Do the system resources on the Micro instance meet the recommended configuration for Oracle?
A.
Yes completely
B.
Yes but only for certain situations
C.
Not in any circumstance
Do the system resources on the Micro instance meet the recommended configuration for Oracle?
Do the system resources on the Micro instance meet the recommended configuration for Oracle?
A.
Yes completely
B.
Yes but only for certain situations
C.
Not in any circumstance
B correct,
We recommend that you use db.t1.micro instances with Oracle to test setup and connectivity only; the system resources for a db.t1.micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle. No Oracle options are supported on a db.t1.micro instance.
Source: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/Concepts.DBInstanceClass.html#Concepts.DBInstanceClass.Previous
B.
C option
from Link – http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/Concepts.DBInstanceClass.html#Concepts.DBInstanceClass.T1
No Oracle options are supported on a db.t1.micro instance.
We recommend that you use db.t1.micro instances with Oracle to test setup and connectivity only; the system resources for a db.t1.micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle. No Oracle options are supported on a db.t1.micro instance.
Agree with you here.
It does says “Recommended configuration”
so db.t1.micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle
Answer is B
Yes but only for certain situations
Micro Instances (db.t1.micro) are instances sufficient for testing that should not be used for production applications. Using a db.t1.micro instance with Oracle is a limited test configuration. If you want to use a micro DB instance class, the db.t1.micro DB instance class only supports Oracle versions 11.2.0.2, 11.2.0.3, and 12.1.0.1. PostgreSQL version 9.5.2 does not support this instance class.
it IS A:
You guys say B but then post a statement saying “do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle”. Seeing as how the question is asking “meet the recommended configuration for Oracle?” im not sure how you answer incorrectly then post the proof of another answer being correct to back up your answer.. good luck with exam bro
B
The certain situation is testing applications
Micro Instances (db.t1.micro) are instances sufficient for testing that should not be used for production applications. PostgreSQL version 9.5.2 does not support this instance class. For more information, see the Micro Instances topic in the Amazon EC2 documentation.
I have the same idea. B
B
Answer is B per this table
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/CHAP_Oracle.html#Oracle.Concepts.InstanceClasses
Answer : B
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/CHAP_Oracle.html#Oracle.Concepts.InstanceClasses
Version 12.1.0.1 doesn’t support micro instance. but Enterprise Edition and Standard Edition 2 (Version 12.1.0.2)does support. Please find the above list for more information.
Be Careful with the question?
The question is if the system resources on the micro instance meet the recommended configuration for oracle. And no if we can use micro instance.
The answer is: yes we can use micro instances for tests purposes, but it doesn’t meet the recommended configuration.
So the correct answer is:C
+1
+1
as for Oracle 11: https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11882_01/install.112/e24326/toc.htm#BHCJCBAF
For Oracle 12: https://docs.oracle.com/database/121/NXDQI/toc.htm#NXDQI107
C for sure.
It does not mention that it’s a DATABASE but as Oracle DBA I can say for sure it will not accomodate an Oracle Database. Answer is NOT. C
Micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration of Oracle but can be used for test setup and connectivity only
So C is the right answer
look at this, Amazon
https://d0.awsstatic.com/whitepapers/best-practices-for-running-oracle-database-on-aws.pdf
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/CHAP_Oracle.html#Oracle.Concepts.InstanceClasses
B correct,
We recommend that you use db.t1.micro instances with Oracle to test setup and connectivity only; the system resources for a db.t1.micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle. No Oracle options are supported on a db.t1.micro instance.
Source: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/Concepts.DBInstanceClass.html#Concepts.DBInstanceClass.Previous
Reply
C
My choice option is ‘B’
Micro Instances (db.t1.micro)
Micro Instances (db.t1.micro) are instances sufficient for testing that should not be used for production applications. PostgreSQL version 9.5.2 and MySQL version 5.7 do not support this instance class. For more information, see the Micro Instances topic in the Amazon EC2 documentation.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/Concepts.DBInstanceClass.html#Concepts.DBInstanceClass.T1
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/Concepts.DBInstanceClass.html#Concepts.DBInstanceClass.T1
I choose B.
here https://d0.awsstatic.com/whitepapers/best-practices-for-running-oracle-database-on-aws.pdf
We recommend that you choose db.m4-based or r3-based Amazon RDS instances for
any enterprise database workloads. Your choice of the Amazon RDS instance type
should be based on the database workload and the Oracle Database licenses available.
Answer is C:
Micro Instances (db.t1.micro) – An instance sufficient for testing that should not be used for production applications. Using a db.t1.micro instance with Oracle is a limited test configuration. If you want to use a micro DB instance class, the db.t1.micro DB instance class only supports Oracle versions 11.2.0.2, 11.2.0.3, and 12.1.0.1.
We recommend that you use db.t1.micro instances with Oracle to test setup and connectivity only; the system resources for a db.t1.micro instance do not meet the recommended configuration for Oracle. No Oracle options are supported on a db.t1.micro instance. For more information, see the Micro Instances topic in the Amazon EC2 documentation.
The “correct” answer is C, not in *ANY* circumstance.
Notice that it’s asking whether the Micro instance meets Oracle’s *recommended* configuration, not whether it meets the Oracles minimum system requirements.
FYI:
– Oracle recommends 2GB physical RAM for 11.2.
– Oracle recommends 4GB physical RAM for 12.1.
– The RDS for Oracle “micro” instance is db.t2.micro, which has 1GB of physical RAM.