We ( as in the municipality of Frederikssund, Denmark) has a medium size
enterprise installation of Qgis 2.8 at around 100 local installations of
Qgis 2.8 in a Windows-7 64 bit environment. There is no significant
problems with this installation.
The largest problem by far was to sift through a mountain sized heap of
tab files from an older installation of MapInfo and determine which
should be restructured, cleaned and imported to our MS-SQLServer based
database environment.
In the near future - probably a month - We are doing a roll out of Qgis
2.18 to around 250 Windows workstations using this method:
"https://github.com/Frederikssund/Alternativ-QGIS-installation" (don't
worry about the Danish readme.md - there is documentation in English too
;-)
If you have a large amount of different layers / tables, I suggest you
take a look at the "QLR Browser" plugin. This plugin provides an immense
help to structure user access to a large number of layers:
And of course: Use a database to store your data. Preferably
Postgres/PostGIS (Open source and IMHO the most powerful spatial
database), but MS-SQL Server or Oracle will do If you don't have a
choice regarding database systems.
Regards
Bo Victor Thomsen
GIS & Database specialist
Municipality of Frederikssund
Den 04/11/16 kl. 04:24 skrev Grant Boxer:
I am using QGIS in a single stand-alone situation and I was wondering
what examples there are of medium to large corporations using QGIS as
their GIS platform and what issues you need to be aware of in large
multi-user QGIS situations?
Grant Boxer
Perth, Western Australia
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