Right, however, according to Red Hat, there has never been a known instance of 
a customer having been forced to actually do that.  Apparently Oracle would 
only resort to that if they could not reproduce the problem any other way and 
it was thought to be a problem caused by the virtualization.  It's not as 
though running Oracle on a virtual platform results in a completely unsupported 
system.  Nearly all of our systems are virtualized and supported.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Collins, Kevin [BEELINE]
Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2010 2:06 PM
To: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (Tikanga) discussion mailing-list
Subject: Re: [rhelv5-list] KVM / Oracle Ebusiness Suite

I don't, but are you aware that Oracle does not really support Oracle DB on 
virtuals (unless it is Oracle's virt platform)? It is sort of half-assed 
support: if you call about a known problem with the particular OS your guest is 
running, they will support it. If you call about an unknown problem, they will 
make you reproduce the problem on a physical server before supporting your 
issue...

Kevin

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Nick Lunt
Sent: Tuesday, October 26, 2010 8:15 AM
To: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (Tikanga) discussion mailing-list
Subject: [rhelv5-list] KVM / Oracle Ebusiness Suite


Hi

We may be looking to have 2 RHEL5 guests, one 32 bit and one 64 bit on top of 
either KVM or XEN.

The 64 bit guest will run the DB and the 32 bit guest the Ebusiness suite.

There will be between 50-500 concurrent users.

Anyone got any real world info on how this setup generally performs ?

Cheers

Nick .



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