August 16, 2008
Congrats to the SQL Server team for shipping 2008. It looks like a great product. Congrats as well for keeping the licensing costs the same and adding a new option with the web edition.
One question that many still have in mind is how to license SQL server. Processor licensing allows unlimited users and devices, whereas a server license allows unlimited users or devices as long as they have a CAL. Server CAL can be much cheaper than Processor license or it can become much more expensive.
Many ILM customers also have this question, and while the product team pushes you to processor licenses and says that if you want to go Server/CAL you need 1 CAL for each user that will connect directly to the SQL server (in case it does other stuff, or your ILM admins like to run unsupported queries under the hood) for each Management agent (how in the world did 1 device – the ILM server – become multiple devices and need many CALs? – Maybe under some sort of multiplexing scenario since the data is getting pushed to other places) each situation will be different.
So I have developed a formula and a table to help you figure this out
Per Processor Licensing Costs =
Cost Per Processor * # of Servers * Avg CPUs per Server
Server + CAL Licensing Cost =
Cost Per Server * # of Servers + Cost Per CAL * # of CALs
Break Even Formula
# of CALs = (Cost Per Processor * Avg CPU per Server - Cost Per Server) * # of Servers/Cost Per CAL
As you can see the break even point between Server/CAL and Processor comes down to a ratio between CALs divded by the number of servers vs Processors (not cores, but physical packages) divded by the number of Servers. (Remember that one CAL allows one user or device to access an unlimited number of licensed servers – you don’t have to buy a CAL for each server you want to access. See http://download.microsoft.com/download/2/d/f/2df66c0c-fff2-4f2e-b739-bf4581cee533/SQLServer%202008CompareEnterpriseStandard.pdf)
Using the sample licensing costs from Microsoft’s site
Edition
Workgroup*
Standard
Enterprise
Per Processor
$ 3,700
$ 5,737
$ 23,911
Per Server
$ 730
$ 885
$ 8,487
Per CAL
$ 146
$ 162
$ 162
Using these sample numbers (and your costs maybe different)
Break Even Points in terms of CALs per Server vs CPU/Server
Workgroup
Standard
Enterprise
CPUs/Server
CALs/Server
CALs/Server
CALs/Server
1
25
30
95
2
51
65
243
4
136
538
6
833
8
1,128
10
1,424
12
1,719
14
2,014
16
2,309
18
2,604
20
2,900
32
4,671
64
9,394
10 SQL Enterprise Edition servers with an average of 2 quad core processors (that is still just two processors for licensing purposes) and I have less than 2430 (243x10) devices or users to license and am likely to maintain these ratios than Server/CAL should be cheaper than processor licensing. 20 processor licenses at $478,220 and 10 server licenses $84,870 plus $393,350 cost the same. Hiring more people and/or acquiring more devices might tip the balance, but acquiring more SQL servers or adding processors to existing boxes could counter that.
As you can see this is really an enterprise wide decision how will I license SQL servers for my organization.
What to do about users coming in from the web, well you can use processor licensing for those SQL servers or you could go with the web edition for $15 per processor per month. What about data on internal servers? Replicate it to the web edition server! SQL to SQL communication does not require a CAL.
Remember that “SQL Server 2008 Web may be used only to support public and Internet-accessible Web pages, sites, applications, and services."
In terms of features it is comparable to Workgroup edition, so none of the high availability features like clustering or mirroring are supported, only log shipping. There are several minor differences in the functionality of Web vs Workgroup
No ad hoc reporting through report builder, in service broker it can only be a client and its development tools come from SQL Express Management studio.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc645993.aspx
http://feeds.feedburner.com/IdentityLifecycleManagerilmBestPractices