Processor Limits
Restrictions
This section is available only for the Microsoft Server Processor license type (for more details, see Microsoft Server Processor (license type)).
Controls
Control | Details |
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This license does not have contracts with applicable processor limits | This label indicates that this license has no linked contract attached to it that has applicable processor limits. Processor limits can be inherited from a contract, or specified in this section. This label appears when the contract attached to this license has no processor limits. See Contracts Tab. |
Inherit processor limits from contract |
Indicates the name of the linked contract from which this license can
inherit license consumption rules and rights. When you select this check box, you instruct
IT Asset Management to dynamically inherit license use rights and rules from an
automatically-selected linked contract. If a license is linked to multiple contracts, the
license inherits use rights and rules from one of the linked contracts based on the
following conditions:
|
Consume one entitlement for every n processors |
Sets the basic ratio of processors to consume a single license entitlement. For example, if you set this value to 2, you need to buy a license (entitlement) for every two processors; and a 4-processor server requires two license entitlements. |
Minimum processors |
Some licenses set a base level of server for which the application can be licensed, defined by the minimum number of processors expected in such a device. When this value is larger than one, it may cause the license consumption to be higher than calculated directly from inventory. For example, suppose inventory returned a device with two processors, but Minimum processors is set to 4. This means that consumption for the inventory device must be calculated as if it had four processors; and if the license requires one license entitlement for every two processors, the device consumes two license entitlements (rather than the one that might be expected from inventory alone). |
IT Asset Management (Cloud)
Current