Author: "Jones, Stephen (East Kilbride) [OS-IE]" <CHRISTOPHER.JONES AT SAIC DOT COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 04:04:55 -0800
Hi, I need to carry out a license audit of my Networker install base. Does anyone know of a tool that will send out a probe over the network and come back with all active enabler codes (and other det
Hi, I need to carry out a license audit of my Networker install base. Does anyone know of a tool that will send out a probe over the network and come back with all active enabler codes (and other de
Author: "Jones, Stephen (East Kilbride) [OS-IE]" <CHRISTOPHER.JONES AT SAIC DOT COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 04:38:17 -0800
Stan, Thanks for your reply. My company used to use the License Manager before I joined them but they ripped it out because of problems that they had. I assume we'd still need to do an initial audit
Author: "Coty, Edward" <Edward.Coty AT AIG DOT COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 08:29:35 -0500
nsrlic -s servername will do the trick. Create a file with all of your Networker data zones and run through nsrlic -s. Ed Coty Open Systems Storage Engineering, LCNA 973-533-2098 Hi, I need to carry
Author: "Howard, Patrick" <Patrick_Howard AT ANNTAYLOR DOT COM>
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 08:52:32 -0500
Add -v and export it to a txt file and you have a very good idea of what is going on. Keep in mind you don't get the clarity on this report in older versions. nsrlic -s servername will do the trick.
On Jan 31, 2006, at 7:38 AM, Jones, Stephen (East Kilbride) [OS-IE] wrote: Stan, Thanks for your reply. My company used to use the License Manager before I joined them but they ripped it out because
As you are trying to get all enablers defined you could try: Echo "print type: nsr license" | nsradmin -s BackupServerName > BackupServerName-enablers.txt To get the list of clients and used licenses