Oracle's database services on Google Cloud are now generally available.
The companies this week said Database@Google Cloud is available in four regions in the US and Europe.
Announced at the Oracle CloudWorld conference, the solution is now available from Google Cloud data center regions including US East (Ashburn, Virginia), US West (Salt Lake City, Utah), UK South (London), and Germany Central (Frankfurt).
Oracle Database@Google Cloud sees Oracle infrastructure hosted in Google data centers.
Customers can use Oracle's database and Exadata technology, as well as run applications on Oracle Linux via Google Cloud.
Customers can also combine generative artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities from Google Cloud's Vertex AI and Gemini foundation models, with Oracle Database 23ai.
“For the first time, the AI and converged database capabilities of Oracle Database 23ai as well as all the automation and tools of Oracle Autonomous Database and Oracle Exadata Database Service are fully integrated with Google Cloud,” said Karan Batta, senior vice president, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.
“This new service combines all of the benefits of OCI database services with Google Cloud services for a seamless multi-cloud experience, which was unthinkable in the cloud space just a few years ago.”
“Customers can now combine Oracle databases and applications running on OCI with Google Cloud’s industry-leading infrastructure, data, and AI capabilities,” said Andi Gutmans, vice president and general manager of databases, Google Cloud. “This enables enterprises to more rapidly migrate to the cloud and accelerate their transformative generative AI journeys with services such as Vertex AI.”
Plans for Oracle Database@Google Cloud were first announced in June 2024, along with the launch of the Google Cloud Cross-Cloud Interconnect, which is available in 11 regions and allows customers to deploy general-purpose workloads across both Oracle and Google Cloud's services with no data transfer fees.
The company has had a similar offering with Microsoft since 2023.
Oracle has also announced an Oracle Database@AWS offering, set to be available in a preview format later this year and to be widely available in 2025.