What Niall says - that's a non contractual doc, although they like people to
think otherwise .
Oracles general line about disabling cores is that there is no audit trail so
its not legit.
If you want to go that route, or vmware, talk to your lawyers and LMS first.
Otherwise, physical tin or use OVM and hard partitioning and suck up the Oracle
line...
Regards
Neil
Sent from my Windows Phone
________________________________
From: Niall Litchfield<mailto:niall.litchfield@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 30/03/2016 14:08
To: chetal@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:chetal@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Patrice Boivin<mailto:patrice.boivin@xxxxxxxxx>;
ORACLE-L<mailto:oracle-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: disabled cores
Note, however, that that document is not contractual. The bottom line here
is that you will need to consult your contract(s), your lawyers and your
Oracle account representatives (or resellers).
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 1:25 PM, Pradeep Chetal <chetal@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It depends on what virtualization and hardware as well. Please go thru
http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/pricing/partitioning-070609.pdf
On Wed, Mar 30, 2016 at 8:03 AM, Patrice sur GMail <
patrice.boivin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am wondering whether you've had to disable core to keep licensing costs
down, or if that is even considered legit.
-- Patrice
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