Oracle ec2 pricing1/19/2024 Oracle contracts, policies, and practices are so complex and risky the only way to fully understand your options and costs is to engage with an independent team of Oracle licensing and contracting experts like we have at Palisade Compliance. While AWS and others battle it out for your cloud dollars, it’s really important that you understand your options on where you can deploy your Oracle software and how much it’s going to cost you. Ultimately, it is up to each Oracle licensee to take control of their Oracle licensing and determine their own path forward. Oracle customers should not, however, wait for Oracle to make it easier to deploy on AWS or any other non-Oracle cloud. Given Oracle’s history, we can expect them to respond in some way. Our initial assessment of this program, and how customers manage their deployments, is that it does offer Oracle users running on Amazon EC2 an opportunity to significantly reduce the number of Oracle licenses required and can therefore lower the associated Oracle licensing costs. That’s how Oracle tries to get you on VMware usage and Oracle may try to do the same thing here. This restriction will eliminate any chance for Oracle to use the argument that the customer’s deployment “could possibly” move to other vCPUs and therefore require more Oracle licenses. According to AWS, there is no way for a client to increase or reduce the number of vCPUs after the initial creation unless they fully delete the instance and recreate it. The way AWS has set up this Optimize CPU Program requires their customers choose up front how many vCPUs are utilized for their deployment. Given that Oracle database costs $47,500 per license, this saving on Oracle is significant and can easily reach millions of dollars. ![]() This would require either 1 or 2 Oracle licenses, depending on when the client acquired their Oracle software. However, under the Optimize CPU program, that same client can now configure an EC2 environment with 2 vCPUs (or even 1!). (Pre-January 2017 had different Oracle licensing policies than post-January 2017). This environment would require either 16 or 8 Oracle database licenses depending on when the client purchased their Oracle licenses. ![]() For example, under the old program an AWS customer would be allocated 16 vCPUs for an EC2 environment. Under Optimize CPU, the clients decide upfront for themselves. Before Optimize CPU, AWS customers were allocated a specific number of vCPUs for their EC2 deployments based on AWS rules. The Optimize CPU program for EC2 allows AWS customers to configure their EC2 environments and choose the number of vCPUs assigned to their instances. It’s a brand new approach by the vendor and something worth exploring. AWS program uses fewer Oracle licensesĪmazon Web Services’ Optimize CPU program for Amazon EC2 is designed to give clients the freedom to deploy their Oracle software in the AWS cloud while using fewer Oracle licenses, thus saving customers money on unnecessary Oracle fees. For example, AWS has an Optimize CPU program, as they look to lower Oracle licensing costs for their customers using Oracle on AWS. Using your Oracle on-premise licenses on non-Oracle clouds is an area where we see plenty of innovation and activity. Vendors on all sides are actively rolling out new service offerings and programs designed to meet their client’s needs and accelerate cloud adoption. ![]() There is a battle raging in the war for your cloud dollars.
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