That's an interesting point, so now I have some questions.
Let's say I want to move my application running on Oracle hardware in-house
to Azure (as an example).
I know in Oracle cloud , they use OCPUs and you pay for 'x' amount of
steady state OCPus and then have bursting capability that you can pay extra
for if you need to boost up CPU resources temporarily.
What I'm now curious about is how you determine on non-Oracle cloud how
many "CPUs" you need, how many "CPUs" you actually use. Does Oracle have
any ability to audit your CPU usage in someone else's cloud? How does an
Azure guarantee you you're only ever using the CPU counts your licensed for
- or is it totally up to the customer to make sure they buy "X" amount of
Cloud CPU licenses from Oracle and only ever use that many cloud CPUs ?
Chris
On Fri, May 7, 2021 at 11:19 AM Tim Gorman <tim.evdbt@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Great point, Jeremiah!
Please don't bother asking the cloud provider about Oracle licensing,
documents like this HERE
<https://www.oracle.com/assets/cloud-licensing-070579.pdf>are merely
general advisory. Oracle licensing is a contract, negotiated between your
company and Oracle, possibly through one or more reseller(s), and the cloud
provider has no influence whatsoever in the matter.
On 5/7/2021 6:46 AM, Jeremiah Wilton wrote:
The processor core rules for non-Oracle clouds Oracle puts out are not
necessarily part of your license agreement with Oracle. That doc even has
some kind of notation like “educational purposes only.” Your license
agreement is the final word on how to count cores, regardless of whether you
run in or off a cloud service.
Jeremiah
Sent from my iPhone
On May 7, 2021, at 4:53 AM, Radoulov, Dimitre <cichomitiko@xxxxxxxxx>
<cichomitiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thank you very much Mike!
I'm aware, of course, that Kellyn Potvin contributes to oracle-l and thanks
for mentioning her blog, I'll check the Azure related posts.
I know that we're supposed to patch our instances by ourselves just like we
do on prem.
As a side note: we have a huge number of cloud managed databases on Google
and the fact that all the backup and patching related stuff is handled by
Google is really great (just like the other cloud vendors database managed
solutions, I suppose).
Best regards
Dimitre
On 07/05/2021 13.40, Michael Gangler wrote:
Hi Dimitre,
Kellyn Potvin-Gorman who use to work for Oracle and is now works for
Microsoft and is the Oracle SME for Azure, has provided great information on
setting up Oracle on Azure. I was able to setup a couple Oracle instances
and it works great. Please note, though, Oracle in Azure is more IAAS so
many of the items such as Oracle patching, etc. will have to be done by you.
Her Blog is : https://dbakevlar.com/about/
Kellyn also follows this site and I'm sure she will also provide more expert
than myself. Overall, worked like a charm, good performance and pretty
straight forward install.
--Mike
Thank You,
Mikemike@xxxxxxxxxxx
On 5/7/21, 6:40 AM, "Radoulov, Dimitre" <oracle-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx on
behalf of cichomitiko@xxxxxxxxx>
<oracle-l-bounce@freelists.orgonbehalfofcichomitiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello all,
we have to set up Oracle database on MS Azure. I'm reading various
articles/blog posts on Internet and try to choose the best options for us.
If I understand correctly the licensing is different (one processor
license covers one virtual core, thus the Intel core factor doesn't
apply).
RAC isn't supported, but you can deploy Data Guard as HA, and eventually
DR (on a different region), solution.
We definitely need to patch OS and databases on a regular basis.
We currently don't use the multitentant option, but I suppose that we'll
need to switch to it because the single tenant will be deprecated.
I don't believe ASM would be more appropriate than XFS with
filesystemio_options set to setall for a single instance.
It would be really great if you could share your experience, suggestions
and new "best practices" for running an enterprise grade Oracle database
on non-Oracle public cloud.
Thanks in advance!
Best regards
Dimitre
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