Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) virtual machines (VMs) are instances of virtualized computing environments that run on Oracle’s cloud infrastructure. They allow you to run various workloads, from small development projects to large-scale global applications, on a secure and scalable platform.
Expand the impact of your OCI VMs.
Optimize resource utilization
Manage Oracle VM consumption with Tidal jobs.
Connect essential functions
Integrate Oracle cloud activities in end-to-end business processes.
Centralize control
Manage all OCI scheduling tasks from one platform.
The native Oracle scheduler has basic scheduling functionality and can only manage jobs within the boundaries of OCI virtual machines. With this adapter, Tidal replaces the Oracle scheduler so you can manage those tasks centrally in your enterprise-wide processes and apply more advanced scheduling functionality.
Use Tidal jobs to bring OCI VMs online when you’re ready to run jobs in your cloud instance, and take them down when you’re not. That way, you’ll only pay for them when you need them.
The integration provides the functionality of the native Oracle scheduler plus more advanced capabilities:
Tidal jobs can be used to start and stop VM instances, and the Tidal agent can delegate tasks on VMs. Automate VM lifecycles and run jobs in VMs.
You can improve VM management with Tidal by:
Resources
Redwood Software helps you create automation fabrics.
In Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), a virtual machine (VM) is a software-defined computer that simulates a physical machine. It allows users to run operating systems and applications as if they were running on a real, physical server without the physical hardware requirements. OCI VMs can be tailored to different workloads, including standard, dense I/O or GPU.
Yes, an Oracle database can be and often is run on a virtual machine (VM). Oracle supports running Oracle Database on virtualized environments, and it's a common practice, especially for development, testing and even production environments.
Here's why:
To schedule jobs/tasks in OCI using Tidal, you first define the job, specifying its name, command, agent and execution criteria. Then, you create or select a calendar to determine when the job will run, and optionally assign dependencies. Finally, you add the job or job group to the production schedule, either manually or via the calendar. See more details in Tidal documentation.