My understanding is as follows:
- 1
licensed copy of W2K3R2 or Longhorn (EE/DC) provides the following:
- 1
physical host running the licensed OS
- 4
virtual guests running the licensed OS or a lesser version (i.e. Enterprise
Edition would allow for Web Edition running in a VM)
- VMs
developed and designed for the following purposes (as examples) need not
be licensed until which time they no longer fall under the following:
- Copies
of licensed machines (physical or virtual) used for backup purposes only
- “Template”
virtual disks used for deploying new virtual guests
- Other
virtual machines not generally online and not used for production
purposes (e.g. an offline CA in a VM would not qualify)
Aric
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rich Milburn
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2005
12:09 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT]
Movement in licensing over Virtual Instances at MS.
I’m a bit confused as to what she
was trying to say… in the quote below, she says four VMs, but she doesn’t say four instances of
Windows… and she says that they’ll only charge for virtual images
of Windows actually running. I take that to mean that if I have a box
with 10 virtual machines defined but only 4 running at a time, that I only have
to pay for 4? Unless I start a 5th one before I bring one of
the others down? Does it mean that currently I’d have to pay for
10? Or is it that if I am only running 4 I can run them on top of one
purchased copy of Windows Server 2003 R2 EE?
One thing that seems a bit silly to me is
if I have my new 64 bit server, GOLIATH, and he’s running 10 VMs with
Windows, then he’s running 10 W2K3 kernels, 10 HALs, 10 __________ (fill
in the blank). There was a concept, sort of filled by NTVDM, that you
could run something in there and if it crashed it didn’t take down the
OS. What if you could run an instance of Exchange in one of those?
Or a DC? VMs are now sort of like having CD images on the network were
for a while – 15 copies of NT4 SP6a, 12 copies of NT4 Option Pack, 25
copies of Adobe Reader, 20 copies of IE5, 15 copies of IE4… you see what
I mean. Run 10 VMs and you have maybe 15 GB of duplicate info on disk.
I hear ESX can mitigate that somewhat… but MS wrote the Windows
code, who could do it better than them? Or maybe I’m way off base
here. ??
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rich Milburn
MCSE, Microsoft MVP -
Directory Services
Sr Network Analyst, Field
Platform Development
Applebee's International,
Inc.
4551 W. 107th St
Overland Park, KS 66207
913-967-2819
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
"I am always doing
that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it." - Pablo
Picasso
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of joe
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2005
10:06 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT]
Movement in licensing over Virtual Instances at MS.
Virtual Windows License Simplified
<QUOTE>
Microsoft also will allow customers to
have four virtual machines running on top of Windows Server 2003 R2 Enterprise
Edition and Windows Server "Longhorn" Datacenter Edition at no extra
cost, Kelly said.
</QUOTE>
-------APPLEBEE'S
INTERNATIONAL, INC. CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE-------
PRIVILEGED /
CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION may be contained in this message or any attachments.
This information is strictly confidential and may be subject to attorney-client
privilege. This message is intended only for the use of the named addressee. If
you are not the intended recipient of this message, unauthorized forwarding,
printing, copying, distribution, or using such information is strictly
prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this in error, you should
kindly notify the sender by reply e-mail and immediately destroy this message.
Unauthorized interception of this e-mail is a violation of federal criminal
law. Applebee's International, Inc. reserves the right to monitor and review
the content of all messages sent to and from this e-mail address. Messages sent
to or from this e-mail address may be stored on the Applebee's International,
Inc. e-mail system.