You will need to be a domain admin for this to work. Replace COMPUTERNAME with the correct computers name. This also creates a log file showing that it was successfully able to copy all of the files - this helped me determine what machines were offline. I copied the AdskLicensingSupportTool to all of these computers using this command from my computer where I had extracted the files. I used that to export a list of computers with the Autodesk software I was looking for. We use Lansweeper to keep track of all the software on our computers across the network. Here are the steps I took, hope it helps someone. Now I need to run it on all of my computers. This command prints out the license key info for all Autodesk products installed- adsklicensingsupporttool.exe -i I was able to use the tool you mentioned. You can also check for the ADSK_LICENSE_FILE environment variable on the machines: NOTE: This works for 2020 versions onwards only.įor versions 2017-2019, you can check the C:\ProgramData\Autodesk\CLM\LGS folder on a machine to see which products are installed, inside each individual product folder you'll find an LGS.dat file that decides which license type that product uses, and if a program uses a network license, there will also be a LICPATH file pointing to the server: The instructions are sloppy and use a comma where a period should be but other than that are easy to follow. There is a tool designed to change all license types on a machine from multi-user to single-user:
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