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HEADER I
Workloads have shifted over the last 8 years and IBM is committed
to providing customers with a relative system performance metric
that better reflects those changes. Today, IBM is announcing the
creation of the new rPerf measurement of relative performance for
the IBM pSeries family of UNIX servers. This new metric replaces
ROLTP which is being immediately withdrawn. rPerf is a combination
of several different measures of total systems commercial
performance that takes into account the demands on a Web server
in today’s environment. Although you might find historical
references to ROLTP on this Web site, it will no longer be published
for any currently marketed or new pSeries servers.
HEADER II.................................................................................
Workloads have shifted over the last 8 years and IBM is committed
to providing customers with a relative system performance metric
that better reflects those changes. Today, IBM is announcing the
creation of the new rPerf measurement of relative performance for
the IBM pSeries family of UNIX servers. This new metric replaces
ROLTP which is being immediately withdrawn. rPerf is a combination
of several different measures of total systems commercial
performance that takes into account the demands on a Web server
in today’s environment. Although you might find historical
references to ROLTP on this Web site, it will no longer be published
for any currently marketed or new pSeries servers.
HEADER III .............................................................................
Workloads have shifted over the last 8 years and IBM is committed
to providing customers with a relative system performance metric
that better reflects those changes. Today, IBM is announcing the
creation of the new rPerf measurement of relative performance for
the IBM pSeries family of UNIX servers. This new metric replaces
ROLTP which is being immediately withdrawn. rPerf is a combination
of several different measures of total systems commercial
performance that takes into account the demands on a Web server
in today’s environment. Although you might find historical
references to ROLTP on this Web site, it will no longer be published
for any currently marketed or new pSeries servers.
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