1 / 46

Update on Virtualization C apabilities for SAP S olutions on IBM Power Systems™

Update on Virtualization C apabilities for SAP S olutions on IBM Power Systems™. Matthias Koechl February 2012. Content . POWER7 Processor Characteristics SMT Modes Entitlement versus virtual CPUs PowerVM Advisors Memory Virtualization Advanced Memory Expansion (AME )

les
Download Presentation

Update on Virtualization C apabilities for SAP S olutions on IBM Power Systems™

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Update on Virtualization Capabilities for SAP Solutions on IBM Power Systems™ Matthias Koechl February 2012

  2. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  3. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  4. Leading SAP Benchmarks for Power Systems Source: http://www.sap.com/benchmark/ Results listed with “processors” / cores / threads. HP DL980 8/80/160 SQL Server #2011021 HP DL980 8/80/160 SQL Server #2011020 Fujitsu P’Quest 1800E2 8/80/160 SQL Server #2011017 IBM Power 795 16/128/512 DB2 #2010042 IBM X3850 X5 8/80/160 DB2 #2011034 NEC Express5800 8/80/160 SQL Server #2011023 IBM Power 795 32/256/1024 DB2 #2010046 IBM Power 780 8/64/256 DB2 #2010013 Sun/Fujitsu M9000 64/256/512 Oracle #2009046 • SAP SD Benchmarks are a spezialied workload patterns with parallel transaction workload. • They provide a good proof-point for system capacity sizing, not transaction response time • They exploit POWER7 SMT4 capabilities and system bandwidth. • Customer workload has different behaviour SAP SD benchmark Users Users per CPU All results are as of 12/1/11.

  5. POWER7 based Servers and Application performance • Avoid running POWER7 systems in POWER6 Mode  only SMT2 will be exploited. • By more Cores and more parallel Threads (SMT4), POWER7 based servers deliver excellent „SAPS“ values. • By nature of the benchmark SAPS are a good measure for system throughput. • Performance of an isolated user transaction or batch program is dominated by single thread performance. These do NOT benefit from SMT effect. • Whenever estimating single thread dominated SAP workload performance, avoid system sizing purely based on SAPS values. • In particular important when doing an upgrade sizing from existing POWER platforms with lower SMT gains (see left diagram): ISICC Walldorf, MK

  6. SAP Dialog POWER7 Multi-threading Options • Certain SAP workload characteristics benefit from different SMT modes • Always differentiate “system capacity” = SAPS and “performance” of a single thread = response time • SMT1: Largest unit of execution work • SMT2: Smaller unit of work, but provides greater amount of execution work per cycle • SMT4: Smallest unit of work, but provides the maximum amount of execution work per cycle SAP Batch Tx A Tx B Tx A Aggregate throughput/ POWER7 core Tx C Sequential Job A Single-threaded Tx B Tx D ISICC Walldorf, MK

  7. POWER7 Virtual Processors & Entitlement (1) • Entitlements specify guaranteed CPU resources for a LPAR • Too low an entitlement means a partition’s portion of a dispatch cycle is small, and work may be spread across many dispatch cycles instead of fewer. • This artificially introduces relative hypervisor overhead compared to SAP workload • Cache hit ratio may be negatively impacted • Virtual Processors (vCPUs) specify the maximum of accessible CPU resources for a LPAR • Too many Virtual Processors being dispatched in a constrained environment reduces performance. • tests showed up to -30% performance impact for wrongly designed LPARs (entitlement / vCPU mismatch) running concurrent DB workloads, compared to best-practices LPAR setup • Processor Folding mitigates the overhead of spreading the partition over many more vCPUs, but does not completely eliminate it (-20% vs. -30%). • Is sub-optimal parameterization rather than PowerVM inefficiency • Spreading a LPAR over more vCPUsthan needed increases the likelihood of lock contention during LPAR scheduling • Databases are particularly lock intensive, so conservative usage of vCPUsis beneficial ISICC Walldorf, MK

  8. POWER7 Virtual Processors & Entitlement (2) • Entitlement settings should be realistic • Size LPAR entitlement in a way that it covers average high load phases • Ideal entitlement requires use of few incremental vCPUs only to cover absolute peak load • Peak loads > 100% of entitlement are not critical in shared processor pools • Adjust entitlement according to monitoring • Virtual Processor (vCPU) settings • Although it provides most flexibility in cross LPAR peak load compensation, avoid too large count of vCPUs beyond the cpu capacity allocated by a LPAR’s entitlement • If there are always free pool cycles, vCPU setting is less critical • Use (topas –C or lparstat “app”) to check • If the pool is constrained, however, the optimal performance will always be by keeping the vCPU to physical core ratio as close as possible • Read “POWER7 Virtualization Best Practice Guide” https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/wikis/display/WikiPtype/Performance+Monitoring+Documentation • Understand the differences in performance reporting across the POWER generations http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/wikis/display/WikiPtype/Understanding+Processor+Utilization+on+POWER+Systems+-+AIX ISICC Walldorf, MK

  9. PowerVM Performance Advisors PC Power System Power System FTP • SAP relevant Advisors can be downloaded from IBM Developer Works: • Virtualization Performance LPAR Advisor • https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/wikis/display/WikiPtype/PowerVM+Virtualization+performance+lpar+advisor • VIOS Advisor • https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/wikis/display/WikiPtype/VIOS+Advisor ISICC Walldorf, MK

  10. Sample Outputs from PowerVM Advisors LPAR VIO • Contains sections for detailled environment reporting and checks for current settings OK Can be improved 10 ISICC - MK, 02/2012

  11. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  12. Active Memory™ Expansion (AME) uncompressed mem. compressed memory LPARs’ memory Power Hypervisor POWER7 System New LPAR Attributes • Active Memory Expansion On/Off • Memory Expansion Factor Hardware Management Console • Innovative POWER7 technology • For AIX 6.1 or later • For POWER7 servers • Uses compression/decompression to effectively expand the true physical memory available for client workloads • Often a small amount of processor resource provides a significant increase in the effective memory maximum • AME has been tested with SAP ERP workload, and delivered excellent expansion factors. • A detailed White Paper including SAP ERP Measurements can be downloaded from:ftp://ftp.software.ibm.com/common/ssi/sa/wh/n/pow03038usen/POW03038USEN.PDF • Fully supported for SAP production environments by DB2 V9 and Oracle 11g ff. • Watch SAP-Note 1464605“POWER7 Active Memory Expansion (AME)” for updates and more details about AME ISICC Walldorf, MK

  13. AME Business value • Enable more LPAR’s per server • Active memory expansion reduces the physical memory requirements of existing LPAR’s • Existing LPAR’s physical memory sizes can be reduced • Free memory capacity can be used to create more LPAR’s • Supports SAP consolidation scenarios • Increase a LPAR’s effective memory capacity • Active memory expansion can increase the effective memory capacity of a LPAR • Enabling active memory expansion for a LPAR and keeping the LPAR’s physical memory size unchanged increases the memory available to a workload • Supports natural growth System Physical Memory System Physical Memory LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR AME LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR …. LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR LPAR’s Effective Memory Capacity LPAR’s Effective Memory Capacity Physical Memory Physical Memory AME Expanded Memory Capacity ISICC Walldorf, MK

  14. Sample SAP ERP Workload test results at constant throughputSAP 2tier setup within a single Partition (DB- and AppServer) • Test configurations held total memory constant at 14.25 GB, varying mix of real and gained memory. • Number of cores was kept constant at 4 cores. • Individual load results will vary depending on expansion factor of the SAP applications and data and available CPU resource 111% more memory for 15% additional CPU 75% more memory for 1% additional CPU ISICC Walldorf, MK

  15. AME Tests with complex SAP Retail DB2 ETL Load • Using a Power 750 w/ AME and Power 570, the following PoC has been performed: • Load 2 years of POS data of a large retail company into SAP NetWeaver BW 7.3 through the layers of the Layered Scalable Architecture for POS data • ~20 billion records stored in the InfoProviders of the Layered Scalable Architecture for POS data management • Database size = 6.4 TByte ISICC Walldorf, MK

  16. Retail ETL AME Test results 1 – BI Application Server Less CPU util because of wait I/Os caused by Paging AME off AME Expansion > 2x with minor impact on both CPU utilization and job runtime. Measurement with AME off @ 20GB phys. showed performance degradation caused by OS paging, while AME on @ 16GB phys. worked well ISICC Walldorf, MK

  17. Retail ETL AME Test results 2 – BI DB-Server • DB2 Compression was turned ON during all tests • AME Expansion worked for DB2 Server instance • Less expansion usable factor, approx 1,5x • Not linked to DB2 compression, consistent with non-compressed DB observations ISICC Walldorf, MK

  18. AME for a Memory-Intensive SAP SCM Component (liveCache) 2-tier SCM - POWER7 LPAR: 4 cores 0,6 GB SAP SCM APO Application Server 1.5 GB Σ= 15.6 GB 10 GB liveCache 3,5 GB DB2 AME=ON “In-Memory MaxDB” Buffer Pool Expansion Factor ~2x Virtual I/O Server Physical Memory = 8.5 GB DB2 LUW 9.7 w/ compression OS & Pagespace liveCache persistence • System was tested with three Supply Chain Management (SCM) planning scenarios • Supply Network Planning, Demand Planning, Production Planning/Detailed Scheduling • White Paper available at TechDocshttp://www.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/WP102031 to accommodate different memory access patterns • liveCache fill rate was >70% • Interestingly, this very memory intensive workload is well behaving with AME! ISICC Walldorf, MK

  19. AME compression is no more sufficient, OS paging required OS Paging AME Exp. = 1,5 IPL 1,5 1,8 2,0 2,6 2,6 reptd. AME effect at OS Level and Impact on SCM Throughput 68% DIMM savings SNP throughput -5% AME Exp. = 1,5 IPL 1,5 1,8 2,0 2,6 2,6 reptd. OS (AIX) AME ISICC Walldorf, MK

  20. AME Sizing Hints • Ideally, use the amepat tool (part of AIX 6ff) and have it run against existing workload. • Recommends individual settings for AME expansion factor • Factor can be changed dynamically, once AME has been enabled • Customer feedback from live SAP environments and from internal test shown before. As initial recommendations for AME settings apply these factors: • AME Expansion Factor SAP Application-Server ABAP = max. 2,0 • AME Expansion Factor SAP Application-Server JAVA = ca. 1,1 • AME Expansion Factor SAP DB-Server = max. 1,6 ISICC Walldorf, MK

  21. POWER Active Memory Sharing (AMS) • POWER6™ feature • Administration comparable to SPLPARs • No instantaneous memory allocation as with cpu cycles! • “Ballooning” policies for memory loaning • Not formally supported by SAP for production use. • Not yet thoroughly tested with SAP applications. • PoCs with small SAP instances work fine • Scalability for large memory sizes ? • Formal DB vendor support statements pending (DB2, Oracle, MaxDB) • Pilot program (non-production environments) started in 11/09, acquiring additional pilot customers. • Technical Paper on PW:http://www.ibm.com/partnerworld/wps/servlet/ContentHandler/POW03017USEN Virtualization Control Point (VCP) Virtualization Control Point (VCP) Paging Devices SM Partition 1 SM Partition 2 SM Partition 3 Dedicated Memory Partition 4 (8 GB) Paging VIOS (PSP) (1 GB) VAS I vSCSI Server CMM CMM CMM FC Page In / Out Page Donation Shared Memory Manager (SMM) Hypervisor Dedicated Memory (9 GB) Shared Memory Pool (16 GB) Free Memory Pool (5.5 GB) Hypervisor Memory (1.5 GB) Physical Memory (32 GB) ISICC Walldorf, MK

  22. Some Words on Memory Virtualization TSM Server incr. backup Start CLIENTCOPY TSM Server incr. Backup end • System Memory is not a dynamic LPAR resourceas CPU cores are. • SAP application memory has several characteristics: • Core memory, linked to a started SAP instance • Executables, shared segments, buffers etc. •  Hard to virtualize • User context • Allocated per users • Fluctuating • Java heap • Managed by Garbage Collector • Fixed allocated per Java node • Consequently, memory is much harder to virtualize than CPUs •  Sizing models of all vendors today allocate memory to virtualized environments, as they do for non-virtualized. Start Cldel 514 Start Cldel 504h Start SAP t0 t0+110min Source: SVA, IBM BP Germany ISICC Walldorf, MK

  23. AMS recommended usage patterns • Around the World • Partitions support workloads with memory demands that peak at different times • WW SAP deployments Memory Usage (GB) Time • Day and Night • Partitions support day time web applications and night time batch • SAP Dialogue and Batch instances Memory Usage (GB) • Infrequent use • Large number of partitions with sporadic use • SAP non-Production instances • Cluster Standby LPARs Time Memory Usage (GB) Time ISICC Walldorf, MK

  24. 24hrs Limited AMS Use Cases • AMS provides limited benefit and is not recommended for the following types of applications: • Workloads with high, sustained memory residency requirements • All the allocated memory is actively referenced • Frequently changing referenced memory regions • Productive SAP systems often have those characteristics • Response time and performance sensitive workloads • Workloads with high degree of load variation • If these workloads are deployed in AMS environment, ensure memory over subscription is minimal to nil ISICC Walldorf, MK

  25. Customer Feedback on AMS usage in an SAP environment • Performance critical SAP systems need to be protected against memory “underflow”: • Continue to use dedicated memory w/o AMS • With AMS use Loan Policy = Default* with a high memory weighting • Limit AMS memory pooling to less critical, i.e. non-PROD, systems • Sandbox-, Test-, Development- and Education (IDES) systems • Set Loan Policy to Default or Aggressive, if AIX paging can be tolerated • 20 - 25% overall memory saving compared to aggressive peak-sizing • Monitored environment showed aggregated memory distribution as • min = 95GB, avg = 113GB, max 138GB, with peak consumption of up to 176GB • Too small memory footprints by sizing can be compensated to a certain degree • Memory peak consumptions are compensated by donated memory from pool • Memory transfer rate into overcommitted LPAR vary: • 300MB/sec • from pool was ~20MB/sec in customer environment • Transfer rate from donating LPARs into AMS pool was ~10/MB/sec in parallel • Compared to slow classical DLPAR memory (re-) allocation, AMS memory is quickly available to demanding LPAR • Instead of monitoring and adjusting memory size per LPAR – even in shared LPAR pools – only a single AMS pool needs to be managed. • Benefit becomes higher the more LPARs dynamically share memory ISICC Walldorf, MK

  26. Active Memory Expansion versus Active Memory Sharing Active Memory Sharing • Moves memory from one partition to another  “memory pooling” • Latency of memory availability • Best fit when one partition is not busy while another partition is busy • AIX, IBM i, and Linux partitions • Comparably complex to setup • Latency until pooled memory available to application • N/A • No CPU cycles required after memory allocation done Active Memory Expansion • Effectively gives more memory capacity to the partition  “memory expansion” • Efficiency depends on compressibility of in-memory content • AIX partitions only • Easy initialization via HMC • Instantaneous effect when activated • Potential of HW assistance • Permanently requires few CPU cycles ISICC Walldorf, MK

  27. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  28. SAP license keys LDAP clients CPU ID of NIM clients Movement to a different server with no loss of service Virtualized SAN and Network Infrastructure POWER6 Live Partition Mobility (LPM) • As of July ’09 LPM is fully supported by SAP • See SAP-Note 1102760 for latest status, pre-requisites, hints and tips The following DB-combinations are supported by LPM: • DB2 • DB2 V9.1 FP4 • DB2 V9.5 ff • MaxDB • MaxDB 7.6 • MaxDB 7.7 • Oracle • Oracle 10, 11.0.2 and later • Single Instance only, no RAC • AIX 5.3 TL8 SP4, or • AIX 6.1 TL2 SP3 • -AIX 7.1 POWER6 Live Partition Mobility Demo with SAP available: http://www.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS2921 SAP ACC and Live Partition Mobility Integration Demo available: http://www.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4232 ISICC Walldorf, MK

  29. LPM Characteristics Quantified Hour-Glass appears on SAPGUI Approx. 10% throughput degradation Approx. 5% throughput degradation SAPS Source LPAR 100% 100% Target LPAR 90% time 2 – 3 min 1 min Variable Minutes Estimate = LPAR size in GB 2…4GB/min 2..20 sec Start LPM Start of MemoryMigration Cleanup queued workload End LPM ISICC Walldorf, MK

  30. LPAR Size (progressive) 90 LPAR Utilization 75 60 Elapsed Migration Time/min 45 30 Network Hops 15 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 LPAR Size/GB Influencing factors for LPM Whitepaper „Live Partition Migration of SAP Systems Under Load” available at TechDocs: http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/WP101917http://www.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/WP101917 Values measured during POWER6 to POWER7 transition at SAP customer site ISICC Walldorf, MK

  31. Practical Experiences with LPM in an SAP Landscape • LPM is being used by many SAP sites meanwhile • This includes non-disruptive upgrade scenarios from POWER6 to POWER7 • In order to estimate transfer time of a running SAP instance assume an effective transfer rate of  2 to 4 GB/min using a >= 1Gb LAN • Users can continue working, no perceived performance impact has been noticed • Users will experience approximately 2…20 seconds of unavailability at SAP frontend during final transfer stage (hourglass). • SAP License Keys must be available on target system • After LPM transfer SAP Apps continue running, but cannot be restarted • As of SAP NetWeaver 7.3 a Central SAP License Server avoids this problem •  Link to SAP Flexible License Mechanism • Avoid LPM transfer while source LPAR is highly utilized • This will exponentially increase migration time • DBs generate significantly less memory page updates compared to App-Servers • Customers have experienced problems with remotely linked SAP systems (via RFCs) • Timing issues occurred during final take-over • Test runs required ISICC Walldorf, MK

  32. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  33. AIX 6 Image AIX 6™ Workload Partitions single memory space Workload Partition A Workload Partition B Workload Partition D Workload Partition C Workload Partition E • SPLPAR vs. WPAR positioning paper for SAP apps. available at: http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/WP101179 • SAP supports WPARs for production systems. • Shares system WPARs • No resource control • DLPARs (Monitoring) • SAP-Note 1105456 describes supported WPAR environments, prerequisites and restrictions • System WPARs only • IBM DB2 UDB 9.5 + 9.1 FP5 ff • MaxDB 7.6 + 7.7 (incl. liveCache) • Oracle 10.2.04 (no RAC) and later • WPAR Application Mobility not yet supported • No DB supports Appl. Mobility today • Requirements for WPAR monitoring capability in CCMS • Also documented in above note • CCMS monitoring integration is a prerequisite for support of production environments. ISICC Walldorf, MK

  34. Content • POWER7 Processor Characteristics • SMT Modes • Entitlement versus virtual CPUs • PowerVM Advisors • Memory Virtualization • Advanced Memory Expansion (AME) • Advanced Memory Sharing (AMS) • PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • AIX Workload Partitions (WPARs) • SAP and PowerVM Integration • POWER metrics in CCMS • SAP Cloud Computing ISICC Walldorf, MK

  35. Challenge • Which physical systems are used by my SAP system? • Are there free resources in my resource pool? How much can the SAP system grow? SAP BASIS IT ADMIN • I need to apply hardware maintenance to one server. Which SAP systems and components are affected? Typical SAP customer landscape: 10..800 SAP Systems 10..800 databases 1..500 servers 3rd party software (often on Windows) Most multi-server SAP installations are heterogeneous ISICC Walldorf, MK

  36. Improved PowerVM™ virtualization monitoring within SAP CCMS • In 2006 IBM Power Systems was the first platform to incorporate platform specific (i.e. PowerVM) virtualization metrics into SAP CCMS. Now additional virtualization capabilities can seamlessly be monitored using standard SAP transactions (OS07n,...). This is a prerequisite for use of these capabilities with SAP production instances. • Starting with SAP NetWeaver 7.20 (shipping since 2010) the newly integrated CCMS monitoring functionalities are: • Monitoring of POWER shared pools • Monitoring of AIX 6 WPARS (Workload Partitions) • See SAP-Note 1105456 "SAP Installations in AIX 6.1 WPARs" • Indication when Live Partition Mobility has been done • See SAP-Note 1102760 "POWER6 Live Partition Mobility" • Monitoring of PowerVM Virtual I/O partitions (VIOs) • See SAP-Note 1379855 “Installation of saposcol and sapccmsr on IBM VIOS” • Parameters of Active Memory Expansion and virtual memory size • SAP-Note #1464605 titled "POWER7 Active Memory Expansion". ISICC Walldorf, MK

  37. PowerVM and AIX SAP Monitoring Transaction (ST06, OS07) Hierarchy of virtualization layersnow clearly visible Physical server LPAR WPAR ISICC Walldorf, MK

  38. AME Memory Metrics have been added to CCMS AME specific section • The memory monitoring capabilities are introduced with saposcol version 12.46. • See SAP-Note #710975 for more details and updated SAP-Note #1464605 titled "POWER7 Active Memory Expansion". ISICC Walldorf, MK

  39. Central Monitoring System( e.g. Solution Manager ) Reporting TXs CPH Collect OS data from LPARswith SAP CCMS agents SAP VIO-Server agent for system wide monitoring • VIOS Certified Program approval to run SAPOSCOL and the SAP SAPCCMSR-Agent in the VIO-Partitions • The SAP collector and the agent can be downloaded as an AIX installp package from the SAP Service Marketplace • Details about installation and setup in SAP-Note 1379855. ISICC Walldorf, MK

  40. Application for updating SAP Launch points within IBM Systems Director 3 Creating of JSON input file with definitions of SAP launch points 1 2 Collecting data about available hosts via REST protocol Collecting data about available SAP Systems via CIM protocol 4 Upload JSON file manually via CLI IBM Systems Director SAP Solution Manager SAP Launch Points SAP Launch for IBM Systems Director Sample Package with Code and Documentation available for free download at IBM TechDocs: http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4578 http://www.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4578 http://partners.boulder.ibm.com/src/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4578 Example launch points are SAP Management Console (ABAP & java Systems) and SAP NetWeaver Administrator (Java Systems) The launch points are automatically collected from the SAP Solution Manager The application discovers the SAP Solution Manager und IBM Systems Director and creates the SAP Launch points for systems which are available in both management applications The application creates a JSON file on the file system that should be inserted into IBM Systems Director with a simple command The application may be executed periodically in order to maintain up-to-data landscape state ISICC Walldorf, MK

  41. SAP Launch from IBM Systems Director Uses Advanced External Application Launch (AEAL) integration facility added into Director 6.2 ISICC Walldorf, MK

  42. Integration of POWER Technology into SAP Cloud Computing The previous section included herein and dealing with PowerVM and SAP Adaptive Compute Controller (ACC) has been moved to an own presentation. SAP Adaptive Compute Controller has evolved to SAP Landscape Virtualization Manager (LVM) in 2011. See the presentation: „Introduction to an Integral IBM / SAP Cloud Solution for SAP Landscape Management” at http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4803 ISICC Walldorf, MK

  43. POWER and SAPRelated Materials ISICC Walldorf, MK

  44. Helpful „SAP on IBM POWER“ documents • IBM internal competitive + reference materials available as a Cattail Collection: • http://cattail.boulder.ibm.com/cattail/#view=collections/C64753E05C0C3DDA93486644093F23B6 • Comfortable Video-Demos available at TechDocs (includes PW & www): • POWER6 Live Partition Mobility Demo with SAP • http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS2921 • Integration of IBM PowerVM and SAP Adaptive Computing Controller + CCMS • http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/PRS4232 • Whitepapers available • Live Migration of Power Partitions running SAP Applications (SAP SDN) • https://www.sdn.sap.com/irj/scn/go/portal/prtroot/docs/webcontent/uuid/b0b6911f-bf10-2c10-14ba-bc789953ff25 • SAP Adaptive Computing Controller for IBM Power Systems and IBM System z • http://w3.ibm.com/support/techdocs/atsmastr.nsf/WebIndex/WP101745 • Redbook completely reworked in October 2011 • SAP Applications on PowerVM • http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redbooks/pdfs/sg247564.pdf • ISICC Wiki Page covering SAP landscapes on IBM PowerVM • http://w3.tap.ibm.com/w3ki2/display/isicc/PowerVM+and+AIX+Virtualization ISICC - MK, 02/2012

  45. SAP Provided Information • Almost all technical SAP materials are maintend on the SAP Service Market Place. It requires a one time registration (S-User) in order to get access to the provided links and repositories at SAP. • Product Availability Matrix (PAM) • http://service.sap.com/pam • Lists all supported OS/DB/SAP stacks • Another technical Source is SAP Developer Network (SDN): • http://www.sdn.sap.com/irj/sdn • AIX Landing Page in SDN • http://www.sdn.sap.com/irj/sdn/aix • Public SAP Benchmark Entry Page • http://www.sap.com/solutions/benchmark/index.epx • 2 tier is most common one and base for SAPS comparisons ISICC - MK, 02/2012

  46. SAP Notes about IBM POWER and AIX • For registered S-Users • can be accessed via • http://service.sap.com/notes • PowerVM Virtualization • 1002461 Support of IBM Dynamic LPAR and Micropartitioning • 1102760 PowerVM Live Partition Mobility • 1105456 SAP Installations in AIX 6.1 WPARs • 1122387 Linux: SAP support in virtualized environments • 1464605 POWER7 Active Memory Expansion • Monitoring • 994025 Virtualized OS environments in the operating system monitor • 113169 CPU utilization metrics of IBM System p • 1379855 Include VIOS Partitions into SAP Performance Monitoring • SAP Applications on AIX • 1087498 Support for AIX 6.1 • 1137862 Using SAP systems with AIX 6.1 • 1096445 AIX 6.1 known problems for validation • 1048686 Recommended AIX settings for SAP • 1458918 Support for AIX 7.1 • 1541935 Using SAP systems with AIX 7.1 • 973227 AIX Virtual Memory Management: Tuning Recommendations • 789477 Large extended memory on AIX (64-bit) as of Kernel • 1088458 AIX: Performance improvement for ES/SHM_SEGS_VERSION • 856848 AIX Extended Memory Disclaiming • 1121904 SAP on AIX: Recommendations for paging space • 948294 AIX JFS2: mount options to use with Oracle 10g / 11g • 1289460 ORA-354 on AIX5L if agblksize is not set correctly ISICC - MK, 02/2012

More Related