Gareth 'bigbro' Eason wrote:
> Conor Wynne wrote:
> [snip]
>>> You know I find that hilarious, Oracle costs more than your server
>>> and OS
>>> combined, and potentially more than your backend storage as well, yet
>>> people
>>> go and install it on an unsupported OS. This makes no sense to me at
>>> all.
>>>>>> If you must use a RHEL clone, and you buy oracle retail (not OE),
>>> then why
>>> not go for unitedlinux instead. That way oracle are your one stop
>>> shop for
>>> everything.
> [snip]
>> Hi,
>> It might be because there are things other than Oracle running on
> the same server, which are easier to source and maintain for (say)
> CentOS than unbreakablelinux/$other_distro_du_jour ;-)
>> When I was deploying production services using Oracle, servers were
> HP and under warranty with them, colo was professional with remote
> hands/eyes, etc., OS was RHEL 3/4, and Oracle was... well... Oracle -
> every part being supported by at least the supplier and sometimes there
> being crossover between support elements, neatly covering all the things
> I couldn't fix myself.
>> If people want to deploy Oracle on Debian for their own testing
> purposes or whatever, that's also good. In fact, if someone could
> provide me with a working Oracle on Debian build, I might actually use
> Oracle for some of the database nonsense I do now :-)
>> Best regards,
> -->Gar
>>My post was at least highly contrasting compared to previous ones when I
was working for Oracle. Moving to an open source company gave me the
much needed freedom to express my ideas. I do not regret my time with
Oracle and it was great to define a clear career path.
For Debian and its descendants (Ubuntu in my case) you can use Oracle
XE, which imposes some limits unsuitable for production, but it is
superb as a learning tool, development and even non-critical production
work. It is available free of charge on otn.oracle.com. Oracle SQL
Developer runs on JRE and integrates well with XE.
I am more than happy to share some accumulated knowledge.
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