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Markus Hilger edited this page May 8, 2024 · 75 revisions

xCAT is an open-source tool for automating deployment, scaling, and management of bare metal severs and virtual machines.

xCAT offers complete management for HPC clusters, RenderFarms, Grids, WebFarms, Online Gaming Infrastructure, Clouds, Datacenters etc. xCAT provides an extensible framework that is based on years of system administration best practices and experiences. It is agile, extensible and powerful.

NOTE: The next release will be 2.17, the first non-IBM release, to be released by the xCA T consortium.

Note: this wiki is only for release information, and security notices. xCAT user documentation is at ReadTheDocs

General Release Information and Planning

Version Release Notes Issues
2.17 (development) Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16.5 (stable) Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16.4 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16.3 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16.2 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16.1 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.16 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.15.1 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.15 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.14 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.13 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR
2.12 Release Notes Closed Issues/PR

Security Notices

Security Notices for xCAT has been moved to here: Security Notices


xCAT is developed under the Eclipse Public License.

News

History

  • Oct 22, 2010: xCAT 2.5 released.
  • Apr 30, 2010: xCAT 2.4 is released.
  • Oct 31, 2009: xCAT 2.3 released. xCAT's 10 year anniversary!
  • Apr 16, 2009: xCAT 2.2 released.
  • Oct 31, 2008: xCAT 2.1 released.
  • Sep 12, 2008: Support for xCAT 2 can now be purchased!
  • June 9, 2008: xCAT breaths life into (at the time) the fastest supercomputer on the planet
  • May 30, 2008: xCAT 2.0 for Linux officially released!
  • Oct 31, 2007: IBM open sources xCAT 2.0 to allow collaboration among all of the xCAT users.
  • Oct 31, 1999: xCAT 1.0 is born!
    xCAT started out as a project in IBM developed by Egan Ford. It was quickly adopted by customers and IBM manufacturing sites to rapidly deploy clusters.
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