Oracle Always Free Tier
Example – Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Email Delivery Settings | Getting Started with Email Delivery | Overview of the Email Delivery Service | Dimitri Gielis Blog (Oracle Application Express – APEX): Free Oracle Cloud: 11. Sending Emails with APEX_MAIL on ATP | Oracle Always Free Oracle Database upgrades |
lscpu comparison GCE vs Oracle vs AWS Uploading files to a bucket | Object Storage Tutorial | CLI | Command Line Interface Details of Always Free Resources: Boot Volumes | Compute Instances | forum post on mulitple compute instances, subnets, network, security lists, VCN etc
Oracle Cloud forum | 13-part series on free Oracle Cloud | How to reserve and attach IP to Oracle VM instance | Launching 1st Free Instance |
Oracle instructions: Connect to a Cloud VM on Windows with PuTTY
Configure WinSCP to Use SFTP with Oracle Compute Instance | Upload files using SFTP | setting up File Storage on OCI and uploading files with Filezilla FTP | Secure FTP accounts | psftp procs | sftp |
It includes a variety of service, including:
- 2 Autonomous DBs (Autonomous Data Warehouse or Autonomous Transaction Processing), each with 1 OCPU and 20GB storage
- 2 Compute VMs, each with 1/8 OCPU and 1GB memory
- 2 Block Volumes, 100GB total, with up to 5 free backups
- 10GB Object Storage, 10GB Archive Storage, 50k/mo API requests
- 1 Load Balancer, 10Mbps bandwidth
- 10TB/month Outbound Data Transfer
- 500 Million ingestion Datapoints and 1 Billion Datapoints for Monitoring Service
- 1 million Notification delivery options and 1000 emails per month
Overall, that is a fairly sizable offer and goes beyond the AWS Free Tier's Always Free offering with features like Compute VMs and Autonomous database instances. https://www.oracle.com/cloud/free | FAQs | F. Pachot Medium post | Full details of sign-up process | Setup Oracle VM | Migrating to OCI | Hands-on Labs | Compute Instance Best Practices | GitHub build, test, deploy Quick Starts |
LET forum | -—
an instance created with a shape VM.Standard.E2.1 will have two cores of type: source
ubuntu@node1:~$ cat /proc/cpuinfo |grep "model name"
model name : AMD EPYC 7551 32-Core Processor
model name : AMD EPYC 7551 32-Core Processor
ubuntu@node1:~$ cat /proc/cpuinfo |grep "cpu MHz"
cpu MHz : 1996.243
cpu MHz : 1996.243