Microsoft Licensing Primer
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Technically only on the CALs used during the DR test.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Technically only on the CALs used during the DR test.
But why would you need any CALs at all for that? Or maybe 1 if anything?
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@BRRABill said:
• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;
And do you have a guess as to what
"• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;"
means? -
@BRRABill said:
@BRRABill said:
• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;
And do you have a guess as to what
"• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;"
means?It means you can spin up your DR site to make sure everything works. for small amounts of time not to exceed a max of one week every 90 days.
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@JaredBusch said:
It means you can spin up your DR site to make sure everything works. for small amounts of time not to exceed a max of one week every 90 days.
So I could spin up for an hour every day for 90 days. That's less than 1 total week.
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@BRRABill said:
@JaredBusch said:
It means you can spin up your DR site to make sure everything works. for small amounts of time not to exceed a max of one week every 90 days.
So I could spin up for an hour every day for 90 days. That's less than 1 total week.
No.
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So you are saying my original theory was right? That I can spin it up only once (for less than a week in that instance) every 90 days?
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@BRRABill said:
So you are saying my original theory was right? That I can spin it up only once (for less than a week in that instance) every 90 days?
Yes. That is what it means.
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Since it is December and hopefully e-mails from ML are flowing again, let's see if we can get an official chime in from @Chris .
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@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
So you are saying my original theory was right? That I can spin it up only once (for less than a week in that instance) every 90 days?
Yes. That is what it means.
I called MS to confirm this today.
You were 100% right.
Once every 90 days, and only with SA.
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@BRRABill said:
@JaredBusch said:
@BRRABill said:
So you are saying my original theory was right? That I can spin it up only once (for less than a week in that instance) every 90 days?
Yes. That is what it means.
I called MS to confirm this today.
You were 100% right.
Once every 90 days, and only with SA.
No SA is required for this per our MS rep. Though all we do spin them up with no network connection and the shut them right back down. Once per quarter.
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@Jason said:
No SA is required for this per our MS rep. Though all we do spin them up with no network connection and the shut them right back down. Once per quarter.
You might want to check on that.
It's only allowed once every 90 days WITH SA.
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@BRRABill said:
@Jason said:
No SA is required for this per our MS rep. Though all we do spin them up with no network connection and the shut them right back down. Once per quarter.
You might want to check on that.
It's only allowed once every 90 days WITH SA.
That's not what our EA Rep says. We have checked on it many times.
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I believe you are referring to cold/standby licensed backup servers. Which is a right under SA's standby server rights but that is highly different then making sure a live backup boots and then turning it back off, there is no 90 day restriction either, if you have SA you can also use Standby servers.
Also if you have Azure for your DR site then you don't need anything. All windows base licensing is covered.
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@Jason said:
I believe you are referring to cold/standby licensed backup servers. Which is a right under SA's standby server rights but that is highly different then making sure a live backup boots and then turning it back off, there is no 90 day restriction either, if you have SA you can also use Standby servers.
Also if you have Azure for your DR site then you don't need anything. All windows base licensing is covered.
What do you mean a "live backup" ... if you boot a copy of server up for 1 second you need another license for it. MS has no disaster recivery rights.
With SA, you can boot it once every 90 days.
@scottalanmiller I am sure will chime in here to support this...
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A bit offtop:
Isn`t MS is the only company who has certification program for its licensing? -
@BRRABill said:
@Jason said:
I believe you are referring to cold/standby licensed backup servers. Which is a right under SA's standby server rights but that is highly different then making sure a live backup boots and then turning it back off, there is no 90 day restriction either, if you have SA you can also use Standby servers.
Also if you have Azure for your DR site then you don't need anything. All windows base licensing is covered.
What do you mean a "live backup" ... if you boot a copy of server up for 1 second you need another license for it. MS has no disaster recivery rights.
With SA, you can boot it once every 90 days.
@scottalanmiller I am sure will chime in here to support this...
That's not true. SA is what gives you disaster recovery rights and you can keep this live backup DR running as a cold site as long as it's not being actively being used for production.
We're on Enterpise so we don't need SA to test backups, but you do need SA for Diaster recovery on other hardware and no you do not need a second windows license for a replicated DR copy.
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@Jason said:
That's not true. SA is what gives you disaster recovery rights and you can keep this live backup DR running as a cold site as long as it's not being actively being used for production.
That is what the whole latest discussion was about. That the usage rights for SA state:
The backup Instance can run only during the following exception periods:
• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;
• During a disaster, while the production Server being recovered is down; and
• Around the time of a disaster, for a brief period, to assist in the transfer between the primary production server and the disaster recovery Server. -
@Dashrender said:
man, you guys have completely left out Software Assurance, which can be a HUGE savings here.
One step at a time. Microsoft Licensing is a beast, that even they themselves don't understand.
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@BRRABill said:
@Jason said:
That's not true. SA is what gives you disaster recovery rights and you can keep this live backup DR running as a cold site as long as it's not being actively being used for production.
That is what the whole latest discussion was about. That the usage rights for SA state:
The backup Instance can run only during the following exception periods:
• For brief periods of disaster recovery testing within one week every 90 days;
• During a disaster, while the production Server being recovered is down; and
• Around the time of a disaster, for a brief period, to assist in the transfer between the primary production server and the disaster recovery Server.The second line is the part that Jason had mentioned.