uwish uwish:
DrCaleb DrCaleb:
Federal sites are just as under funded.
And it's ironic that you mention the campsite booking system. I physically look after those. They are two HP ML360 servers, 8 core. They have the capacity to service about 1000 requests per minute. When the season starts, they have to handle 5000-6000 requests per minute. And because they are physical, the licensing is outrageous, and we can't virtualize them to improve performance. Parks and Rec doesn't have the budget for better machines or more Oracle licenses.
So you picked a perfect example of underfunded government infrastructure, and how it affects the average Albertan. Get used to it, as Kenney cuts even deeper.
Why is the licensing so high?
Oracle requires you have a license for each
core that their software
might run on. Not processor, but core. So if you have a processor with 32 cores, you need 32 licences at roughly $15,000 per year. Each. So one of those ML360s has 2 processors, 4 cores each, set up as a cluster, for 16 cores. Total annual cost - $240k. If your operating system doesn't restrict which core you can limit certain software to run on, then you have to license them all.
Then you have to license the copy of the operating systems, and the HP diagnostic software. And the antivirus. And the software for the networking equipment.
It adds up pretty fast. This is why Oracle is such a money making company. And Microsoft. Oracle gives you a break if you use their operating system, and a further break if you use their hardware. But their hardware costs as much as my house.
Somewhere, deep in that balance sheet, you have to hire people like me to run it all.