Windows Server 2016 Pricing
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@brianlittlejohn said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
I knew this was coming when I ordered my last servers, I didnt need alot of processing power, so I ordered a 1 socket 10core cpu. I believe it can be done with the base pricing.
Yes, because minimum is
8 cores per proc
16 cores per serverYou will be licensed for 6 more cores than you have.
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@KOOLER said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@JaredBusch said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@zuphzuph said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Does anyone have a stupid simple breakdown of pricing? I'm still confuzzled on how this per core stuff works... Currently I work for an MS partner so this isn't something I've had to worry about for quite some time...
For Server 2016 Standard:
$882 for the minimum 16 cores means that the per core price is $55.13.
You are required to buy in 2-core packs. Each 2-core pack then should cost $110.26.
If you have a 2 proc x 10 core server, for 20 total cores, then you will buy 10 2-core packs for $110.26 * 10 = $1102.60.
It won't be easy to stay within basic Standard fee for pretty much ANY server in ±12 months from now. Reason: TOO MANY CORES!
I'm pretty sure that all the server makers will make servers specifically to meet this need.... providing other features but limiting the cores to match the licensing limits.
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@StuartJordan said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
They will be adding licences per NIC's next lol.....Don't agree with this per core licencing model, shitty move by Microsoft I think....
It's really not as bad as it seams. They are pretty much just recognizing that sockets don't reflect what the original pricing model was based on.
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@scottalanmiller I can understand the pricing may be a little dated, they should of just increased the cost per socket a little more rather then implementing core based licencing. Oh well I wont rant too much about it, after all its the weekend
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The new licensing looks like a nod from Microsoft towards Intel. This really makes the whole hyperthreading vs more cores concept tip the scales towards Intel.
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@StuartJordan said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@scottalanmiller I can understand the pricing may be a little dated, they should of just increased the cost per socket a little more rather then implementing core based licencing. Oh well I wont rant too much about it, after all its the weekend
If they do that, they make it too expensive for small shops and too cheap for big ones. The current model helps the SMB market.
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@ardeyn said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
The new licensing looks like a nod from Microsoft towards Intel. This really makes the whole hyperthreading vs more cores concept tip the scales towards Intel.
Yes, that's a huge deal. AMD is the big loser here.
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Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Correct. 16 is the minimum and only cores are counted. Cores are physical things, logical thread engines are not.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with a dual hexacore Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
No, you can by a 24 core license. licensing is sold in packs of 2 cores with the minimum being 16 cores.
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@scottalanmiller said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with a dual hexacore Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Correct. 16 is the minimum and only cores are counted. Cores are physical things, logical thread engines are not.
Great thanks. So I could also buy octa cores for the same result.
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@thwr Yep, that'd be the easiest way to license each server.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
You have an extra 2 in there. Dual sext-core procs is 2 (procs) x 6 (cores) = 12 cores total.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Where did the extra 2* come from?
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@JaredBusch said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with a dual hexacore Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Now, you can by a 24 core license. licensing is sold in packs of 2 cores with the minimum being 16 cores.
Uhm, really? Could you provide a link?
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@Dashrender said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Where did the extra 2* come from?
2 servers * 2 CPUs * 6 cores per CPU
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@Dashrender said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Where did the extra 2* come from?
2 servers * 2 cores * 6 cores each
Each server has to be licensed separately. So you have to look at them one at a time, you can't lump them together.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@scottalanmiller said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with a dual hexacore Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Correct. 16 is the minimum and only cores are counted. Cores are physical things, logical thread engines are not.
Great thanks. So I could also buy octa cores for the same result.
Correct, the MS Licensing for 2016 is designed to treat dual processors and eight cores as the "standard" that they intended for "power licensing" in the 2012 / 2012 R2 era. Because the power of systems has shifted from processor count to core count they are shifting their licensing to reflect this. So octa-core processors are the hot new item as they make, by far, the most sense for the average shop running Windows 2016. The best bang for the buck.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@Dashrender said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just an example: In case I got two servers with dual hexa-core Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Where did the extra 2* come from?
2 servers * 2 CPUs * 6 cores per CPU
That's confusing. Licensing is for a server.
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@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@JaredBusch said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
@thwr said in Windows Server 2016 Pricing:
Just checking what I would need to license Windows Server 2016 Datacenter Edition
As far as I can tell:
- A minimum 16 ("physical") cores must be licensed per server
- Hyper-Threading does not count towards the number of cores
Just an example: In case I got two servers with a dual hexacore Xeons (2 * 2 * 6 = 24 cores total), I would have to buy licenses for 32 cores (or 16 two-core packages). Is that correct?
Now, you can by a 24 core license. licensing is sold in packs of 2 cores with the minimum being 16 cores.
Uhm, really? Could you provide a link?
Higher in this thread. https://mangolassi.it/post/228422
That post links to Microsoft's document.