Hi, Thanks for asking this valid question.IFS do time to time update our support terms, but not very often. Last time was almost 2 years ago.I’ve taking the feedback about the date and version in our terms back into our legal team. The previous version are located at the same page https://ifs.com/legal (under the section of “Previous Versions). The file name would hint of when it was last time issued. Hope this answer your question.
Licensing is another tricky subject. (My advice on this is offered without warranty.) If you use a user-based licensing metric, you’re free to deploy on the hardware of your choice. This is typically how IFS sells ASFU licenses, but these carry the added requirement that you ONLY run IFS on the system. This is not fully true. The Oracle Named User Plus (NUP) is an named user metric license. The NUP could/can be procured with Standard Edition or Enterprise Edition versions. The SE (SE1, SE or SE2) has an maximum CPU socket limit that affects the number of physical sockets that could be part of the VM-cluster. I.e. you are not allowed to exceed the maximum number of sockets even if you had the user-based metric. Enterprise Edition has no such restrictions. Before the fall 2015, IFS was able to sell NUP ASFU versions and some customers might still have those type of license today.However, the current ASFU license model sold by IFS, have no hardware restrictions at all, it has to match t
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