On 11/01/2011 06:26 PM, Dennis Jacobfeuerborn wrote:
On 11/01/2011 09:36 PM, Ned Slider wrote:
On 01/11/11 18:27, Bob Hoffman wrote:
David Miller wrote
You can go with the self support option. Seeing you are willing to go with CentOS as long as there are timely updates. That tells me you dont really care about getting "support" from the vendor. You can pick up workstation self support for $50 and server for $350 a year. That means you will get all the updates but just can't call or open tickets with Redhat. The limitations imposed by Redhat for "Support" they will provide are artificial. Although Redhat says it will only support 2 sockets and x amount of virtual guests you can still do it.
From what I saw on the redhat site they have also taken away that support/subscription model. They have standard support as minimum, for me it would be 4,000+ or more for my 2 little non-commercial servers...forget it.
First option, Desktop Self-support Subscription (1 year) $49:
https://www.redhat.com/apps/store/desktop/
First option, Server Self-support Subscription (1 year) $349
https://www.redhat.com/apps/store/server/
A 2 socket virtualization platform is $1,999 giving unlimited virtual guests.
Just to be sure does that mean that for $2000 I can install on one physical system and unlimited guests on that system or does that mean the $2000 are only for the host system with the *ability* to host an unlimited number of guests and I still have to buy a subscription for each individual guest on top of that?
Regards, Dennis
As I understand it, you still need to buy licenses for whatever guest OS you want to create. They are, for all intent and purpose, separate servers.
Of course, best would be to ask Red Hat sales directly, or a Red Hat reseller.