Note: Core-based licensing is actually a bit more complicated than that. Core: where a “core license” is purchased for every single (physical) CPU core.Server+CAL: where a “server license” is purchased for the server and a “CAL” (client access license) is purchased for each user who will consume data from the server.If your company is in an existing agreement with Microsoft, Enterprise Edition (for SQL 20) actually comes in 2 licensing flavors… …but it might be cheaper for some folks… Enterprise “Core” vs “CAL” …no hardware restrictions, no usage restrictions, and no product feature restrictions…and rightfully so because it certainly is not cheap! Which is simply not the case with Enterprise Edition. can’t use more than 16 cores or 4 sockets…whichever is smaller) and/or usage (e.g. no Columnstore Indexing) and/or hardware resources (e.g. Standard, Business Intelligence, Developer, etc) have limitations – on product features (e.g. Enterprise is the Cadillac Tesla Model S of SQL Server editions – unbridled access to all the things YAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHhRR!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |