On Monday 07 November 2011 22:23:09 Reindl Harald wrote: > Am 07.11.2011 22:50, schrieb Marko Vojinovic: > > Typically, you have no way of knowing the physical structure of the > > "cloud machine" where your virtual machine is being hosted. Also, this > > structure may even change over time due to upgrades of the cloud > > hardware (by the cloud provider). You wouldn't even know about it. > > again: > > the physical structure does not matter > you pay for virtaul CPUs as you do also for virtual appliances > of some vendors where you can get a license with 2 vCPUs or > 4 vCPUs - independent if you have your own hardware or using > any hsoting service > > what is there so difficulty to understand? Well, what I don't understand is how many vCPU's are equal to one socket. Or, to be explicit, let me invent an example: suppose that I have leased virtual hardware from some 3rd party, and have obtained a virtual machine with 6 vCPU's. I want to buy RHEL licences to install on that machine. AFAIK, RH counts licences in sockets. How many licences should I buy? Or, iow, how many sockets is equal to 6 vCPU's? Does RH have a formula for the number of sockets as a function of the number of vCPU's (and vice versa)? Best, :-) Marko _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos