Oracle has
changed its licensing policies for dual-core processors,
bringing pricing schemes more in line with those of its rivals.
The database vendor previously charged its enterprise software per processing
core, meaning that a server running on a dual-core processor required two
software licences.
Oracle has now
announced
on it website that each core will count as 0.75 processors.
A database running on a single server with one quadruple-core processor will
therefore require three processor licences. Fractions will be rounded up, so a
dual-core processor still requires two licences.
Competing infrastructure software vendors including
IBM,
Microsoft and
Red Hat only count physical
computer chips when calculating licensing fees, regardless of the number of
processor cores per socket.
Oracle was one of the last to hold out in the move away from per-core
licensing schemes.
Chip makers AMD and
Intel only recently
introduced dual-core x86 processors. Multiple-core processors are already common
in high-end servers from vendors including
IBM and
Sun Microsystems.
Intel and AMD have said that policies such as Oracle's prevent enterprise
adoption of dual-core x86 servers because the savings of the hardware are offset
by the increased license fees.
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