AFAIK this is the way to keep Oracle quiet:
http://captainkvm.com/2012/10/virtualizing-oracle-11g-on-rhev-3-0-netapp/
On 14 May 2018, at 11:50, Gianluca Cecchi
<gianluca.cecchi@gmail.com<mailto:gianluca.cecchi@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 4:03 PM, Simon Coter
<simon.coter@gmail.com<mailto:simon.coter@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Nicola,
CPU pinning granted by oVirt is not a supported method to apply hardware-partitioning for
Oracle products on top of VMs.
The only supported method/solution is available on Oracle VM Server. You can see further
details at:
http://www.oracle.com/us/corporate/pricing/partitioning-070609.pdf
Simon
Correct.
But very arguable from a technological point of view (in my opinion of course).
I don't see differences in what you have to do in Oracle VM to get cpu pinning and
"accepted" hard-partitioning
(
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/server-storage/vm/ovm-hardpart-168217.pdf referred in
the linked pdf above), from what you can do in vSphere, oVirt or RHV to get the same
result:
eg
oVirt:
https://www.ovirt.org/documentation/sla/cpu-pinning/
RHV:
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_virtualization/4.1/...
vSphere 5.1
https://pubs.vmware.com/vsphere-51/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.vsphere....
vSphere 6.0
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.0/com.vmware.vsphere.vm_admin...
Not so fair in my opinion.
Gianluca
_______________________________________________
Users mailing list -- users@ovirt.org<mailto:users@ovirt.org>
To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@ovirt.org<mailto:users-leave@ovirt.org>