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Qlikview Unlocked
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The size of your QlikView deployment, budget, and future plans will directly influence the way the environment is built.
In the simplest QlikView Server installation, you have a single machine (physical or virtual), where all development, user testing, and production takes place. There's nothing that wrong with this approach, and we've seen plenty of smaller installations where this is the case. A better solution, though, is to at least keep development and production separate. However, larger deployments and those requiring more control over access to QlikView documents tend towards multiple machines: one each for development, user testing, and production. If you use QlikView Publisher, you may wish to put this on its own server. Obviously, there is a cost implication as multiple Server licenses are required if QlikView is installed on more than one machine, and the Publisher license is an additional cost as it's not included in the QlikView Server license.
A further consideration in larger deployments or for mission-critical systems is whether to go for multiple production machines, employing load balancing and clustering.
As with all things, the way the environment is built depends on what you need to deliver and to whom. Let's consider a few example scenarios. Hopefully, one of these will help guide you toward your goal. We'll assume, in all cases, that you could have the option of carrying out all development on PCs so that you only need effectively to design test and production environments. Bear in mind that the development PCs, unless running standalone desktop licenses, need access to a server at least every 30 days to renew their licenses, which could be a problem if you spend long periods off-site. There's a further "gotcha" here, too: if you use QlikView Test Server licenses, you cannot renew the PC license from them. It has to be done from the 'full' server license. Clearly, if developers are not supposed to have access to the production server, this has a security implication.
We would normally think of having three environments: Development, Test and Production (or Live). How these are implemented will depend on the number of machines at your disposal. Ideally you would have three or more, but of course there will be a cost implication because QlikView Server is licensed on a per machine basis. Therefore it is cheaper to implement on only one or two server machines but implementing on three or more will give a more robust and clearly-defined environment. Let's consider the options, based on one, two, three or more machines:
The QlikView server has the following components:
An example of clustered, software load balanced server deployment can be seen in the following diagram:

An example of clustered, software load balanced server deployment with clustered Publisher is shown in the following diagram:

Don't underestimate the importance of this area, especially if yours is an enterprise-level deployment.
QlikView Test Server licenses are available for half the price of full licenses. These are fine for a true test server, but avoid using them for a development server because of the security implications.
Clustering servers enables the construction of very large and scalable environments, and it's straightforward to add extra servers to a cluster. So, if there's the likelihood or requirement to scale out, consider a production cluster from the start.
Bear in mind that the QlikView Server and QlikView Publisher licenses are sold on a per-machine basis. So, the more servers you have, the more licenses you need. This applies to cluster licenses, too—for instance, a three-machine QlikView Server cluster would require a three-node cluster license at three times the cost of a single server license.
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