSystem forms part of the HP ConvergedSystem platform, which use a common converged infrastructure architecture for server, storage, and networking products. [4]
Integrated Lights-Out, or iLO, is a proprietary embedded server management technology by Hewlett Packard Enterprise which provides out-of-band management facilities. The physical connection is an Ethernet port that can be found on most ProLiant servers and microservers [1] of the 300 and above series.
On November 11, 2009, HP announced its intent to acquire 3Com Corporation for $2.7B. [4] In April 2010, HP completed its acquisition. [5] In April 2010, following HP's acquisition of 3Com Corporation, HP combined the ProCurve and 3Com entities as HP Networking. [6] [7] HP ProCurve. Based in Roseville, CA, USA. Developer of networking switches ...
NUMAlink 8 is the eighth generation of the interconnect, introduced in 2017 and used in the HPE Superdome Flex. NUMAlink 8 provides 13.3 GB/s of bandwidth per port [ 11 ] and systems using it are capable of 853.33 GB/s of bisection peak bandwidth (64 links are cut) across a 32 socket system with up to 48 TB of coherent shared memory.
ServiceCenter 4: Process Model and Module Alignment; ServiceCenter 5 / 5.1: Client, GUI, introduction of Document Engine; ServiceCenter 6: New Client, New Server-side Application stack (servlets), inclusion of JavaScript, inclusion of SOAP; Service Manager 7 / 7.11: GUI, Web Client, Process Model (IIA)
Management Component Transport Protocol (MCTP) is a protocol designed by the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) to support communications between different intelligent hardware components that make up a platform management subsystem, providing monitoring and control functions inside a managed computer system.
It uses the Visual Basic Scripting Edition scripting language to specify a test procedure, and to manipulate the objects and controls of the application under test. [1] UFT allows developers to test all three layers of a program's operations from a single console: the interface, the service layer and the database layer.