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Summary of Oracle OpenWorld announcements at Systems Spotlight Luncheon Oct 9 in Hartford CT

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Page 1: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

1 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle: Systems Spotlight Luncheon

Oct 2013 v3

Page 2: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

2 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

The Safe Harbor

The following is intended to outline our general product direction. It

is intended for information purposes only, and may not be

incorporated into any contract. It is not a commitment to deliver any

material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in

making purchasing decisions. The development, release, and timing

of any features or functionality described for Oracle’s products

remains at the sole discretion of Oracle.

Page 3: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

3 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Agenda

Systems Announcements at Oracle Open World (Dan Lyons)

Customer Examples: Oracle for IBM Customers (Sandrino Cueva)

Customer Examples: Oracle on Oracle hardware (Dan Lyons)

Call to Action: Schedule an on-site detailed briefing (You)

Page 4: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

4 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle Open World Sept 23-26, 2013 Major Systems Announcements

Database 12c In-Memory Option

SPARC M6 Processor Upgrade

SPARC M6-32 System

SuperCluster M6-32

Exalytics SPARC T5-8

Oracle Database Backup, Logging and Recovery Appliance

ZS3 Storage Announcement

Page 5: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

5 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle 12c: Stores Data in Both Formats Simultaneously

Optimizing Transaction and Query Performance Row Format Databases versus Column Format Databases

Row

Transactions run faster on row format

– Insert or query a sales order

– Fast processing few rows, many columns

Column

Analytics run faster on column format

– Report on sales totals by state

– Fast accessing few columns, many rows

ORDER

SALES

SALES

S

T

A

T

E

Page 6: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

6 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

BOTH row and column

in-memory formats for

same data/table

Simultaneously active and

transactionally consistent

100X Faster Analytics &

reporting: column format

2X Faster OLTP: row format

Breakthrough: Dual Format In-Memory Database

Column

Format

Memory

Row

Format

Memory

Analytics OLTP Sales Sales

Page 7: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

7 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Generate Reports Instantly: sub-second

In-Memory

Report Outline

Example: Show sales trends for footwear products in outlet stores

Stores

Products

Sales

Sales

Dynamically creates

in-memory report object

Report object populated

during fact scan

Reports 20x faster without

predefined cubes

Page 8: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

8 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Column Store Replaces Analytic Indexes

Table 1 to 3

OLTP

Indexes Analytic queries 100X faster

OLTP & batch: 2X - 3X faster

No Analytic Index Overhead

Replaced by Column Store:

Near Zero Overhead Updates

Less Tuning & Administration

In-Memory

Column Store

Page 9: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

9 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle In-Memory Column Store: Easy to Use

1. Configure Memory Capacity inmemory_size = XXX GB

2. Configure tables or partitions to be in memory alter table | partition … inmemory;

3. Drop analytic indexes to speed up OLTP

Page 10: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

10 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle In-Memory Requires Zero Application Changes

Full Functionality - No restrictions on SQL

Easy to Implement - No migration of data

Fully Compatible - All existing applications run unchanged

Fully Multitenant - Oracle In-Memory is Cloud Ready

Uniquely Achieves All In-Memory Benefits With No Application Changes

Page 11: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 11

Investing in Silicon Innovation An Accelerated Pace of Engineering Execution

March 26, 2013 March 26, 2013 Sept. 23, 2013

NEW

Page 12: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 12

New Oracle Processor Technology SPARC M6: Higher Density and Lower Cost / Core

New: 12 S3 cores @ 3.6GHz

Large 48MB shared L3 Cache

Scalable to 32 processors

Integrated 2x8 PCIe 3.0

Integrated ISA-based crypto

acceleration

2X THROUGHPUT

PERFORMANCE

OF M5

Page 13: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 13

The Ultimate Software Optimization: Hardware Moving Oracle Database & Java Software Functions into Hardware

More Software in Silicon

Database query acceleration

Java acceleration

Application data protection

Data decompression

Investment

Page 14: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 14

Extreme performance

– 2X the processor cores

– 2X the throughput

– In memory Oracle data base queries 7X faster

Highest efficiency: built-in, no-cost virtualization

– Flexible physical and logical system partitioning

– Continuous availability design to eliminate downtime

– All of your existing apps just run, faster

Best for in-memory computing

– 2X more memory per processor of any datacenter server

– Terabytes per second of memory bandwidth

Oracle Introduces the SPARC M6-32 Server

Page 15: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 15

Unprecedented Performance and Scalability Oracle M6: Terabyte Scale Computing

384 cores, 3,072 threads

Hardware Optimized Virtualization

32 Terabytes Memory

3 TERABYTES

PER SECOND

SYSTEM

BANDWIDTH

1.4 TERABYTES

PER SECOND

MEMORY

BANDWIDTH

1 TERABYTE

PER SECOND

I/O

BANDWIDTH

Page 16: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 16

Oracle’s Big Memory Advantage

Game changing performance

advantage on database

queries when using big

memory

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Scan-rate Query1 Query2

Rela

tive P

erf

orm

an

ce

Small Memory Large Memory

>7X PERFORMANCE BOOST

Page 17: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 17

Oracle SuperCluster M6-32 Oracle’s Ultimate Engineered System

Highest performance

Most scalable engineered system

Most flexible: Grow compute and storage

independently

Best for In-Memory computing: Oracle

Database12c and applications optimized

Highest consolidation ratios

Highest availability and serviceability

Page 18: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 18

Oracle SuperCluster Extending the Product Family

Best Price / performance

High consolidation ratios

Run database and

applications on a single rack

Scalable configurations

Exadata database

optimizations

Exalogic software and other

application optimizations

Layered Optimized

Virtualization

Virtual Tuning Assistant

SuperCluster M6-32 SuperCluster T5-8

All SuperCluster T5-8

benefits, PLUS…

Vertical scaling

In-memory applications

using big memory

capacity

Oracle Database12c

and applications

optimized

Mainframe-class RAS

Page 19: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 19

SuperCluster SuperCluster T5-8 SuperCluster M6-32

Half Rack Full Rack Minimum Maximum

Processors 8 16 16 32

Memory 2TB 4TB 8 TB 32 TB

Exadata Storage Servers 4 8 9

Oracle SuperCluster At A Glance

Page 20: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 20

Oracle SuperCluster Price-Performance

SuperCluster T5-8 Half

SuperCluster T5-8 Full

SuperCluster M6-32 Max

Performance

Price-Performance

Oracle Eliminates the High-End Premium with SuperCluster

Page 21: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 21

The New Exalytics In-Memory Machine T5-8

The world’s fastest processor and

the world’s best analytics software

Massive scalability

Tens-of-thousands of BI users

Sub-second response times

Extreme analytics infrastructure consolidation

4TB Memory

Page 22: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 22

Exalytics T5-8: Product Specification

Compute 8 SPARC T5 processors -128 cores total Memory 4 TB RAM Networking 40 Gbps InfiniBand – 4 ports 10 Gbps Ethernet – 4 ports 8 Gbps FibreChannel – 4 ports Storage 3.2 TB Flash Storage 7.2 TB HDD Capacity

Available Now

Page 23: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 23

What is Unique To Exalytics T5?

Ideal platform for multi-department shared analytic infrastructure

– Pre-defined partitioning options

– Zero-overhead, pre-built virtualization with Oracle VM for Solaris

– Finer grain resource isolation available in every VM using Solaris Zones

– ZFS snapshots provide fast backup and restore

Highly efficient CPU processing: More users per processor

– Latency may be higher compared to X3; but can support more users and achieve higher

throughput

All software same as Exalytics X3-4

– Note: Endeca – Solaris planned for near future release

Page 24: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

24 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

The New Oracle Database Backup, Logging, Recovery Appliance Real time log shipping: near zero data loss

Fast restore to any time point

Delta-only architecture: minimizes network load

End-to-end visibility: cloud & replica, disk to tape option

Scalable appliance: backs up 1000s databases

Page 25: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

25 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Backup Appliances not designed for Databases Treats Databases as Just More Files to Copy

Lose business data - restore from backup loses a day of data

Slow down business - backup overhead slows applications

Not scalable - must deploy and manage multiple appliances

Page 26: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

26 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Database Backup Logging Recovery Appliance Architected for Protection of Critical Business Data

Real time log shipping:

near zero data loss

Fast restore to any time point

Delta-only architecture:

minimizes network load

End-to-end visibility: cloud &

replica, disk to tape option

Scalable appliance:

backs up 1000s databases

1000s of

Databases

Validated &

Compressed

Change Deltas

Database Backup Logging

Recovery Appliance

Real-time Log &

Change Deltas

Optional

Archive to Tape

Page 27: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

27 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle Database Backup & Logging as a Cloud Service

Oracle

Public Cloud

Data Center B

Data Center A

Data Center C

New Public Cloud

Backup Service

‒ Data encrypted at source

Backup DBs directly to cloud

Replicate backups from

Database Backup Logging

Recovery Appliance to

Oracle Public Cloud

Database Backup Logging

Recovery Appliances can

also replicate to each other

Page 28: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

28 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle’s new ZS3 Series

ZS3-2 ZS3-4

• Single or Dual Controllers

• 512GB DRAM

• 8 PCIe Slots

• 16 Disk Enclosures*

• 12TB Read Flash

• 4TB Write Flash*

• Single or Dual Controllers

• 2TB DRAM

• 14 PCIe Slots

• 36 Disk Enclosures

• 12TB Read Flash

• 10TB Write Flash

2x Faster

3x More Scalable

OS8 Storage OS Support

* ZS3-2 will release with expansion to 8 disk enclosures. Scale to 16 expected within 6 months of release.

ZFS Storage Operating System • Most powerful storage software suite

• Engineered Integration with Oracle software

Page 29: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

29 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

ZS3: World Record Performance 4X Better Price-performance for Financial Processing, Database

Queries, and Video Streaming Applications

IBM DS8870 15,423 SPC-2 MBPS

TM

$134.2 SPC-2 Price PerformanceTM

VSP 13,147 SPC-2 MBPSTM

$95.3 SPC-2 Price PerformanceTM

P9500 XP 13,147 SPC-2 MBPSTM

$131.2 SPC-2 Price PerformanceTM

17,224 SPC-2 MBPSTM

$22.5 SPC-2 Price PerformanceTM

ZS3-4

Results as of September 10, 2013, for more information go to www.storageperformance.org/results SPC-2. Results for Oracle ZFS Storage ZS3-4 are 17,244.22 SPC-2 MBPS™, $22.53 SPC-2 Price-Performance. Full results at www.storageperformance.org/results/benchmark_results_spc2#b00067. Results for IBM DS8870 are 15,423.66 SPC-2 MBPS, $131.21 SPC-2 Price-Performance. Full results at ww.storageperformance.org/results/benchmark_results_spc2#b00062. Results for Hitachi VSP are 13,147 SPC-2 MBPS, $95.38 SPC-2 Price-Performance. Full results at www.storageperformance.org/results/benchmark_results_spc2#b000600. Results for HP P9500 XP Disk Array are 13,147.87 SPC-2 MBPS, $88.34 SPC-2 Price-Performance. Full results at www.storageperformance.org/results/benchmark_results_spc2#b00056.

Page 30: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

30 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Thousands of Engineered Systems In Production Existing Applications, Spectacular Results

Page 31: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

31 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Oracle Open World Major Systems Announcements - Summary Database 12c In-Memory Option

– Provides 100x Read Performance; 4x OLTP Performance

SPARC M6 Server - Processor Upgrade

– Twice the Cores, Twice the Throughput, Twice the Performance, But Not Twice the Price

SuperCluster M6-32

– Flexibility and Performance of SuperCluster Brought to the Big Iron Arena with an M6-32 Option

Exalytics SPARC T5-8

– OBIEE and Hyperion Acceleration on SPARC for Intensive Memory Workloads

Oracle Database Backup, Logging and Recovery Appliance

– Many to One Database Protection Mechanism With Potential Cloud Offload Capabilities

ZS3 Storage Announcement

– Hardware and OS Upgrades To Match More Intensive DB Workloads

Page 32: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 32

SPARC: Best Enterprise Portfolio

T4-1B

T4-1

T4-2

T4-4

T5-1B

T5-2

T5-4 SuperCluster T5-8 and M6-32

Exalytics T5-8

Entry-Level Mid-Range High-End Engineered Systems

M6-32, M5-32

T5-8

Page 33: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

33 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Agenda

Systems Announcements at Oracle Open World (Dan Lyons)

Customer Examples: Oracle for IBM Customers (Sandrino Cueva)

Customer Examples: Oracle on Oracle hardware (Dan Lyons)

Call to Action: Schedule an on-site detailed briefing (You)

Page 34: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

34 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Features Customers Value

Customers base buying decisions on key values

– System performance

– System price

– TCO cost

Other characteristics are implementation details that designers balance

for System performance & price

– GHz, transistor count, cache sizes, instruction issue rate, cache policies,

chip size, TLB design, core design, hardware thread count, circuit board

layout, internal buffers, redundancy, register count, FP, etc…

Versus design tradeoffs

- System capacity

- Low Risk Deployments

- Efficiencies

Page 35: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

35 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Wo

rse

B

ette

r

Historical Economics of SMP Near Linear Pricing

$/U

nit

of

Pe

rfo

rma

nc

e

T5-4

$147,992

T5-8

$268,314

M6-32

$1,209,943

T5-2

$67,042

IBM Power 750 POWER7+ $204,982

IBM Power 780 POWER7+ $2,101,370

IBM Power 795 POWER7

$6,491,183

IBM Power 740 POWER7+ $101,571

2 Socket 4 Socket 8 Socket 32 Socket

List Price of Equivalent configurations: Sockets, Memory, OS, Virtualization

Page 36: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

36 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Wo

rse

B

ette

r

Historical Economics of SMP Near Linear Pricing

$/U

nit

of

Pe

rfo

rma

nc

e

T5-4

$147,992

T5-8

$268,314

M6-32

$1,209,943

T5-2

$67,042

2 Socket 4 Socket 8 Socket 32 Socket

List Price of Equivalent configurations: Sockets, Memory, OS, Virtualization

Page 37: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

37 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Wo

rse

B

ette

r

Historical Economics of SMP Near Linear Pricing

$/U

nit

of

Pe

rfo

rma

nc

e

T5-4

$147,992

T5-8

$268,314

M6-32

$1,209,943

T5-2

$67,042

IBM Power 750 POWER7+ $204,982

IBM Power 780 POWER7+ $2,101,370

IBM Power 795 POWER7

$6,491,183

IBM Power 740 POWER7+ $101,571

2 Socket 4 Socket 8 Socket 32 Socket

List Price of Equivalent configurations: Sockets, Memory, OS, Virtualization

Page 38: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

38 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Wo

rse

B

ette

r

Near Linear Pricing

$/U

nit

of

Pe

rfo

rma

nc

e

T5-4

$147,992

T5-8

$268,314

M6-32

$1,209,943

T5-2

$67,042

IBM Power 750 POWER7+ $204,982

IBM Power 780 POWER7+ $2,101,370

IBM Power 795 POWER7

$6,491,183

IBM Power 740 POWER7+ $101,571

2 Socket 4 Socket 8 Socket 32 Socket

List Price of Equivalent configurations: Sockets, Memory, OS, Virtualization

Oracle: Re-engineering the Economics of SMP

Page 39: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

39 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

European Hospital Organization 4x performance gain with no change to applications

COMPANY

• Largest hospital organization in region

• Consolidate existing servers, improve performance

• Installed base of M5000 systems running Solaris 10

OPPORTUNITIES

• Deliver 2x immediate performance gain with upside for 4x improvement over time

• Lower cost of acquisition than IBM Power 7+ systems

• Next generation platform for DB2

SOLUTION

• Selected SPARC T5-4 servers running Solaris 10

• Solaris compatibility for applications ensures more rapid transition

RESULT

Chose SPARC T5-4 and Solaris 10 for best combination of acquisition cost and price/performance

• Achieved goal of providing the maximum performance required at 4x existing platforms

• Lower cost to acquire than similarly positioned IBM Power 7+/AIX offering

• No application change required for DB2: no patching, no porting, no recompile, just drop-in replacement due to Solaris application compatibility

IBM P770

M5000

SPARC T5-4

Performance

IBM P770

M5000

SPARC T5-4

Page 40: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

40 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

European Hospital Organization Lower cost of acquisition and 4x better price/performance than IBM

Oracle Solaris 10

IBM DB2

SPARC T5-4

Increased Performance by 4X

Rapid time to Adoption

SAN Storage

SPARC T5-4 #1

Oracle Solaris 10

SPARC T5-4 #2

Oracle Solaris 10

T5-4

Page 41: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

41 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

COMPANY

• Large Oracle SPARC installed base financial

institution software ISV

• Requirement to reduce data center costs and

consolidate platforms

• Minimize risk and complexity by leveraging

Oracle Solaris operating system

OPPORTUNITY

• Characterize SPARC T5-8 as their new mid-

range system with proven performance against

IBM Pure Flex

• Replace IBM Pure Flex with T5-8 for higher

performance and better response times

RESULTS

• 8x price/performance advantage over IBM

Pure Flex

• 6x performance increase based on utilization

• 4x higher performance per core

• 4x additional agents supported

• 1.3x better application response times

SPARC T5-8 Delivers Impressive Throughput for Core Banking Application

Core Banking Applications

0 5 10

Price/Performance

CPU Utilization

Performance/Core

SPARC T5

IBM

Page 42: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

42 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Scalability of Oracle

Solaris/SPARC and superior

virtualization with Solaris Zones

Superior Scalability

and Virtualization

Oracle Solaris 11

SPARC T5-8

8x price/performance over IBM Pure Flex

6x Performance increase

4x better performance per core

30% faster response times

SPARC T5-8 Impressive Throughput Improvement of Core Banking Application

Core Banking Applications

IBM Pure Flex

Page 43: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

43 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

COMPANY

• One of the largest mobile telephony providers in

their region in Europe

• Seeking to reduce reduce data center

complexity and cost, and increase subscriber

performance

OPPORTUNITY

• SPARC T5-4 with Oracle Solaris offers proven

higher performance and lower TCO than

existing IBM platform running Oracle Enterprise

Database 11gR2

• Improve customer response times with higher

performance I/O, CPU, and query response

times

RESULTS

• Baseline equivalent tested Oracle SPARC T5-4

on a 6 CPU to 6 CPU basis compared to

existing IBM platform

• 1.1x improvement in I/O intensive query run

times

• 1.1x improvement in CPU intensive query run

times

• 1.1x improvement in merge query run times

Telecommunications Provider

Oracle Database 11gR2 Query Run Times

SPARC T5 and Oracle Solaris Improves Oracle Enterprise Database 11gR2 Performance

Existing Platform

SPARC T5-4

Page 44: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

44 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

SPARC T5-4

1.1x Improved Oracle Enterprise

Database 11gR2 Response

Times

IBM Power 795

SPARC T5 and Oracle Solaris Significantly Reduce Total Cost of Ownership

Telecommunications Provider

Significant reduction in

Oracle core software

licensing costs

Total Cost of Ownership Comparison

SPARC T5-4 to IBM Power 795 (both 64 cores)

Installed Base Proposed

Total 5 Year TCO ($000) IBM Power 795 SPARC T5-4

Hardware Acquisition $ - $ 149

Hardware Service $ 1,957 $ 98

Software Licensing/Service $ 3,322 $ 830

Power and Cooling $ 81 $ 12

Floor Space $ 24 $ 2

Integration $ - $ 7

$ 5,384 $ 1,098

Net TCO Difference 5x Lower

System Configurations:

SPARC T5-4 SPARC T5 3.6GHz 1024GB 4 chips 64 cores

POWER 795 POWER 7 4.0GHz 512GB 8 chips 64 cores

Page 45: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

45 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Pharmaceutical Manufacturer and Distributor

COMPANY OVERVIEW

– Rapidly growing pharmaceutical distributor and retailer migrating from

Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne SP12 and Oracle Database 9iR2

– Replacing IBM hardware platform running IBM AIX and EMC storage which

lacks the required scalability, performance, high availability, and centralized

management

SPARC SUPERCLUSTER BENEFITS

– Ideal platform to consolidate IBM x86, IBM p6 AIX, and EMC storage to one

SPARC SuperCluster half rack with additional capacity for future expansion

– SPARC SuperCluster platform allowed for a phased migration porting Oracle

JD Edwards EnterpriseOne to Oracle Solaris 10, and subsequently migrating

the database to Oracle Database 11gR2 using Exadata storage cells

– Scalable engineered system to implement data warehouse and ODI running

Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne, Exadata, and WebLogic

– Centralized management of an integrated solution and a single point of

technical support for all components decreased both costs and risks

SOLUTIONS

– Half-rack SPARC SuperCluster with domains for Oracle Database 11gR2

database and Oracle Solaris general-purpose domains

– CPU and memory resource allocated 50% for Oracle JD Edwards Enterprise

One using Oracle Solaris Cluster, and 50% for Oracle Database 11gR2

PERFORMANCE RESULTS

– Performance comparison against IBM 5x IBM 3550, 1x

IBM p630, 1x IBM P6 P550 and EMC CX4 240 40TB

– 34x improvement in batch report with Oracle 11gR2

Database connected to Sun ZFS Storage 7320 Appliance

storage in SPARC SuperCluster

– Exponential improvements in Oracle Database batch

reporting with up to 153x using Oracle Exadata Storage

Servers

– 4x performance migrating database from Oracle

Database 10gR2 in Solaris 10 general-purpose domain to

Oracle Database 11gR2

– 2.5x performance improvement of Oracle JD Edwards

EnterpriseOne sales order processing

SPARC Super Cluster

M9000/EMC Loading Oracle

Database with TIBCO

Oracle RMAN Backups

Page 46: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

46 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

SPARC SuperCluster Architecture Oracle JD Edwards EnterpriseOne

One View Reporting Across the Enterprise

Complete, Integrated Solution Applications,

Database, ZFS Storage Appliance on Infinband

Pharmaceutical Manufacturer and Distributor

Domain Architecture Optimized

for Application Workloads

2.5x performance improvement of Oracle JD

Edwards EnterpriseOne sales order processing

InfiniBand Network

• Oracle Solaris 11 domains for 11gR2

• Oracle Solaris 10 domains for JDE

• Oracle Exadata Storage Servers

• Sun ZFS Storage 7320 Appliance

T4-4 Node 2

Oracle Solaris 11

Oracle Solaris 11

DB Domain

T4-4 Node 1

Oracle Solaris 11

Oracle Solaris 11

DB Domain

GP Domain GP Domain

EXADATA

STORAGE

EXADATA

STORAGE

EXADATA

STORAGE

ZFS

STORAGE

APPLIANCE

Consolidated Multiple Legacy IBM pSeries and IBM

x86 Systems and 40TB EMC Storage to SPARC

SuperCluster Half Rack

Page 47: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

47 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

SPARC T5 Leadership: Seventeen #1’s

SPARC T5: Oracle best on Oracle throughout datacenter

– SPARC T5 best at Enterprise Database

– SPARC T5 best at Enterprise Java & Oracle Applications

– SPARC T5 best at Cloud – best virtualization

– SPARC T5 best at Analytics

SPARC – Industry’s best enterprise midrange

– 2x to 3x performance vs. IBM Power7/7+ & competitive x86 servers

Innovations for Enterprise performance leadership

– Leading throughput, fast single-thread, leading Software in Silicon

Best performance and $/performance on audited results

See benchmark disclosure slide

SPARC T5

Page 48: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

48 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Summary

Performance: We beat IBM on a systems basis with T5 anywhere from 2-5x price/performance over P7 and P7+.

Total Cost: Whether looking at Total Cost of Acquisition, Total Cost of Ownership, or Total Cost of Management, Oracle has proven that SPARC is a lower cost platform than P7 and P7+ regardless of how many cores, sockets and memory.

Virtualization: We continue to be the leader in Unix virtualization with lower overhead, Zones, secure VM migration and direct I/O. We have also unified Oracle VM across SPARC and x86 platforms.

Value Growth: IBM gained 10% over P7 with P7+ (and in some cases lost performance). Oracle gained 2x with T4 to T5 in a 12 month period. P7+ was long delayed.

Roadmap: Oracle has consistently delivered on the promises in its Roadmap and will continue to do so. The next generation of SPARC processors with Software in Silicon Application Accelerators are already being manufactured for release next calendar year! Where is Power8 from IBM and what is it?

Why Choose SPARC over IBM Power?

Page 49: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

49 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Agenda

Systems Announcements at Oracle Open World (Dan Lyons)

Customer Examples: Oracle for IBM Customers (Sandrino Cueva)

Customer Examples: Oracle on Oracle hardware (Dan Lyons)

Call to Action: Schedule an on-site detailed briefing (You)

Page 50: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

50 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Agenda

Systems Announcements at Oracle Open World (Dan Lyons)

Customer Examples: Oracle for IBM Customers (Sandrino Cueva)

Customer Examples: Oracle on Oracle hardware (Dan Lyons)

Call to Action: Schedule an on-site detailed briefing (You)

Page 51: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

51 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Confidential – Oracle Internal Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Upcoming Oracle Events…

Systems Spotlight Luncheon – Boston

Oracle Infrastructure for Oracle Applications Burlington MA, Oct 22, 2013

Oracle Innovation Forum – New York Grand Hyatt, Nov 6, 2013

Oracle Innovation Forum – Boston Burlington MA, Nov 13, 2013

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52 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Page 53: Oracle OpenWorld Overview Hartford Oct 9

53 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Required Benchmark Disclosure Statement Copyright 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Oracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Results as of 3/26/2013.

TPC Benchmark C, tpmC, and TPC-C are trademarks of the Transaction Processing Performance Council (TPC). SPARC T5-8 (8/128/1024) with Oracle Database 11g Release 2 Enterprise Edition

with Partitioning, 8,552,523 tpmC, $0.55 USD/tpmC, available 9/25/2013, New Order 90th% Response Time 0.410sec. IBM Power 780 Cluster (24/192/768) with DB2 ESE 9.7, 10,366,254 tpmC,

$1.38 USD/tpmC, available 10/13/2010, New Order 90th% Response Time 2.10 sec. IBM x3850 X5 (4/40/80) with DB2 ESE 9.7, 3,014,684 tpmC, $0.59 USD/tpmC, available 7/11/2011. IBM x3850 X5

(4/32/64) with DB2 ESE 9.7, 2,308,099 tpmC, $0.60 USD/tpmC, available 5/20/2011. IBM Flex x240 (2/16/32) with DB2 ESE 9.7, 1,503,544 tpmC, $0.53 USD/tpmC, available 8/16/2012. IBM Power

780 (2/8/32) with IBM DB2 9.5, 1,200,011 tpmC, $0.69 USD/tpmC, available 10/13/2010. Source: http://www.tpc.org/tpcc, results as of 3/26/2013.

SPEC and the benchmark name SPECjEnterprise are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. Results from www.spec.org as of 3/26/2013. SPARC T5-8,

57,422.17 SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS; SPARC T4-4, 40,104.86 SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS; Sun Server X2-8, 27,150.05 SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS; Cisco UCS B440 M2, 26,118.67

SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS; IBM Power 780, 16,646.34 SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS. SPARC T3-4 9456.28 SPECjEnterprise2010 EjOPS. SPARC T5-8 (SPARC T5-8 Server base package,

8xSPARC T5 16-core processors, 128x16GB-1066 DIMMS, 2x600GB 10K RPM 2.5. SAS-2 HDD, 4x Power Cables) List Price $268,742. IBM Power 780 (IBM Power 780:9179 Model MHB, 4x3.8GHz

16-core, 64x one processor activation, 4xCEC Enclosure with IBM Bezel, I/O Backplane and System Midplane,16x 0/32GB DDR3 Memory (4x8GB) DIMMS-1066MHz Power7 CoD Memory, 12x

Activation of 1 GB DDR3 Power7 Memory, 5x Activation of 100GB DDR3 Power7 Memory, 1x Disk/Media Backplane. 2x 146.8GB SAS 15K RPM 2.5. HDD (AIX/Linux only), 4x AC Power Supply

1725W) List Price $992,023. Source: Oracle.com and IBM.com, collected 03/18/2013.

SPEC & the benchmark name SPECjbb are registered trademarks of Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation (SPEC). Results as of 3/26/2013, see http://www.spec.org for more information.

SPARC T5-2 75,658 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 23,334 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. Sun Server X2-4 65,211 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 22,057 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM

critical-jOPS. Sun Server X3-2 41,954 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 13,305 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. SPARC T4-2 34,804 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 10,101

SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. HP ProLiant DL560p Gen8 66,007 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 16,577 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. HP ProLiant ML350p Gen8 40,047

SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 12,308 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. Supermicro X8DTN+ 20,977 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 6,188 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. HP

ProLiant ML310e Gen8 12,315 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 2,908 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM critical-jOPS. Intel R1304BT 6,198 SPECjbb2013-MultiJVM max-jOPS, 1,722 SPECjbb2013-

MultiJVM critical-jOPS.

Two-tier SAP Sales and Distribution (SD) Standard Application benchmarks SAP Enhancement package 5 for SAP ERP 6.0 as of 3/26/13:SPARC M5-32 (32 processors, 192 cores, 1536 threads)

85,050 SAP SD users, 32 x 3.6 GHz SPARC M5, 4 TB memory, Oracle Database 11g, Oracle Solaris 11, Cert# 2013009. SPARC T5-8 (8 processors, 64 cores, 1024 threads) 40,000 SAP SD users,

8 x 3.6 GHz SPARC T5, 2 TB memory, Oracle Database 11g, Oracle Solaris 11, Cert# 2013008. IBM Power 760 (8 processors, 48 cores, 192 threads) 25,488 SAP SD users, 8 x 3.41 GHz IBM

POWER7+, 1024 GB memory, DB2 10, AIX 7.1, Cert#2013004. Two-tier SAP Sales and Distribution (SD) Standard Application benchmarks SAP Enhancement package 4 for SAP ERP 6.0 as of

4/30/12:IBM Power 795 (32 processors, 256 cores, 1024 threads) 126,063 SAP SD users, 32 x 4 GHz IBM POWER7, 4 TB memory, DB2 9.7, AIX7.1, Cert#2010046. SPARC Enterprise Server M9000

(64 processors, 256 cores, 512 threads) 32,000 SAP SD users, 64 x 2.88 GHz SPARC64 VII, 1152 GB memory, Oracle Database 10g, Oracle Solaris 10, Cert# 2009046. SAP, R/3, reg TM of SAP AG

in Germany and other countries. More info www.sap.com/benchmark

SPEC and the benchmark names SPECfp, SPECint are registered trademarks of the Standard Performance Evaluation Corporation. Results as of March 26, 2013 from www.spec.org and this

report. SPARC T5-8: 3750 SPECint_rate2006, 3490 SPECint_rate_base2006, 3020 SPECfp_rate2006, 2770 SPECfp_rate_base2006; SPARC T5-1B: 467 SPECint_rate2006, 436

SPECint_rate_base2006, 369 SPECfp_rate2006, 350 SPECfp_rate_base2006. IBM Power 780 8-chip 3.92GHz: 2770 SPECint_rate2006. IBM Power 710 Express 1-chip 3.556GHz: 289

SPECint_rate2006.

Must be in SPARC T5 & M5 Presos with Benchmark Results