Exchange Server Cookbook: For Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange 2000 Server
Recipe 2.12. Upgrading from Standard Edition to Enterprise Edition
Problem
You have a server running the Standard Edition of Exchange 2000 or 2003, and you want to upgrade it to the Enterprise Edition because your database has grown past the 16 GB limit of the Standard Edition. Solution
Using a graphical user interface
Discussion
The actual product differences between the Standard and Enterprise Editions are relatively small, as shown in Table 2-1, but they vary somewhat between Exchange 2000 and 2003. In both Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 2003, the Standard Edition software cannot be part of a Windows cluster, and it is limited to a total of two databases per server: one public database and one mailbox database, neither of which may exceed 16 GB in size. The Enterprise Edition can be clustered, and it supports up to 20 databases per server. For Exchange 2000 only, the Enterprise Edition is required if you want the server to function as a front-end; in Exchange Server 2003, Standard servers can play this role.
See Also
Recipe 2.7 for more on installing Exchange, and MS KB 827281 (CPU and Memory Scalability for Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange 2000 Server) |