
And minimum reservation is 50% (I don't know if this value is changed. In my experience, with a brainless people, I calculate i 3 vDC the cost for a VM with this sum: So in your example 4GB must be 20 points in a bronze vDC, 30 points in silver vDC (75% guarantee) and 40 point in gold (100%). Cost for additional licenses (like Windows, SQL server) Cost for physical infrastructure (power and cooling too) 50%) -> Use Chargeback to keep costs updated Cost for PowerOn GB/month * %reserved (min.

Cost for men power (implementation, maintenance, support) Cost for additional services (like antivirus. I'm trying to find an answer by my aggregator, because I know, if VSPP has not been changed, that the minimum tolerable reservation is 50% and the max per VM is 24GB. In your case I think that you can assing reservation under 50%, but the meter will calculate 50% -> 2GB vRAM. I suggest to use reservation per vDC not per VM and define your quality of service using the vDC as the minimun piece for the customer tenant.Įg: vDC in best effort (reservation at 20%) -> cost 50% but infrastructure saving Cloud based backup for small shops and remote offices. VDC for critical apps (reservation 90% or 100%) -> cost 100% VDC for heavy apps (reservation > 50%) -> cost 50% It also works well as a redundant system for larger installations.


In the company where I'm working, we don't have an integration from chargeback with CRM and billing system.
#Carbonite cost per month license
We should do vDC in allocation mode and predict all costs for our customer, but it isn't the right way to sell cloud IaaS (Hope my management will understand it.), for this reason we apply a formula based on vDC best effort: license VSPP for 1GB PoweredOn RAM costs 2€/month and the max RAM per VM is 24GB.
