![]() The following WMI class is used to revoke issued CALs: CALs revoked through WMI are reflected in TS Licensing Manager. ![]() Windows Server 2008 also provides support for revocation of issued CALs using WMI providers. Manual Revocation of CALs using WMI Providers: The status of the revoked CAL is changed from “Active” to “Revoked,” as shown in figure below. ![]() Right-click the CAL you want to revoke, and then clickĪfter revocation, the revoked CAL becomes available immediately. Manual Revocation of CALs using TS Licensing Manager: Manual revocation of CALs can be done by either of the following mechanisms: Once 20% of the totals CAL are revoked, Admin will have to wait till any of the revoked CAL expires, so that he can revoke more CAL’s. So, for example, if there are 100 Windows Server 2003 per-device CALs installed, you can revoke only 20 of them. You can only revoke 20% of a specific version of a CAL or one CAL, whichever is more. Per User Terminal Server mode is not enforced in Windows Server 2008, so there will not be any denial of service from terminal server. To address this, we now have a method of revoking a license manually.Ĭurrently, revocation support is only for In some cases, an administrator might want an issued license to become available immediately-typically when a particular machine will no longer be used (for example, the machine is being reformatted) and the license must be made available immediately to another client without waiting until it expires. Issued licenses would automatically expire after a random period between 52-89 days and become part of the available license pool. Prior to Windows Server 2008, there was no way for administrators to manually revoke issued licenses. First published on CloudBlogs on Feb, 15 2008
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