Nov 09 2023 09:11 AM
Hi,
A client is wanting to carry out their own (small) developments on their Business Central on premise environment.
Is the licensing for Business Central on premise is the same as NAV, i.e. additional objects e.g. pages/reports need to be purchased and assigned on the license or is the client able to create new pages/reports with any unused object ID between 50,000 and 99,999 without purchasing/assigning the new objects?
Thanks
Nov 09 2023 12:30 PM - edited Nov 09 2023 12:39 PM
Hi @LizKipling,
Thank you for posting to the community!
NAV is now Business Central and the functionality is the same. Dynamics NAV is now Business Central | Microsoft Dynamics 365
Here is a useful link for Dynamics NAV objects - Designing Application Objects - Dynamics NAV | Microsoft Learn
As a friendly reminder, the links provided can be found by logging into Partner Center.
If this reply answers your question, please Accept as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly. Otherwise, please let me know if you need further assistance on this topic.
Regards,
Microsoft CSP Licensing Concierge
Regards,
Microsoft CSP Licensing Concierge
Nov 10 2023 01:04 AM
@LicensingConcierge1 thanks for the response but it does not answer my question which is specifically relating to licensing not how to develop. In old NAV the client would buy xx number of additional objects (tables, reports, pages etc.) which needed to be assigned to their license so that they had permission to run those additional objects. My question is does this still apply in Business Central on premise or is the licensing for Business Central on premise the same as Business Central in the cloud? Note that the Object Designer is not installed in Business Central on premise v22. Thanks
Nov 10 2023 06:38 AM
Solution"Is the licensing for Business Central on premise is the same as NAV"
No.
My last BC on-prem licensing guide is from March of this year but there's not anything about licensing BC by additional pages within the 50,000+ object range.
It should be as simple as the user wishing to develop needing a full user license for their environment, shouldn't it?
You may also find some clarity in the BC on prem licensing guide: https://assetsprod.microsoft.com/mpn/en-us/business-central-dynamics-licensing-guide.pdf
Nov 10 2023 09:12 AM - edited Nov 10 2023 09:15 AM
Hi @LizKipling
In old NAV the client would buy xx number of additional objects (tables, reports, pages etc.) which needed to be assigned to their license so that they had permission to run those additional objects. My question is does this still apply in Business Central on premise or is the licensing for Business Central on premise the same as Business Central in the cloud? Note that the Object Designer is not installed in Business Central on premise v22.
If I understand your question, the first link in my previous reply confirms that the functionality between NAV & Business Central (BC) is the same and that Microsoft Dynamics NAV is renamed Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central on premises is under the Dynamics 365 Business Central brand.
There are a few features that are not intended for OnPrem Features not implemented in on-premises deployments - Business Central | Microsoft Learn
With Dynamics 365 Business Central (cloud), you can create tables, create card pages, and create list pages. Here is the training on how to do so - Add new objects to Dynamics 365 Business Central - Training | Microsoft Learn
With Dynamics 365 Business Central OnPrem, licensed users can create tables, reports, and pages:
with the Essentials & Premium licenses per pg.8 of the Dynamics 356 Business Central, on-premises Licensing Guide:
Hope this clarifies!
If this reply answers your question, please Accept as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly. Otherwise, please let me know if you need further assistance on this topic.
Regards,
Microsoft CSP Licensing Concierge
Nov 10 2023 06:38 AM
Solution"Is the licensing for Business Central on premise is the same as NAV"
No.
My last BC on-prem licensing guide is from March of this year but there's not anything about licensing BC by additional pages within the 50,000+ object range.
It should be as simple as the user wishing to develop needing a full user license for their environment, shouldn't it?
You may also find some clarity in the BC on prem licensing guide: https://assetsprod.microsoft.com/mpn/en-us/business-central-dynamics-licensing-guide.pdf