On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 13:01:33 +1100, Andrew Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Daryl,
> 
> And anyone else who cares to know.
> 
> It seems that not too many people can be bothered to read the documentation
> or as most would say RTFM. I'll put a great big smile on that as to not
> offend people:-)

Too late....

> There are 2 ways to deploy your application, the most common with previous
> versions is to use the deployment of ear/war files that would allow you to
> include the runtime of coldfusion, you don't need a serial number to deploy
> to another j2ee server however if one is not supplied it will revert back to
> a developer edition, taken from the cfdocs.
> 
> The newer way in blackstone for the standard addition is not so much
> sourceless, but instead tries to be. We all know that since CF moved to
> being compiled on top of a j2ee server, the byte class files can be switched
> on to save recompiling of the sourcefiles. And leverages of this to be able
> to deploy sourceless applications in the standard version of coldfusion.

oooook.

What i meant by a sourcelss app (sorry I should of expanded into more
detail.. assumptions again).. Is this. I create an application in
Enterprise Server and i then want to deploy (keyword here) that
application to a client. All bells and whistles included. In order for
me to deploy that application, based on related articles /
conversations / conflicts with the RTFM as andrew put it, is that you
infact NEED Enterprise Server to "run" those package applications.

I asked if this was true that you NEED Enterprise Server to run it.

To quote Mr Forta:

"...ColdFusion MX 7 also allows for the creation of deployment
packages, EAR or WAR files that contain your application as well as
the ColdFusion engine itself. All versions of ColdFusion can create
deployment packages, however a ColdFusion Enterprise license is needed
on the machine that the package is deployed to. .."

Now the Manual isn't always crystal clear on what you can/can't do
because its written in a way to cover all possible question / answers.

Getting back onto original question was is there a pricing model of
some sorts that allow you to have a OEM version for "deployed"
applications using the Enterprise Model.

Anywho. its all good.

-- 
Regards,
Scott Barnes
http://www.mossyblog.com

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