Re: Another licensing Q

From: Seth Miller <sethmiller.sm_at_gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2017 10:02:15 -0600
Message-ID: <CAEueRAU=WObmwVMUwGCR2q7eu1Wz1_Wq-_Z5qeGbgS17gf63HQ_at_mail.gmail.com>



> "...get it in writing."

It's already in writing. It's called a contract and it is the only thing that matters. White papers, MOS articles, blogs, conversations, and forums are irrelevant. Your contract details what can be enforced by Oracle. Your contract is (most likely) silent on partitioning. Therefore, if the software cannot run on those cores, Oracle has no legal ground to charge you for them.

I think I already mentioned this once or twice but it bears repeating; Do not engage Oracle LMS directly. There is an inherent conflict of interest. Use a reputable partner.

Seth Miller

On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 8:37 AM, Andrew Kerber <andrew.kerber_at_gmail.com> wrote:

> I am pretty sure that Oracle will only accept that method on Oracle
> hardware, ie ODA. You will probably need to license all of them on any
> other hardware. That is not any sort of official answer of course, but its
> my best guess.
>
> On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 2:41 AM, Marian Bednar <bednar_at_nbs.sk> wrote:
>
>> Hi Thomas,
>>
>> only note - on bare-metal servers output form “cat /proc/cpuinfo|grep
>> processor|wc –l” usually show the number of threads (if multithreading
>> is on) then number of cores is half of it. Try command "lscpu".
>> Number of cores you can also see in oracle alert.log during instance
>> startup (since 11.2.0.4), e.g.
>>
>> Initial number of CPU is 16
>> Number of processor cores in the system is 8
>> Number of processor sockets in the system is 2
>>
>> Marian
>>
>>
>>
>> From: Biju Thomas <biju.thomas_at_gmail.com>
>> To: "oracle-l_at_freelists.org" <oracle-l_at_freelists.org>,
>> Date: 03. 11. 2017 20:38
>> Subject: Another licensing Q
>> Sent by: oracle-l-bounce_at_freelists.org
>> ------------------------------
>>
>>
>>
>> Question related to Oracle CPU licensing on Cisco UCS. My current blade
>> has 32 cores (the result of “cat /proc/cpuinfo|grep processor|wc –l”).
>> The sysadmin disabled all but four cores on each socket via the UCS BIOS
>> and got the output of 8 when I ran the same command the second time. The OS
>> only sees 8. The question is does Oracle allow me to license only 8 visible
>> cores, or do I have to still license all 32 present on the blade?
>>
>> I believe such licensing is possible on ODA (Oracle Database Appliance).
>> *https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E22693_01/doc.12/e25375/chapter1.htm*
>> <https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E22693_01/doc.12/e25375/chapter1.htm>
>> With bare-metal, you disable cores that will not be used by the Oracle
>> Database by adding your hardware Support Identifier (SI) for Oracle
>> Database Appliance to your My Oracle Support account and creating a key.
>>
>> Thanks much!
>> Biju Thomas
>>
>>
>> --
>> Best,
>> Biju Thomas
>> *www.bijoos.com* <http://www.bijoos.com/>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Andrew W. Kerber
>
> 'If at first you dont succeed, dont take up skydiving.'
>

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Received on Mon Nov 06 2017 - 17:02:15 CET

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