AIX V7.1
Support for 256 cores / 1024 threads in a single virtual machine The ability to run AIX V 5.2 inside of a Workload Partition
A XML profile based system configuration management utility Support for export of fibre channel adapters to WPARs VIOS disk support in a WPAR Cluster Aware AIX AIX Event infrastructure
Role Based Access Control (RBAC) with domain support for multi-tenant environments
Live Application Mobility Live Partition Mobility Security AIX Security Expert - A system and network security hardening tool
ProbeVue dynamic tracing Systems Director Console for AIX Integrated filesystem snapshot Requires POWER4 or newer CPUs
NFS Version 4 Advanced Accounting Virtual SCSI Virtual Ethernet Exploitation of Simultaneous multithreading (SMT) Micro-Partitioning enablement POWER5 exploitation JFS2 quotas Ability to shrink a JFS2 filesystem
kernel scheduler has been enhanced to dynamically increase and decrease the use of virtual processors.
2009
Ability to run on the IBM BladeCenter JS20 with the PowerPC Minimum level required for POWER5 hardware MPIO for Fibre Channel disks iSCSI Initiator software Participation in Dynamic LPAR 970.
Concurrrent I/O (CIO) feature introduced for JFS2 released in Maintenance Level 01 in May 2003[12]
AIX 5L 5.1
2006) Ability to run on an IA-64 architecture processor, although this never went beyond beta[14] Minimum level required for POWER4 hardware and the last release that worked on the Micro Channel architecture
64-bit kernel, installed but not activated by default JFS2 Ability to run in a Logical Partition on POWER4 The L stands for Linux affinity Trusted Computing Base (TCB) Support for mirroring with striping
AIX 4.3.3
Ability to run on 64-bit architecture CPUs IPv6 Web-based System Manager April 25, 1997
AIX 4.2.1
NFS Version 3 May 17, 1996 November 8, 1996 October 20, 1995 July 7, 1995
AIX 4.2
AIX 4.1.5
CDE 1.0 became the default GUI environment, replacing Motif Window Manager.
AIX 3.0
1989
LVM (Logical Volume Manager) was incorporated into OSF/1, and in 1995 for HP-UX,[15] and the Linux LVM implementation is similar to the HP-UX LVM implementation.[16]
1989
AIX v1.0
AIX v2.0
1986