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Sequent Computer Systems

Sequent Computer Systems, or more commonly just Sequent, was a computer company that designed and manufactured parallel computing systems. Together with Pyramid Technology[?], they were pioneers in symmetric multi-processing[?]. Through a close partnership with Oracle, Sequent became a dominant high-end UNIX platform in the late 80s and early 90s. Later, after several missteps, they returned to their roots, producing a next-generation high-end platform for UNIX and Windows NT based on a non-uniform memory architecture[?]. As hardware prices fell in the late 1990s Sequent found their market shinking. Eventually, IBM bought them in 1999. Although the acquisition was made to establish NUMA-Q-based systems as the high end of their Intel-based platform line, changes in senior IBM management led to changes in strategy, and the death knell for NUMA-Q was sounded when in 2002, two layoffs at Sequent's former headquarters near Nike ended all development on the systems for which IBM had acquired the company.

History

Sequent formed in 1983 when a group of eighteen engineers and executives left Intel after the failed iAPX 432[?] mainframe on a chip project was cancelled. They started Sequent to develop a line of parallel computers, then considered one of the up and coming fields in computer design.

Sequent's first computer systems were the Balance 8000 and Balance 21000 released in 1984. The Balance included up to 20 National Semiconductor NS32016[?] processors, each with a small cache connected to a common memory. The system ran a modified version of BSD Unix they called DYNIX, for DYNamix unIX. The machines were designed to compete with the DEC VAX 11/780, with each of their inexpensive processors dedicated to a particular user. In addition the system included a series of libraries that could be used by programmers to develop applications that could use more than one processor at a time. In reality, the machines were purchased almost solely by people interested in "low end" parallel computing, and the Balance was never a success in the general minicomputer market.

Their next series was the Intel 80386-based Symmetry, released in 1987. Various models supported between 2 and 24 processors, using a new copyback cache and a wider 64-bit memory bus. 1991's Symmetry 2000 added SCSI drives, and were offered in versions with 1 to 6 Intel 80486 processors. The next year they added the VMEbus based Symmetry 2000/x50 with faster CPUs. In 1993 they added the Symmetry 2000/x90 along with their ptx/Cluster software to gang a number of machines into larger groups.

The late 80s and early 90s saw big changes on the software side for Sequent. DYNIX was replaced by DYNIX/ptx, which was based on AT&T's version of UNIX instead of BSD. And this was during a period when Sequent's high-end systems became particularly successful due to a close working relationship withn Oracle, specifically their high-end database servers.

In 1994 they introduced the Symmetry 5000 series models SE20, SE60 and SE90, which used 66Mhz Pentium CPUs in systems from 2 to 30 processors. The next year they expanded that with the SE30/70/100 linup using 100MHz Pentiums, and then in 1996 with the SE40/80/120 with 166MHz Pentiums. With the addition of a VGA card and the Winserver NT software, the 5000 series could also run Windows NT.

Recognizing the increase in competition for SMP systems, Sequent sought its next source of differentiation. They licensed their technology to Intel to help commoditize the SMP market, and began investing in the development of a system based on a cache-coherent non-uniform memory architecture. In 1996 they released the first of a new series of machines based on this new architecture. Known internally as STiNG, it was productized as NUMA-Q and was the last of the systems released before the company was purchased by IBM for over $800 million. In 2002, after Sun Microsystems began a public discussion of IBM's silence on their NUMA-based x430 system, IBM announced that it had no further plans to market the x430 and would eventually drop support for the over 10,000 systems that Sequent and IBM had deployed.



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