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aix

Advanced Interactive eXecutive (AIX) is IBM's proprietary Unix operating system for POWER-based IBM servers. First released in 1986, it has evolved into the primary Unix platform for IBM's POWER hardware and related systems. AIX is based on UNIX System V with BSD-derived features and is POSIX-compliant, with certifications that align it with UNIX standards.

AIX supports a range of enterprise features designed for reliability, scalability, and security. It offers transactional

Administration and software delivery are handled through command-line tools and a System Management Interface Tool (SMIT).

AIX runs on IBM POWER hardware, including the POWER4 and later families, and remains a central element

and
multi-user
capabilities,
high
availability,
and
robust
networking.
Storage
is
managed
using
the
Journaled
File
System
(JFS)
and
later
JFS2,
along
with
the
Logical
Volume
Manager
(LVM)
for
flexible
disk
management.
The
system
supports
logical
partitions
(LPARs)
and
IBM
PowerVM
virtualization,
enabling
consolidation
and
dynamic
resource
allocation.
High-availability
clustering
is
provided
by
PowerHA
SystemMirror.
Software
can
also
be
installed
with
installp
and
via
the
AIX
Toolbox
for
Linux
Applications,
which
provides
GNU
tools
and
utilities
compiled
for
AIX.
of
IBM’s
Power
Systems
platform.
It
is
commonly
used
for
databases,
ERP,
and
other
mission-critical
workloads,
often
in
conjunction
with
IBM
DB2,
Oracle,
SAP,
and
other
enterprise
software.
IBM
continues
to
release
updates
and
security
patches
to
the
AIX
family,
supporting
long-term
deployments
and
virtualization
environments.