Start-up brews hardware boost for Java

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

Topics

Azul, Java

NEWS

A Silicon Valley start-up called Azul Systems plans to start selling hardware next year designed to make it faster and more efficient to run Java programs.

The company has developed a custom processor called Vega that provides a hardware foundation for Java programs that's faster than the application server software from companies such as BEA, IBM, Oracle and Sun Microsystems that's most widely used today to run Java programs. But Azul believes the reason customers will be drawn to the hardware will be efficiency rather than acceleration.

Azul chief executive Stephen DeWitt said Azul's technology will do for Java software what networking has done for storage: let customers use a pool of resources efficiently shared by many servers. In the first half of 2005, Azul expects to sell systems with four to 16 customised processors that graft onto a customer's existing server infrastructure for running Java programs.

The devices are likely to be useful to larger companies, said RedMonk analyst Stephen O'Grady. "I think it's something of a niche most attractive to people with some pretty substantial workloads and computing needs," he said. Average Java server users, though, "are probably not going to be clamouring for this."

Selling chips to boost Java has been a business with ups and downs. Most contenders, such as Nazomi Communications, Ajile Systems and ARM, aimed for high-end mobile phones, while Sun dropped its own Java chip project.

Servers are different from mobile phones, though, and in that market customised processors are more common. Several companies offer products custom chips to accelerate Internet encryption operations, while ClearSpeed is working on chips to offload mathematical processing chores.

Java is widely used software developed by Sun that lets the same program run on many different computers. The program runs in a software environment called a Java virtual machine (JVM) -- in effect a software version of a computer that insulates the program from the varying particulars of a computer's hardware.

Moving software to hardware
Azul's Vega chip effectively moves some of that Java foundation into hardware. And because each Vega chip has 24 processing cores, a 16-processor machine can host as many as 384 Java virtual machines. "We have built massive pools of compute capacity that any application built on an application virtual machine can tap into," DeWitt said.

Azul's systems plug into existing application servers, which need a minor configuration change to direct Java programs to the Azul JVM rather than the application server's regular version. Azul is working to have its products certified with application servers from IBM and BEA Systems, which lead the market.

Azul also is working with Microsoft to obtain the support necessary to let the systems dovetail with the software colossus' .Net infrastructure, which instead of instead of the Java programming language and a JVM uses C# and the Common Language Runtime (CLR).

Working with .Net requires "absolutely no modifications to the hardware. The difference between the CLR world and the Java world is that Java is open. The CLR world is Microsoft," DeWitt said. "It requires a business relationship with Microsoft to open up that code."

Another future direction, planned for future chips, is the ability to better withstand failures, DeWitt said. Right now, if a virtual machine fails, the transactions it was working on must be restarted, but a future product will be able to keep the process alive, he said.

"We don't have transactional fault tolerance," DeWitt said. "That's something that's a logical evolution down the road."

Azul's Vega processors are a new design not based on any existing chips, DeWitt said. The company is working on a successor to the first-generation model, he added.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

zdnetukuser

And NOW, folks, for Canonical's next trick... Kubuntu is late. Here's a pencil. Draw your own conclusions. cf.:...

6 minutes ago by zdnetukuser on Linux Minterface
Moley

@kevinmchapman. The discussion here reflects the very significant number of users who really do like the traditional menu system and who wish to...

2 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

Er, no... It is an efficient means of finding the application/file/setting you need in one place. The icons are a simply a fallback for when you...

4 hours ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

Isn't the provision of a text based search an admission by the developers that the mass of icons approach does not work? I don't need to use a...

5 hours ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
kevinmchapman

"Unity and GNOME 3 both abandon the old text-based cascading menus in favour of a graphical icon-driven system." Point truly missed. Both use a...

6 hours ago by kevinmchapman on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
TerryRK

whs001 - Thank you, I'm glad you liked the article. I absolutely agree with you on your first point. I should perhaps have made it clearer that...

6 hours ago by TerryRK on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Dennis Nilsson

If we allow corporate interest to dictate the way our government circumvents due process against foreign entities then we should accept the same...

7 hours ago by Dennis Nilsson via Facebook on ACTA stumbles in Germany
GHar123

I totally dislike pirating of works, I fear that artists will be deterred from creating works if they think that they are going to get ripped off....

8 hours ago by GHar123 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
JCB33

How dare film makers, artists or anybody that invests in creativity stop us pirating their works for free. I want to be able to walk into my local...

14 hours ago by JCB33 on ACTA stumbles in Germany
Moley

@GrueMaster. I prefer horses for courses rather than one size fits all. I, and I suspect most other computer users, do not really wish to have...

16 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
greycynic

The product that scares me every time I have to use it is the Office 2007 version of Excel. The first bug that I found was applying the median...

16 hours ago by greycynic on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
GrueMaster

Nice review and very informative. One thing I'd like to add (in reply to whs001's 1st question), the main reason to have the same interface from...

18 hours ago by GrueMaster on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Frederick Wrigley

I'be been using Mint 12 since the RC came out, and I am far more happy with the Cinnamon, the Mate, and, yes (with extensions), theGnome 3...

18 hours ago by Frederick Wrigley via Facebook on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
bdantas

Excellent article. One small correction, though--although a fresh installation of Linux Mint 12 will, indeed, provide the user with a version of...

19 hours ago by bdantas on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

20 hours ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Alan Ralph

In related news, the ISPs club together to get the members of the Home Affairs Select Committee (ya goofed on that part, ZDNet UK) copies of "The...

20 hours ago by Alan Ralph via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Moley

For Gnome 2 die-hards, it is possible to add icons to the bottom panel (or top top panel, if you prefer) which provide the exact Gnome 2...

20 hours ago by Moley on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint
ramwellian

Your comments would seem pretty naive and immature. Your 'solution' appears to be, "gee, let's all just give in to the hackers and give them...

21 hours ago by ramwellian on Cloud computing security: no more oxymoron?
BugStalker

"Interesting thought ... If you installed Win7 as a dual boot on a machine that previously only had Linux, and it wrecked your Linux installation,...

21 hours ago by BugStalker on Windows 7 Declares War on GRUB
whs001

This is an excellent summary of Ubuntu and Mint and the interface differences between them. Most such articles take a very partisan position for...

21 hours ago by whs001 on A tale of two distros: Ubuntu and Linux Mint