Answers
- The available infrastructure options are shared Exadata infrastructure and dedicated Exadata infrastructure.
- A shared infrastructure deployment provides easy-to-provision Autonomous Databases where multiple tenants can share an Exadata Cloud infrastructure. With dedicated deployment, you can consider it your own reserved Exadata infrastructure in OCI, which provides more flexibility and control than shared options.
- All standard connectivity methods, such as JDBC, SQL* Net, or any SQL client tools such as SQL Developer, are used for connectivity.
- ADB is a fully managed service from Oracle. You don’t have access to the OS; additionally, not all DBEE administrative features are available. You should look at the Oracle documentation, as features might change over time.
- Up to 60 days (7, 15, 30, and 60 days).
- OCI support both BYOL and a License Included model for provisioning.
- Yes, you can seamlessly scale beyond 16 OCPUs, although one of the requirements enforced by Oracle is to have a RAC license for scaling beyond 16 OCPUs in a BYOL scenario.
- You need at least one OCPU to provision ADB, although upon provisioning, you can shut down the instance and database OCPU billing will stop. Keep in mind that you will be responsible for storage as long as the service instance exists.
- Yes, Oracle Enterprise Manager 13.3, along with EM DB plugin bundle patch 13.32.0.190731 can be used. Keep in mind that only ATP-D databases are supported by EM at moment.
- Yes, ADB supports XML DB features with certain restrictions.
- Dedicated shape options include a quarter rack, half rack, and full rack. Underlying hardware could be one of Exadata X7, X8, X8M, or X9M shapes.
- Shape options include a base rack, quarter rack, half rack, and full rack. Underlying hardware could be one of Exadata X7, X8, X8M, or X9M shapes.
- No.