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By Dawn Kawamoto
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 9, 2005 7:04:00 PM

SAN FRANCISCO--Within the next five years, half of Oracle's customers may be running Linux, company President Charles Phillips has predicted.

The open-source operating system is a key piece in filling out Oracle's technology stack, which takes a soup-to-nuts approach, from applications to the database. The missing piece is the operating system, a slot Linux can fill in a variety of ways, Phillips said Tuesday, during a keynote speech at LinuxWorld here.

Oracle's customers have increasingly adopted Linux as they've become more comfortable with it and recognized its lower costs and greater predictability, Phillips said.


Charles Phillips
Co-president, Oracle

Twenty percent of Oracle's customers currently use Linux, but Phillips expects that figure to climb.

"I think over 50 percent of our customers will use Linux in the next five years, if not sooner," Phillips said, noting that a 90 percent figure may be exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to ever attain.

Another sign that Oracle's customers are becoming more comfortable with Linux is the migration path they're taking.

During the past 12 months, Phillips said, he has seen an increase in the number of customers using Linux machines to run databases and Java application servers, rather than slowly testing the waters with application servers running on Linux and then later adopting a Linux database.

Currently, 1,500 software companies support Oracle on Linux, he said.

During his presentation, Phillips highlighted Oracle's efforts in the Linux arena. One of the first moves the company made dates back to 1998, when it debuted a database on Linux. That was followed two years later with a database for 64-bit Linux.

Other steps Oracle has taken include its open-source and Linux test labs and the formation of its Oracle Linux kernel team to offer code-level support for its entire software stack.

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Industry researchers, meanwhile, placed Oracle's market share for the Linux database at 81 percent in 2004, while IBM held a 17 percent slice and other vendors accounted for 3 percent, Phillips said.

Amazon.com uses Oracle's Linux database on RAC--the Real Application Cluster version of the database that spans several machines--while Vanderbilt University is using Oracle's Linux grid.

"These aren't just small customers using Linux," Phillips said.

Grid computing is a major initiative at Oracle. The company has placed big bets that linking multiple computers together into a "grid" that replaces a single expensive system will be an ever-increasing trend.

"Linux is a key part of the grid. You need a structured approach, a standard approach, to configure these computers...Linux is at the heart of that," Phillips said.

Oracle also announced Tuesday that it has made its Oracle Cluster File System Release 2 generally available and that independent software developers Kronos, McKesson and Yantra are using its software on Linux to deliver their own products to customers.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 47 Talkback(s)
Re: Oracle belongs on Solaris, not Linux.
> Solaris is nice, however it lacks anything other than command line admin utilities.
> It takes far more work to generate a quick picture of how the system as a
> whole is functioning than HP's Glance.

But, on the other hand, only Solaris has DTrace.

-Ramon... (Read the rest)
Posted by: RamonFHerrera Posted on: 05/07/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Not Surprising  itanalyst | 08/09/05
We run on AIX  nucrash | 08/09/05
Only time I've seen an AIX system crash...  ju1ce | 08/09/05
Only Time I've Ever Seen ANY Unix System Crash  itanalyst | 08/09/05
Only time I've seen an AIX system crash...  Brian@... | 08/09/05
I'v seen AIX 5.2 crash a few times due to JFS2 bugs  michael_t | 08/09/05
We used a small Ultra-1 back in 1996 with Oracle 7  michael_t | 08/09/05
That's enough from the Larry fan club  jorwell | 08/10/05
Never notice the memory leaks  voska | 08/15/05
Oracle looking to Linux  Loverock Davidson | 08/09/05
Isn't there an article on Oracle switching to Linux  nucrash | 08/09/05
Costs...  ju1ce | 08/09/05
Larry wants more of your money  jorwell | 08/10/05
I believe. . .  Sheeva | 08/10/05
Re: Oracle belongs on Solaris, not linux.  Otto_Delete | 08/10/05
RE: Re: Oracle belongs on Solaris, not linux.  jkotan | 08/18/05
In Other News, Microsoft Announces Vulnerabilities AGAIN  itanalyst | 08/09/05
Is there any time you don't?  John Zern | 08/09/05
Yeah, for short lengths of time.  Brian@... | 08/09/05
you ever read the advisories on the updates?  linuxoverwindows | 08/10/05
Somebodies complained that the advisories were overly  Boot_Agnostic | 08/11/05
It COULD be worse!  jkotan | 08/18/05
That's Ok, We Still Have The Stability Of Access And SQL Server On Windows  itanalyst | 08/09/05
That's Ok, We Still Have The Stability Of Access And SQL Server On Windows  Brian@... | 08/09/05
Oh Yes, It Must Be Babied And Coddled  itanalyst | 08/09/05
Oh Yes, It Must Be Babied And Coddled  Brian@... | 08/09/05
but his wife heard...  linuxoverwindows | 08/10/05
10.0 Bravo Wheel, Bravo!!! (nt)  tbbrickster_z | 08/10/05
Actually  Boot_Agnostic | 08/11/05
Access vs Foxpro .....  IanX | 08/10/05
So if they say 50% will be running Linux  John Zern | 08/09/05
When you were contemplating this you were using more or less than  michael_t | 08/09/05
Ouch! - In a forum of shots -  Gonna_Snap | 08/09/05
They said %50 of their customers; It was a friendly puch in good taste;_)nt  michael_t | 08/11/05
Well Duh  supoman | 08/09/05
solaris has lower numbers than HP-UX  dwjunix | 08/11/05
Long life Linux!  tonydi | 08/09/05
The hosting comparison article that you refer to  dougpierson@... | 08/11/05
Oracle on Linux is the best  sajidwarsi | 08/09/05
Follow the money ...  IanX | 08/10/05
Re: Follow the money ...  IanX | 08/10/05
Maybe?  Edward@... | 08/10/05
Bye-Bye Billy...  jkotan | 08/18/05
In other news, MS buys silicon factory  FilledOut | 08/10/05
Watch out Linux, Oracle's looking at you  Boot_Agnostic | 08/11/05
RE: Watch out Linux, Oracle's looking at you  jkotan | 08/18/05
Re: Oracle belongs on Solaris, not Linux.  RamonFHerrera | 05/07/08

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