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dbeavon
Guest
Thanks for the tip. I'd be surprised if the port forwarding would work. I'd probably have to mess with the forwarding of both the server port (-S) and the ephemeral range (-minport -maxport). Besides I don't want to break the terms of service. I'm sure if Progress was on board with this, they would have made it easier. Software development work is complex these days, eg. from an infrastructure standpoint, (ie. software can be configured for cloud, client-server, multiple application tiers, etc). I have to say I'm a bit annoyed that Progress makes my job harder and more complicated than it needs to be. For Progress to restrict SQL92-based access to a dev database server from another (dev) machine seems like they are out of touch. Maybe connecting to a dev database from a remote machine used to be an "extra"/"bonus"/"enterprise" feature. But these days it is common for apps to be built using a number of tiers, and deployed in the same fashion. All of our .Net stuff runs on 2 or 3 tiers, even in development. Is there a document that explains all the PDSOE license restrictions (vs "development" licensing compared to "enterprise")? I would have liked more of this type of information before configuring my PDSOE vm ("VMA").
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