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Document Type: FAQ Product(s): SELECTserver Version(s): Original Author: Bentley Technical Support Group Legacy Document Number: 8904
Document Type: FAQ
Product(s): SELECTserver
Version(s):
Original Author: Bentley Technical Support Group
Legacy Document Number: 8904
Answer: The best place to go for this type of information is http://www.bentley.com/selectserver. Bentley colleagues have assembled some great information on this site (like the Six-Step Plan, for example). In addition, the Bentley discussion groups on MicroStation Administration are another great source of related topics.
Answer: The fundamental difference in XM-based Trust Licensing is that licensed applications can operate in a disconnected mode. In that, XM Edition and newer applications no longer require a constant connection to the license server, as long as they can connect at least once every 30 days. This is to ensure that users are not denied use of their mission-critical applications from Bentley.
Applications can be installed on many machines and there is a "usage count" in the license file (called a "Site" on SELECTserver). There's a fundamental difference in the "handshake" between the client and the license server, though, in the new SELECTserver. In the past, the handshake is based on a license request from the client application and a corresponding license grant by the server. If successful, the client will emit a "heartbeat" as long as the session is open. This is how SELECTserver historically determined that the license is in use and how usage was compiled. The problem with this model is that it requires a real-time connection to the license server and puts it in a precarious, mission-critical position. If this connection was broken or not available, users could not run their applications.
In Trust Licensing with SELECTserver, the model is different. Instead of a request-grant handshake, the application records usage locally. When a daily connection is made with the license server, the desktop application posts its usage log, including the application, version, and duration of use. In effect, the desktop is telling its SELECTserver, "This is what I used since the last time I was connected to post usage". This change in behavior puts SELECTserver into a position of primarily tracking and reporting usage, not granting licenses or enforcing the right for an application to run. And it ensures that users always "get a license", even if they are all used up at the time.
Answer: Individual desktop machines log usage statistics for the application installed and running on that machine. Desktops post their logs to SELECTserver daily, or whenever they can achieve a connection. SELECTserver compiles individual logs into reports on a site-wide basis. SELECTserver transmits usage reports to Bentley on a daily basis, or whenever SELECTserver can successfully connect to Bentley's licensing Web Services.
Answer: You do NOT have to be running XM Edition applications to take advantage of SELECTserver. You could choose to run the new server with Gateways even if you are not running any XM or V8i applications. With that said, you have three different options for activating and licensing XM Edition applications:
More information on SELECTserver XM's Six-point Plan for Adoption.
Answer: We recommend that SELECTserver has access to the Internet. This will make routine transactions, like transmitting usage reports and downloading updated license files, much more convenient. All transactions are performed under HTTPS protocol, and no proprietary information will be included in the transmitted reports.
There is a manual alternative to transmit usage reports in order to maintain activation, and it does not require SELECTserver itself to be connected to the Internet.
Answer: XM Edition applications, including SELECTserver, understand the concept of a SELECT Site. The requesting application identifies itself with a Site through the activation process. If the license server manages that Site, and has a corresponding application usage in the license file, then the application can be activated.
Answer: A SELECT subscriber who has deployed a SELECTserver or uses Bentley-hosted licensing will use a check-out license to serve the needs of node-locked style licenses. A license can be checked-out directly by the user of the target machine, or indirectly by a system administrator, on behalf of the target user. The ability for a user to check out licenses can also be controlled by the administrator. A checked-out license has a length defined by the administrator. There is a default length of one year, but it can be extended to the SELECT Agreement renewal date. Longer check-out periods are available, upon request.
For non-SELECT users, products are activated through a one-time check-out from a hosted site. Alternatively, Bentley can email the user a checked-out license. This process replaces node-locked license files for XM Edition and V8i applications.
Answer: SELECT subscriber entitlement of pooled usage of Bentley desktop applications is defined in the 2004 Bentley SELECT Agreement. For pooled applications, SELECTserver tracks usage by machine and reports usage based on 1-hour intervals. Two requirements were drivers in the definition of this one-hour reporting interval.
First, Bentley was required to define a common reporting interval for all Bentley products managed and licensed by SELECTserver. This included a wide spectrum of poolable applications and the one-hour interval is the most obvious and reasonable interval for the requirements of distributed AEC workflows.
The requirement to provide a disconnected use licensing model for Bentley users was also a significant design influence on the new SELECTserver. Disconnected use of Bentley applications means that users will theoretically never be shut out of a mission critical Bentley application. That, in turn, resulted in a local usage logging mechanism and a need for a practical interval under which to log and report usage. Once again, the obvious choice was one hour, which is the fundamental unit of work throughout the AEC industry.
It is important to note here that named user licenses are not pooled, and are entitled to and tracked by users, not machines.
Product TechNotes and FAQs
Licensing TechNotes and FAQs
Bentley Technical Support KnowledgeBase
Bentley LEARN Server
SELECTservices page on Bentley website
TechNotes and FAQ archive
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