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Thread: Re:Oracle Licensing on Oracle 9i Enterprise Edition

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
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    Re:Oracle Licensing on Oracle 9i Enterprise Edition

    Hi!

    I am an IT Auditor. I need some assistance on one issue relating to licensing requirements in Oracle 9i Enterprise Edition. The scenario is given blow:


    In our company, we have BEA Web logic Application server and Oracle 9i Enterprise Edition running on separate machines. We have developed an in-house application system with Web logic as the application server and oracle 9i as the database. All the end (front-end) users are application users and no one is created on the database level. One user is created on the database for the application server, which is responsible for fulfilling the requests from the end users. When the front end user requires any transaction, the request is forwarded to the user created on the Web logic application user, which passes it onto the application user, created at the database level and the request is fulfilled. That is the front end users have been mapped to the Web logic users, which ultimately is mapped to the application user created on the database.

    These days, we are deciding whether to buy per user or per processor licenses for Oracle 9i.Currently, we have 10 users at the oracle database level. Can anyone suggest any information in this regard whether to buy per processor or per user license on oracle 9i database? Early reply in this regard will be highly appreciated.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
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    will licensing questions, there is only one answer - call oracle.

    But as a general rule they want to get away from user based licensing purely for the fact you mentioned

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    1 physical person = 1 database user. If you have 2000 users connecting to a middle tier and only one database user, you need to license for 2000 users.

    But, consulting the Oracle weasels is always the safest option especially for an Auditor.
    Jeff Hunter

  4. #4
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    Originally posted by marist89
    1 physical person = 1 database user. If you have 2000 users connecting to a middle tier and only one database user, you need to license for 2000 users.

    But, consulting the Oracle weasels is always the safest option especially for an Auditor.
    from a purely database level, how would you know how many physical people are connecting to the database?

  5. #5
    Join Date
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    exactly the problem. If you can't measure the number of users (like via the internet) then you have to go with unlimited users. If you can measure the number of users (like each user has username/password even on application level) you can use user licensing.
    Jeff Hunter

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