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The types of Operating Systems I have supported are:
+HP-UX 11i v3Operating systems are complex software ecosystems that control the usage of resources of your computers (for example memory, peripherals, processors, and applications). HP-UX 11i, HP’s version of the UNIX operating system, is highly configurable and has many optional components and applications to enhance the basic functionality of the core operating system. Operating Environments are pre-configured combinations of these components, designed and pre-tested to work together. https://docstore.mik.ua/manuals/hp-ux/en/5992-4580/ch01s01.html
The types of Clustering I have supported are:
+HP-UX MC-ServiceGuardA Serviceguard cluster is a networked group of HP Integrity or HP 9000 servers (known to Serviceguard as nodes) having sufficient redundancy of software and hardware that a single point of failure will not significantly disrupt service. The ability to continue operating in spite of a software or hardware failure makes Serviceguard clusters highly available. https://docstore.mik.ua/manuals/hp-ux/en/5992-4580/ch02s05.html
The types of HP Hardware supported are:
+K-CLASS The next step up from the L-Class is HP's K-Class series of UNIX servers, which are positioned either for enterprise or for technical computing environments. Available in a variety of processor configurations - ranging from PA-RISC 8200 to PA-RISC 8600 processor models - K-Class boxes can scale from one to six processors, can address up to 8 GB of physical memory, and can support up to 30 TB of storage.
While the N-Class may approach near-mainframe performance in some areas, HP's V-Class servers constitute the UNIX world's equivalent of a mainframe. With near-linear scalability from one to 32 processors - and with the ability to scale to 128 processors in an SMP configuration - V-Class servers are built upon HP's scalable computing architecture (SMP).
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