hello there,
whats the difference between site and global license?
single or multiple databases?
greetings
Tim
Hi,
The site license give you the right to use the application for all the users of a physical office (we include roaming user based at this location). The global license give the right to use the application to all you users around the world.
Infos:
http://remotedesktopmanager.com/remotedesktopmanager/Support.aspx/FAQ#l2
Schema:
http://remotedesktopmanager.com/remotedesktopmanager/Support.aspx/FAQ#l5
David Hervieux
Might be a silly question, but I have a site license. If I upgrade to a global license, will I be able to have more than one RDM server that my clients will connect to as a failover?
Will RDM handle the synching of the data in that case, or do I need to have SQL handle that part?
Hi,
RDM does not handle this by default, but in the advanced settings, you can configure the SQL Server failover, but it must be configured before and I'm the best person to help you with that. I added that because it was requested but never implemented this architecture.
David Hervieux
I'm happy to test it, but I'm concerned with the failover server having all the data that the first server has (and vice versa), including access logs.
I suppose the question is- do I need to upgrade my site license to a global license to do that?
Hi,
I don't think that you need to upgrade your license, since your will share the data, we are not picky about the license except when it's used at large by multiple offices. I think that you will need to setup a kind of synchronization.
edited by dhervieux on 12/8/2010
David Hervieux
ok, if I need to periodically export the data source and import it to the failover with RDM, it's still better than not having a failover
I'll do some tests and report back if desired
thanks for the info
edited by sbonilla on 12/8/2010