Try our conversational search powered by Generative AI!

Dan Matthews
May 6, 2009
  9490
(0 votes)

Entry vs. Enterprise Comparison

I’ve been asked a few times what the difference is between the Entry and Enterprise license for the core CMS product and whether an upgrade path is available between the two. The simple answer is that Entry is for single sites which are not business-critical and do not require pages to be provided from other systems, and Enterprise is for single or multiple sites that have a higher requirement on resilience and may feed pages from other systems. An Enterprise license is for a site that is an integral part of your Enterprise. As a well-known advert for a range of paint and varnish products in the UK says… “it does exactly what it says on the tin”.

There is an upgrade path between the two and I’d suggest that you talk to the EPiServer office that covers your geographical area for more information on that. What is certain is that it is more cost effective to go straight for Enterprise if you think you will be needing it rather than purchase Entry and decide pretty soon that you need to upgrade.

Having given the simple answer, I’ll now give a slightly more complete answer.

The core product is identical in terms of software (as at CMS 5 R2 SP1). This means that there is only one download and install. The differences come with what the license you are using permits you to do.

Multiple Sites

A single Entry license only permits you to run a single web site. This may not be a problem initially, but once a company or organisation starts to expand their EPiServer installation to other sites, you will end up buying additional license packs.

With an Enterprise license, you have immediate support for up to 15 sites and sharing of information between them.

Load Balancing

A single Entry license only permits you to run your EPiServer site on a single web server. This means that you have no load balancing or resilience support. You can always have a cold-swap server ready but the time you’d take to get that up and running means that you may not have 99.9% uptime should you have a failure.

You can purchase additional Entry licenses in order to load balance but by the time you have purchased a couple of these, you may be better off with an Enterprise license anyway, which supports up to four load-balanced servers.

If four is not enough (and for most people it should be – you can always scale up as well as out) then additional Enterprise license packs can be purchased.

Custom Page Providers

With an Entry license, the use of Custom Page Providers is not supported in Production. This means that if you want to expose content from, say, a SQL database as EPiServer pages, you will be unable to do so. Even if you buy additional Entry license packs, you will still not be able to use this functionality. Note that if you are a developer using the in-built Web Server in Visual Studio, you can build Custom Page Providers but once you run a site on IIS they will no longer work (as you would in Test and Production).

An Enterprise license supports Custom Page Providers under IIS.

List of Features

Having shown what the differences are, it is still pretty amazing how much ‘bang for your buck’ you get in the Entry license. Have a look at the feature comparison below:

 

Feature Enterprise Entry
FILE AND DOCUMENT MANAGEMENT    
File management image image
File versioning image image
Uniform file system image image
Document management image image
Document check-in and check-out image image
WebDAV support image image
CONTENT MANAGEMENT    
Content versioning image image
Spell check image
With MS Office
image
With MS Office
Content categorizing image image
Multilingual support image image
Form management image image
Image editing image image
Friendly URLs
image image
Search engine image image
Content archiving
image image
Rich text editing image image
Version management image image
Dynamic content image image
OPERATIONS    
Load balancing image
Up to 4 LB web servers
image
Can be added singly with license packs
SQL Server support image image
Staging image
With a staging license
image 
With a staging license
PUBLISHING    
Scheduled publishing image image
Workflow and process management image image
Office integration and publishing image image
Page management image image
Statistics image image
Tasks image image
INTEGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT


   
Content mirroring image image
In CMS 5 R2 SP1
Web services image image
Multiple sites image
Up to 15
image
Can be added singly with license packs
Full set of sample pages, including
templates for Forms, Search, Sitemap,
RSS, Subscription, Registration,
Documents, Login and File listing.
image image
Custom Page Providers image image
In development only
SECURITY    
User management image image
Qualifications and validation image image
Role and membership provider image image
Virtual groups image image
PERSONALIZATION    
Portal solutions
image image
User preferences image image
Language preferences image image
User and member registration image image
Subscription services image image
May 06, 2009

Comments

Sep 21, 2010 10:32 AM

Thanks for the explanation.

Can you elaborate on how Sub domain are covered in the diffrent licenses

/ arik

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
Optimizely and the never-ending story of the missing globe!

I've worked with Optimizely CMS for 14 years, and there are two things I'm obsessed with: Link validation and the globe that keeps disappearing on...

Tomas Hensrud Gulla | Apr 18, 2024 | Syndicated blog

Visitor Groups Usage Report For Optimizely CMS 12

This add-on offers detailed information on how visitor groups are used and how effective they are within Optimizely CMS. Editors can monitor and...

Adnan Zameer | Apr 18, 2024 | Syndicated blog

Azure AI Language – Abstractive Summarisation in Optimizely CMS

In this article, I show how the abstraction summarisation feature provided by the Azure AI Language platform, can be used within Optimizely CMS to...

Anil Patel | Apr 18, 2024 | Syndicated blog

Fix your Search & Navigation (Find) indexing job, please

Once upon a time, a colleague asked me to look into a customer database with weird spikes in database log usage. (You might start to wonder why I a...

Quan Mai | Apr 17, 2024 | Syndicated blog