Well said, Rick. And a downside to this (new in 2004 i think) TSM way of licensing, where you actually end up having to pay MORE: If you have an 8-processor Windows server for each of 50 different applications in your business (sort of the opposite of consolidation) .
________________________________ From: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager on behalf of Richard Rhodes Sent: Thu 12/16/2004 8:13 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: license costs >You can't. To be short, you need 1 license / cpu for the servers. OS doesn't >matter. The license count on the server is based on the number of active >nodes. So the number of license you have to buy have nothing to do with the >numer reported by the TSM server. Here is an example of how TSM nodes may not match licensing. We are implementing VMWare - consolidating on average 8 windows servers onto one blade/vmware server. When we checked with IBM, we were told that TSM pricing is per cpu - the number of Win instances doesn't come into it at all. Our TSM server still sees all the individual Windows nodes, but for licensing we only have to count a fraction of them. The interesting result of this is having lots of extra licenses right now. Rick. Stef Coene <[EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] .ORG> cc: Sent by: "ADSM: Subject: Re: license costs Dist Stor Manager" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] .EDU> 12/14/2004 02:56 PM Please respond to "ADSM: Dist Stor Manager" On Tuesday 14 December 2004 19:37, Muthyam Reddy wrote: > ** High Priority ** > > Hi , > present we are taking AIX/DB2 backups to tsm and whenever I add new AIX > client I update server license . > Soon we re planning to take NOVEL,NT client backups tsm. > Do I need to buy extra license for other client backups, NOVEL and NT? > How to check existing License term on TSM server? You can't. To be short, you need 1 license / cpu for the servers. OS doesn't matter. The license count on the server is based on the number of active nodes. So the number of license you have to buy have nothing to do with the numer reported by the TSM server. Stef -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Using Linux as bandwidth manager" http://www.docum.org/ ----------------------------------------- The information contained in this message is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the recipient(s) named above. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient or an agent responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you have received this document in error and that any review, dissemination, distribution, or copying of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately, and delete the original message.