ADSM-L

Re: What qualifies as an in use license?

2002-01-16 10:38:07
Subject: Re: What qualifies as an in use license?
From: Bill Mansfield <WMansfield AT SOLUTIONTECHNOLOGY DOT COM>
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2002 09:35:34 -0600
Yeah, should have said machine, not "platform".

Yes, you should consider the whole SP (or p690 or the like) as a single
entity with regard to licensing provided.  The same is true for your
desktop running Windows, OS-2,  and Linux.  The cluster you refer to counts
for 2 licenses, since there are two machines involved.  In every case I
have commented on Tivoli policy I have attached sections from the USA
Tivoli announcement letter, which I consider to be official, committed
Tivoli policy for the USA.  Here's the relevant section regarding SP.
                                                                                
  
 Distributed server tiers are defined by the machine, not operating system, 
based 
 on installed processors. For IBM RS/6000(superscript: ®) Scalable POWER 
Parallel 
 Systems (RS/6000 SP?), Sun Ultra Systems and similar systems, the licensing is 
  
 based on the number of processors in the frame, not per individual node or 
card. 
 For clustered environments, the licensing is determined by the number of       
  
 installed processors in each server in the cluster.                            
  
                                                                                
  




_____________________________
William Mansfield
Senior Consultant
Solution Technology, Inc



                                                                                
                                    
                    Zlatko                                                      
                                    
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Let try to define it further - what do you (or "Tivoli" you have contacted)
mean of "single hardware platform" ?
For me this means type of hardware, i.e. IBM RS/6000, HP9000, PC, etc. I do
not believe that buying enough points for a server and three MgSysLAN
licenses will allow me to define nodes and use the client on bunch of PCs
with Windows&Linux and all HP9000s + RS/6000s. Or having two clients
RS/6000 and one of them through processor upgrade becomes pSeries I should
be forced to get more points for this second "platform".
So probably this is not a "platform" but "box" or "machine".
However this raises the question of many *real* nodes within one box. I
already presented my opinion in answer to your (Bill Mansfield) post on the
thread "Licensing MS SQL cluster - managed system for LAN/SAN and TDP
licenses?" on 19.11.2001:
"How can we distinguish between two nodes on two machines, two nodes on the
same OS and two nodes on different OS images with the same box (HP
SuperDome or IBM eServer pSeries 690 for example)? Or should we consider
whole IBM SP(2) cluster as a single system with multiple nodes registered?"
Unfortunately I do not know *OFFICIAL* Tivoli contact to ask licensing
questions for my country. In the thread mentioned above we already got
*unofficial* (any opinion presented here from IBM/Tivoli people does not
bind the company and is just informative) answer from Del Hoobler
confirming my guess - for two "boxes" in MSCS cluster we need three managed
system licenses. Two for the local files on each box and third for the
cluster resourses jumping from box to box.
So my personal opinion is that we need license for *EACH* defined node. If
I want to define two nodes for single box I am supposed to be ready to pay
for this. For example on my PC I have installed OS/2, Linux and Windows but
I had to pay licenses for both OS/2 and Windows (God save Linus).

Zlatko Krastev
IT Consultant





Bill Mansfield <WMansfield AT SOLUTIONTECHNOLOGY DOT COM> on 15.01.2002 22:53:29
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Subject:        Re: What qualifies as an in use license?

Yes, the TSM licensing is anything but clear.  I can't speak to the client
expiration issue, but I've looked very hard into the licensing aspects.
Here's a bit of what it says in the announcement letter for the USA
value-based program:
(
http://www2.ibmlink.ibm.com/cgi-bin/master?xh=JCvY43nNwaCFgG1USenGnN9332&request=announcements&parms=H%5f200%2d245&xhi=announcements%5e&xfr=Nhttp://www2.ibmlink.ibm.com/cgi-bin/master?xh=JCvY43nNwaCFgG1USenGnN9332&request=announcements&parms=H%5f200%2d245&xhi=announcements%5e&xfr=N
)
* One MANAGED SYSTEM FOR LAN feature is required for each managed syste* One 
MANAGED SYSTEM FOR LAN feature is required for each managed system
that will move data to and from storage over a LAN.

* One MANAGED SYSTEM FOR SAN feature is required for each managed system
that will move data to and from storage over a SAN.

* A managed system that moves data to and from storage, both on a LAN and
on a SAN, requires only the Managed System for SAN feature.

I have verified with Tivoli that a managed system is a single hardware
platform regardless of how many nodes TSM has defined for the box.  So you
need either a MGSYSLAN or a MGSYSSAN license for every physical machine
that will be sending data.  Not for each node registered to TSM.
Essentially this means that the license feature built into TSM is useless
for actually managing your license usage.

The TDPs only require their own specific licenses, even if they generate
extra nodes.  Their data movement is covered by the MGSYSLAN license (or
MGSYSSAN if LANFree is required).

This may be different in other parts of the world, but don't trust your
reseller to get it right, call Tivoli directly to verify your
configuration.


William Mansfield
Senior Consultant
Solution Technology, Inc




                    Daniel Sparrman
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Hi

There seems to be a lot of confusion about licensing in TSM.

According to Wanda Prather, license for each client expires 30 days after
the clients last connection.

According to some other, clients not in use don't require a client license.



I've been looking in to this, and according to the License Agreement, each
registred client need and "Tivoli Storage Manager Managed Systems for LAN"
client. This means that each file client needs a license, each TDP need a
client, and according to internal sources on Tivoli, each Managed Systems
for SAN require a Managed systems for LAN. Special requirements have been
issued from Tivoli concering the use of Gresham EDT concerning licensing.

My suggestion is to here with your local Tivoli sales/dealer on how to
use/agree the licensing terms.

Best Regards

Daniel Sparrman

-----------------------------------
Daniel Sparrman
Daniel Sparrman
Exist i Stockholm AB
Bergkällavägen 31D
192 79 SOLLENTUNA
Växel: 08 - 754 98 00
Mobil: 070 - 399 27 51


Tom Melton <Tom Melton AT EMORYHEALTHCARE DOT ORG>
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2002-01-15 11:36 EST
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Subject: Re: What qualifies as an in use license?


It was my understanding that a "defined" client on the server would fall
from the "in-use" number after 30 days.  IE, 30 days of inactivity and the
in-use count decrements.

Tom Melton
Emory HealthCare


>>> daniel.sparrman AT EXIST DOT SE 01/15/02 10:44AM >>>
Hi

Yes, every node registred on the server counts as one client license.

Also, if you use separate nodenames for Tivoli Data Protection clients,
everyone will count as 1 Managed System LAN.

I'm not sure, but I also think that every Managed System SAN counts as one
managed systems lan also.

Best Regards

Daniel Sparrman
-----------------------------------
Daniel Sparrman
Daniel Sparrman
Exist i Stockholm AB
Bergkällavägen 31D
192 79 SOLLENTUNA
Växel: 08 - 754 98 00
Mobil: 070 - 399 27 51



                    Dylan Ryback
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I'm in the midst of doing a cleanup job on our TSM servers.  When I do a 'q
license', one of the results is:

Number of Managed System for LAN in use: 107

My question is, what counts as 'in use'?  For example, there are a bunch of
nodes that are defined and are no longer used or associated with any
schedules.  Do these count as 'in use', and if so, should I export the node
out of the db and delete it to get the license counts down?  One other
question: anyone got a query to figure out which nodes are NOT associated
with a schedule.  This would help me identify nodes that are candidates for
export.

Many thanks,
Dylan