Difference between revisions of "PowerNV"

From RCS Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (openpower link)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
PowerNV is the IBM name for POWER systems that conform to the OpenPOWER standard and expose OpenPOWER interfaces, such as [[OPAL|OPAL]], to the host operating system.  This distinguishes OpenPOWER platforms from earlier systems using [[Open Firmware|Open Firmware]] as well as from IBM's [[Scale_Up|Scale Up (SU)]] offerings that focus on [[AIX|AIX]] and other proprietary software.
+
{{Glossary
 +
  |name=PowerNV
 +
  |abbr=PowerNV
 +
  |desc=The IBM name (standing for Power Non-Virtualized) for POWER systems that conform to the [[OpenPOWER]] standard and expose OpenPOWER interfaces, such as [[OPAL|OPAL]], to the host operating system.  This distinguishes OpenPOWER platforms from earlier systems using [[Open Firmware|Open Firmware]] as well as from IBM's [[Scale_Up|Scale Up (SU)]] offerings that focus on [[AIX|AIX]] and other proprietary software.}}
  
 
You can determine if you are on an OpenPOWER platform fairly easily via examination of the '/proc/cpuinfo' file on Linux systems.  The platform field will show "PowerNV" and the "firmware" field will normally show "OPAL".
 
You can determine if you are on an OpenPOWER platform fairly easily via examination of the '/proc/cpuinfo' file on Linux systems.  The platform field will show "PowerNV" and the "firmware" field will normally show "OPAL".
 +
 +
Known processors with PowerNV support include:
 +
* [[POWER8|POWER8]]
 +
* [[POWER8E|POWER8E]]
 +
* [[POWER9|POWER9]]

Latest revision as of 01:27, 22 December 2017

PowerNV (PowerNV): The IBM name (standing for Power Non-Virtualized) for POWER systems that conform to the OpenPOWER standard and expose OpenPOWER interfaces, such as OPAL, to the host operating system. This distinguishes OpenPOWER platforms from earlier systems using Open Firmware as well as from IBM's Scale Up (SU) offerings that focus on AIX and other proprietary software.

You can determine if you are on an OpenPOWER platform fairly easily via examination of the '/proc/cpuinfo' file on Linux systems. The platform field will show "PowerNV" and the "firmware" field will normally show "OPAL".

Known processors with PowerNV support include: