Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Compunix is not a typical cloud SaaS product. It is a data recovery software and consulting provider for AIX systems on IBM Power, and claims to have offered these services since 1992. It focuses on incident scenarios such as deleted files and directories, deleted databases, file systems rebuilt with crfs, and logical volumes removed with rmlv. It is relevant for enterprises that still run mission-critical systems on AIX.
Its core product is an AIX undelete tool. According to the documentation, it supports JFS2 undelete, recursive recovery of directory structures, recovery of data whose path or filename cannot be restored via the special /.INODES directory, and recognition of Oracle database file patterns. It also supports AIX 4.3 through 7.1, including some older versions no longer supported by IBM. EFS-encrypted files can also be recovered to another encrypted file system. The recovery approach emphasizes local execution, read-only access to logical volumes, no direct writes back to the original file system, and no reliance on fsck to modify metadata. This safety-oriented design is well suited to high-risk recovery scenarios.
Pricing is transparent but clearly geared toward incident-based purchasing. An on-demand software license costs 200€, with additional recovery codes priced from 50€ to 4000€ based on the size of a single file. Bulk small-file licenses range from 2000€ to 5000€. Full-file recovery licenses range from 3000€ to 7500€, tiered by maximum file system size. All licenses are valid for three months, and prices exclude tax. A free list tool can scan and list recoverable files before purchase, but it cannot perform recovery. This is useful for estimating the likelihood of success before paying.
The main strengths are its highly specialized positioning, support for legacy AIX versions, local non-intrusive recovery, and payment options including bank transfer and AmEx/Mastercard/VISA credit cards. The drawbacks are its extremely narrow use case and the lack of typical SaaS features such as team collaboration, permission management, third-party integrations, APIs, or published compliance certifications. Digital products are generally non-refundable, and the cost of keeping it on standby long term is not low.
Compunix is best suited to operations teams in finance, manufacturing, energy, and similar industries that still run AIX/IBM Power environments with SAP, Oracle, or Cache database workloads. It is mainly for emergency use after accidental deletion or file system misoperations. The available information does not disclose access conditions from China, so network reachability and payment availability are unknown. Alternatives include IBM official support, local AIX data recovery consultants, and more complete backup, snapshot, and disaster recovery solutions.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on compunix.com official site.
compunix.com is an Netherlands SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach compunix.com directly.