September 9, 2004 at 4:02 am
Hi Guys,
Are there any known problems with MSSQL Server 2000 Enterprise/Standard Editions installing/running on Windows XP?
Thanks a lot
September 9, 2004 at 8:01 am
Yes, you can't run either of those on XP.
Here's the information from Microsoft:
http://www.microsoft.com/sql/evaluation/sysreqs/2000/default.asp
SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition and Standard Edition can run on the following operating systems:
• SQL Server 2000 Evaluation Edition and Developer Edition can run on the following operating systems:
• SQL Server 2000 Personal Edition2 and SQL Server 2000 Desktop Engine (MSDE) can run on the following operating systems:
-SQLBill
June 17, 2005 at 6:14 am
Hi
We are running Personal Edition of SQL 2000 on a Windows 2000 Operating System.
In the meantime we moved on to Windows XP Proffessional.
Sometimes we get the message:
'This SQL Server has been optimized for 8 concurrent
queries. This limit has been exceeded by 2 queries and
performance may be adversely affected.
I understood that the Personal Edition degrades performance if the maximum of 5
Transact-SQL batches that are executed concurrently is exceeded.
But I understand as well that the Standard Edition is not running on a Windows 2000 Proffessional or Windows XP Workstation so therefore the Personal Edition has to be chosen.
Can anyone tell me what is correct?
Thanks
Mipo
June 17, 2005 at 6:38 am
I'm curious as to why would you want to spend £4100 (GBP) for SQL Enterprise edition to run on a £130 desktop operating system (XP)?
It's "SQL Server" not "SQL Desktop"...
June 17, 2005 at 7:11 am
Hi
I don't want to spend 4100 GBP but if you have limitations on the performance?
You agree with me that Standard Edition doesn't run on Windows 2000 Proffessional, right?
So we choose Personal Edition, then we have this stupid limitations!
What do we next? How can we get around this problem?
Thanks for your infos
mipo
June 17, 2005 at 7:16 am
Use a server OS?
Any other method (such as running SQL Developer edition) will break MS licensing...
June 17, 2005 at 7:28 am
Thanks
Isn't a bit stupid the difference between Personal Edition and the next better version
and there is no other version in between (to have a better performance) than the Personal Edition)?
We use a lot of Workstations running Windows 2000 or Windows XP and it doesn't make sense to buy SQL Developer Edition!
Why doesn't the Standard version run on the workstations? Because of marketing reasons?
Any other suggestions?
Mipo
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