Windows server 2016 licensing
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@Dashrender said:
If you have a 12 core system, buy three 4 core packs... Assuming you get two VM per pack, does that mean you can have up to 6 VMs, or only two, because it took 12 cores to cover the server. so in this example you'd need 11 cores worth of licenses per two VMs... That of course would be crazy.
If it is like how it has been, and we must assume that it is, you would still only get two VMs on those cores. You would need another set of licenses to get more VMs.
You would go to Datacenter Licensing pretty quickly.
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It's a base of sixteen cores, then increments of two as you increase. So you always start with sixteen, but if you just needed twenty, you would need the base plus two two-core packs.
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Looks like pricing wise dual proc 8 core , pricing will remain the same.
Licensing a 10+ core PE proc will be more than it is today, but only for the base machine.
But this could change the break even point for how many VMs before datacenter licensing is worth it.
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@Dashrender said:
Licensing a 10+ core PE proc will be more than it is today, but only for the base machine.
Base machine?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Licensing a 10+ core PE proc will be more than it is today, but only for the base machine.
Base machine?
Maybe it works the same way today.
If you have a quad processor server, you need 2 Windows Server licenses just to get started. That alone allows you to put 2 VMs on it.
Then if you want to add two more VMs you only need to purchase one more Windows Server license, not two.
But then again, maybe it doesn't work that way today.From reading the link you provided, it appears that you need to license the host to start, so you have 20 cores, you'll need 1 Windows Server full licenses ( Which provides 16 cores worth), then you'll need two 2 core add-ons packs to get to 20 cores.
This will give you 2 VMs on that host.
Now when you want to add 2 more VMs you don't need to double your earlier purchase (1 full server license and two 2 core packs) instead you'll only need the 1 full server license.
At least this is how I read it.
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@Dashrender said:
Then if you want to add two more VMs you only need to purchase one more Windows Server license, not two.
But then again, maybe it doesn't work that way today.
.I thought that you needed two more licenses today.
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@Dashrender said:
This will give you 2 VMs on that host.
Now when you want to add 2 more VMs you don't need to double your earlier purchase (1 full server license and two 2 core packs) instead you'll only need the 1 full server license.
At least this is how I read it.
I couldn't find anything on that sheet that said one way or the other. It never talks about standard license about two VMs.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Then if you want to add two more VMs you only need to purchase one more Windows Server license, not two.
But then again, maybe it doesn't work that way today.
.I thought that you needed two more licenses today.
@Dashrender said:
But then again, maybe it doesn't work that way today.
I honestly don't know how it works today.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
This will give you 2 VMs on that host.
Now when you want to add 2 more VMs you don't need to double your earlier purchase (1 full server license and two 2 core packs) instead you'll only need the 1 full server license.
At least this is how I read it.
I couldn't find anything on that sheet that said one way or the other. It never talks about standard license about two VMs.
@PDF:
The Standard Edition of Windows Server and System Center will license up to 2 VMs when all of the physical cores on the server are licensed.
Now that I re-read this, it could easily go either way, for every 2 VMs you want to have on a physical server, you could have to have enough cores for every core on the box, OR once all the cores are covered by the first set of VMs, any additional 2 VMs would only require a base Standard Edition Windows Server license.
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Yup, that's what I saw... no information at all