I am analyzing SonarQube to use it for our closed source product which is mostly .Net and web technologies.
Are there any caveats to using community edition for commercial projects?
What is the limit on the lines of code that community edition can scan?
SonarQube Community Edition is free of charge without any LOC (Lines Of Code) limitations. You can use if freely in your commercial project.
Related
what are the difference like security , encryption in Vertica community edition vs premium edition.I am not getting any proper focus over this comparison.
The features are the same in both versions. The difference is that Community Edition (the free download) is limited to 1TB of data and 3 database nodes. Premium edition licenses are priced by usage.
I need some clarifications about Sonarqube community edition licensing.
Editions comparison web page "http://www.sonarsource.com/products/editions/" say that the community edition is "Single Technology".
I'm not sure to really understand this. Does it means that on community edition I will not have right to install Java and C# plugin on a same instance of SonarQube server ?
Or perhaps I can do this, but will have restricted features in comparison of Enterprise Edition ?
Regards,
Laurent.
You can install all the community language plugins you like under the Community Edition. What this page is saying is that you're more likely to be successful running without support in small, simple environments, such as a mono-site, mono-language development environment.
We are trying to figure out if we can make use of Release Management for our Continuous Integration / Continuous Deployment needs.
It says that the Release Management Client requires VS 2013 Premium/Ultimate/Test. Does it mean it's only the person who is configuring the build needs to have such version and other developers can still use their VS 2013 Pro?
Does the Release Management Server for TFS 2013 has it's own license which is different from Microsoft Deployment Agent 2013?
Does the product now supports Visual Studio Online? If it helps, we have a TFS proxy and build server in-house.
Thanks
To answer the only technical question you asked: Release Management does not support Visual Studio Online at the moment.
You can read the licensing information here, which pretty clearly answers the questions you have:
http://www.visualstudio.com/en-us/products/how-to-buy-release-management-vs.aspx
What are the limitations of VS2010 C# Express Edition compared with the paid for versions? I was mostly looking into what sort of applications I can build, in VS Express I only have the option of Console, Winform and DLL, etc. I read that you can build services and add - ins for office programs, is this functionality available in Professional/Ultimate etc versions? Thanks.
There's a comparison chart here - You'll need VS Professional to develop Office Plugins.
Although previous version, there is a definitive overview of the VS2008 Express limitations in in this SO Question
Wikipedia also explains the differences.
Edit
The comparison chart link is dead. For 2012:
Visual Studio 2012 (Web Only) comparison is here, and in this Programmer's post
This SO post addresses the Desktop comparison.
The Express edition does not come with, nor does it grant you permission to distribute, the Microsoft C++ runtime redistributable packages. So the users of the software you build with the Express edition will have to download & run the installers themselves.
I used to have DevPartner Profiler Community Edition installed on my machine, which was free to use indefinitely and was compatible with Visual Studio 2003.
After I have rebuild my machine and downloaded a newer version (version 8.1) of the software, it turns out it is actually a 45 day trial eventhough it is still called a Community Edition.
I have tried looking for an older version, but haven't been able to find it.
Could someone help me out please?
Billy, Compuware retired the Community Edition profiler years ago and pulled it from any web sites. That profiler was used as a marketing tool. Folks were supposed to use the profiler then request an upgrade to the full DevPartner Studio suite. Because that didn't really pan out they yanked down the profiler. Under Micro Focus, you can now obtain the full suite but license just the profiler at a much lower price point than the full suite. I suggest you look at http://www.microfocus.com under MF Developer at the different offerings. Shameless plug: I work on the DevPartner team. We are releasing our 64-bit profiler editions in version 10.5 on February 4, 2011. Check out the download eval once its posted.