Re: Oracle on Windows Server Vs Xp-Pro
Date: Thu, 23 Dec 2004 03:17:01 +1100
Message-ID: <41c99e08$0$4537$afc38c87_at_news.optusnet.com.au>
Newton Bolton wrote:
>
>> Newton Bolton wrote: >> >> >>> Does anyone know if using the Windows Server OS instead of XP-Pro >>> will offer any performance advantages? >>> >>> I don't plan to use ANY Microsoft products such as IIS or Exchange. >>> >>> This will be a pure Oracle database server. >>> >>> Thanks in advance- >>> Newt >> >> >>
> Howard J. Rogers wrote:>
>
[Quoted] >> You'll know already, of course, that workstation-class MS operating >> systems only permit 10 concurrent users to access the machine from >> other workstations. Your anticipated load of 8 is already perilously >> close to that, and the Server O/S might be justified on those grounds >> alone -plenty more growth room. Besides which, you need to be careful >> that workstations don't do unintended 'silent' cross-connections, >> which steal from your number of permitted connections.
>
> I didn't know of this limit. Is this a licensing limit, performance
> limit or a limitation enforced by the MS software? I have departments
> with 14 Oracle "named users" and they all connect to the server every
> day, even though only 2-4 may be using the application. The nature of
> this department is such that they interact with the database only a few
> times every hour, so the effective load on the database is negligable.
> However, I have never had a problem with people connecting to the
> 'server' (Win-NT 4.0 workstation)
[Quoted] It's an intrinsic software limit (that is, it's not something you can license your way out of).
As a for-example, try:
www.ntcompatible.com/thread17769-1.html
It was the first one I spotted on Google. It talks a lot about Windows 2000, but there is also mention of NT and XP. And someone confuses PC-to-PC connections with Internet Connections, but the general point is clear enough, I hope.
[snip]
> The Oracle
> application (on the server) needs to run Reports 6I to create PDF
> reports for emailing, so that rules out Linux for now.
[Quoted] I don't understand that comment.... are you saying that Reports 6i is not available in a Linux version? Or that you can't produce PDFs on Linux?
The latter I know not to be the case. And the former... well, a quick trip to technet.oracle.com's download page reveals a Reports 6i Release 2 is available for SPARC Solaris, Windows NT/2000/XP ...and Linux.
Am I missing your point, then?
Regards
HJR
Received on Wed Dec 22 2004 - 17:17:01 CET