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тАО03-24-2011 12:05 PM
тАО03-24-2011 12:05 PM
What host OS software are certified for use with this besides Oracle's own Linux VM OS host software? I looked at it, and it really seems to be (of course) Redhat's OS using Xen.
When I've looked on Oracle Metalink's flash driven application, finding out what is supported is a nightmare in certain cases (like the case of virtual OS support vs just OS support in the general case). Anyways, all I found was a document saying what client OSes are allowed to run under *their* host OS VM solution, but I've not found anything about other host OS VM software.
Is VMWare supported? Is Redhat's Xen supported?
I have a hard believing that VMWare isn't supported, but with Oracle lately, who knows?
I'd love to know what others are using for these middle tier/application tier vm hosting solutions, and what of those that they know are "officially" supported.
Many thanks for the information.
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО03-25-2011 06:54 AM
тАО03-25-2011 06:54 AM
SolutionAccording to VMware, they have officially supported oracle apps for about 4 years. http://www.vmware.com/solutions/partners/alliances/oracle-vmware-support.html
I'm using both OVB and ESXi to host Oracle databases with no trouble.
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тАО03-25-2011 10:03 AM
тАО03-25-2011 10:03 AM
Re: Virtualization host OS for Oracle iAS Ebiz suite "middle tier" "application tier"
I am aware of the VMware solution (though not "fusion" specifically), but was not about the other two, which I'm going to start doing some reading about.
Thanks for taking the time to respond.
John
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тАО03-28-2011 10:36 AM
тАО03-28-2011 10:36 AM
Re: Virtualization host OS for Oracle iAS Ebiz suite "middle tier" "application tier"
Virtually none of Oracle's Mega Stack - RDBMS, Midtier and ERP suites are "officially supported" on any Virtualised Platform aside from Oracle VM. Oracle VM is relly a "fork" - albeit with reportedly Oracle cream and sauce - of Xen on RHEL.
We however still do deploy them. Most of my clients of course choose vSphere (VMware) although KVM (RHEV) is catching up. There's a caveat however -- be prepared to be able to V2P (physical) your environment if you have issues OR prove issues exist in a Physical Server environment.
Between vSPhere and KVM however - I'd still choose KVM any day - as it is easy to V2P and P2v and does not have the reuqisite vMware Tools that one has to maintain.
Cheers.
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тАО03-31-2011 06:05 AM
тАО03-31-2011 06:05 AM