The HPE Integrity NonStop computers are a line of
fault-tolerant, message-based server computers based on the
Intel Xeon processor platform, and optimized for transaction processing. Average availability levels of 99.999% have been observed. NonStop systems feature a
massively parallel processing (MPP) architecture and provide linear scalability. Each CPU runs its own copy of the OS, and systems can be expanded up to over 4000 CPUs. This is a
shared-nothing architecture—a "share nothing" arrangement also known as
loosely coupled multiprocessing. Due to the integrated hardware/software stack and a
single system image for even the largest configurations, system management requirements for NonStop systems are rather low. In most deployments there is just a single production server, not a complex
server farm. Most customers also have a backup server in a remote location for
IT disaster recovery. There are standard products to keep the data of the production and the backup server in sync, for example, HPE's Remote Database Facility (RDF), hence there is fast takeover and little to no data loss also in a disaster situation with the production server being disabled or destroyed. HP also developed a
data warehouse and
business intelligence server line,
HP Neoview, based on the NonStop line. It acted as a
database server, providing NonStop OS and
NonStop SQL, but lacked the
transaction processing functionality of the original NonStop systems. The line was
retired, and no longer
marketed, as of 24 January 2011. ==See also==