Microsoft Sql Server 2008 R2 Developer Edition Purchase

Is it possible to 'downgrade' SQL 2008 R2 from standard edition to Developer edition? I'm working on developing a long-term SQL Server infrastructure for my company. We're evaluating using the Enterprise edition, but my bet at this point is that we'll go with Standard at least short-term. If, at some point in the future we decide to go to Enterprise, we'd want to (A) upgrade our production Standard installs to Enterprise, and (B) change our non-production installs to Developer to reduce licensing costs. (I'd be OK with the production environments having slightly less capabilities, since Developer is now equivalent to Data Center) From what I've seen , it doesn't look like what I'd like to do is possible.

Hoping someone knows otherwise. I'd like to avoid having to install SQL Server from scratch if we changed editions. Brian Kukowski Brian Kukowski. Brian Kukowski (4/4/2011) If, at some point in the future we decide to go to Enterprise, we'd want to (A) upgrade our production Standard installs to Enterprise, and (B) change our non-production installs to Developer to reduce licensing costs. From what I have seen Microsoft doesn't support that. I would advise you to be careful about your use of the Developer edition, my understanding from talking to Microsoft is that nobody without a Developer edition license can access the server, or look at the reports created from it if it contains real/production data.

Microsoft SQL Svr Developer Edtn 2008 English DVD. Verified Purchase. It worked really well for us. The developer edition of SQL Server 2008 has almost all the necessary features that a developer generally requires. See and discover other items: microsoft server, windows server 2008 r2, microsoft operating systems.

You can't use it for QA/UA with real data if users accessing it, or the results from it, don't have developer licenses. I would love to be wrong, as it would save us a bunch of money, but that is what Microsoft told me. Piece of cake to do this. UMG has some good caution about the licensing differences and to be careful not to violate the agreement for using the Developer edition. But on the technical side, I just did this about a week ago, if I can only remember exactly what I did. I remember just rerunning the installer (setup) from the Developer edition media and point it at your existing instance.

  1. Build intelligent, mission-critical applications using a scalable, hybrid data platform for demanding workloads. Get started with a 180-day free trial of SQL Server 2017 on Windows. Take advantage of the built-in high availability, security, and intelligence of Azure SQL Database, and use the.
  2. End users can access your server for acceptance testing of your product. MS defines shared environments such as you describe as production deployments, even though they're not production for you. See the licensing page for Developer. (Note this is for SQL 2008 R2). For real specific questions you'll.

Somewhere after specifying the existing instance, it'll ask you if you want to 'upgrade'. Upon choosing yes (including all related services like SSRS), it prompts for the key. I slapped in my dev edition key and it completed the upgrade. Checking my version showed the dev edition. One of my employees needed to install R2 to do some development work but my only dev edition/MSDN license was on my own system, so I had him install the standard edition 6 month trial. Course, this was, um, 6 months ago. In the mean time, I bought another dev edition license (Amazon.com!) but didn't get around to reinstalling until the tools smacked him down one day last week.

Anyway, most of my trepidation was not wanting to point the installer at my instance, hoping for an earlier non-hosing option which would tell me if this path would even work in the first place. Once I ran through it as a last-ditch 'I'm going to uninstall/reinstall next anyway' effort, I found that the installer handled it properly. Jim Jim Murphy @SQLMurph. I recently had to downgrade a server from Enterprise to Developer as we wanted to ensure the proper licensing compliance on a dev box. What I did was: 1.) Clone the server using VMWare (all our dev servers are virtual, only production servers are physical). 2.) Rename the existing server 'servernameold'.

3.) Detach all the databases on the clone. 4.) Uninstall SQL Enterprise on the clone. 6.) Install SQL Developer on the clone (we also had the 'old' VM to use as a reference.) 7.) Attach all the databases. 8.) Script out the creation of the logins from the 'old' VM. So, in less than 2.5 hours (which included the time it took to create the clone) we solved a similar issue with a dev server. I have successfully downgraded about 20 servers in our environment.

I am working on doing the same to the clustered ones too. I tested cluster downgrade on a test cluster and it worked. We had SQL Server 2008 Enterprise everywhere and had to downgrade in lower environments to SQL Server 2008 Developer. The basics are this. Install Developer edition and look at the registry in Setup dir. Take those keys and copy them to Ent. You have to restart SQL Service for it to 'know' it's now Developer edition.

You can't post new topics. You can't post topic replies. You can't post new polls. You can't post replies to polls. You can't edit your own topics. You can't delete your own topics. You can't edit other topics.

You can't delete other topics. You can't edit your own posts. You can't edit other posts. You can't delete your own posts.

You can't delete other posts. You can't post events. You can't edit your own events. You can't edit other events.

You can't delete your own events. You can't delete other events. You can't send private messages. You can't send emails.

You can read topics. You can't vote in polls.

2008

Sql 2008 Developer Edition Download

You can't upload attachments. You can download attachments.

You can't post HTML code. You can't edit HTML code. You can't post IFCode. You can't post JavaScript.

Sql Server 2008 Editions

You can post emoticons. You can't post or upload images.

Microsoft Sql Server 2008 R2 Developer Edition Price

Hello, Please try the following resources: You can try to call Microsoft Licensing at 1-800-426-9400, Monday through Friday, 6:00 A.M. (Pacific Time) to speak directly to a Microsoft licensing specialist and see if you can buy using that channel. You can also visit the following site for more information and support on licensing issues: Another option is to download SQL Server 2008 R2 Developer Edition from MSDN Subscriber Downloads or TechNet Subscriber Downloads, if you have a MSDN or TechNet Subscription. Regards, Alberto Morillo.