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How Big Is VMS?

(vmssoftware.com)
77 points rbanffy | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.389s | source
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jamesy0ung ◴[] No.43575439[source]
Is there any reason to use VMS today other than for existing applications that cannot be migrated? I've heard its reliability is legendary, but I've never tried it myself. The 1 year licensed VM seems excessively annoying. Is it just old and esoteric, or does it still have practical use? At least with Linux, multiple vendors release and support distros and it is mainstream, whereas with VMS, you'd be stuck with VSI.
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snovymgodym ◴[] No.43576851[source]
> Is there any reason to use VMS today other than for existing applications that cannot be migrated?

No, there is no reason to do a greenfield VMS deployment and hasn't been for a long time.

> I've heard its reliability is legendary, but I've never tried it myself.

I've heard the same things but I am doubtful as to their veracity in a modern context. Those claims sound like they come from an era where VMS was still a cutting-edge and competitive product. I'm sure VMS on vaxclusters had impressive reliability in the 1980s, but I doubt it's anything special today. If you look at the companies and institutions that need performance and high reliability today (e.g. Hyperscaler companies or the TOP500) they are all using the same thing: Linux on clusters of x86-64 machines.

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1. przemub ◴[] No.43585359[source]
Hey, something like twenty are not x86-64 based :) With ARM Fugaku at the top a couple years ago.