Emulex Corporation was an American computer hardware company active from 1978 to 2015. The company was a provider of computer network connectivity, monitoring and management hardware and software. The company's I/O connectivity offerings, including its line of Ethernet and Fibre Channel-based connectivity products, are or were used in server and storage products from OEMs, including Cisco, Dell, EMC Corporation, Fujitsu, Hitachi, Hewlett-Packard, Huawei, IBM, NetApp, and Oracle Corporation. In 2015, the company was acquired by Avago Technologies.
Much of Emulex's early market was for Digital Equipment Corporation's VAX and PDP-11 systems. One of the company's most successful products early on was the Performance series of low-cost, low-profile . The inaugural Performance 4000 (P4000), released in August 1988, was the first third-party terminal server compatible with DEC's Local Area Transport protocol. As one of the industry's first compact design terminal servers, it was instantly profitable for Emulex, selling well in shops that were looking for low-cost access methods to a fast-growing base of DEC VAX server products. The P4000 was fixed in port count (16) and housed in a plastic shell with an LCD status screen.
In 1992, Emulex spun off their disk controller business into QLogic.
In February 2015, Avago Technologies Limited announced it would acquire Emulex for $8 per share, in cash. Avago, a spinoff of Hewlett Packard, merged with Broadcom in May of that year. Avago assumed the Broadcom name. avagotech.com redirects to broadcom.com
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