Microstation V8i License !!install!! May 2026
Leo pulled up a command prompt on the projector. “Corporate already pushed a script to the server. On Friday at 3 PM, it will shut down the LM service, delete the vendor daemon, and wipe the license keys from the registry.”
Leo plugged it in. Passed it through to the VM. Restarted the service. microstation v8i license
11:47:32 (lmgrd) "MicroStation V8i SELECT" 5 licenses available Leo pulled up a command prompt on the projector
Leo built a virtual machine. He copied the entire C:\Bentley\License folder, the registry keys under HKLM\Software\Bentley\SELECTServer , and the system volume information. He used a tool called LicenseDropper, which felt like holding a live wire. The VM booted. The LM service started. He fed it the old license file. Passed it through to the VM
And third was Leo, the IT manager, who knew the truth: the license server was a physical Dell PowerEdge T320 running Windows Server 2008 R2. It sat in a closet, humming like an anxious beehive. The software that served the V8i licenses was a proprietary Bentley LM tool that hadn’t been updated since the Obama administration. If they decommissioned the server, the licenses would evaporate. And without licenses, V8i wouldn’t even open in read-only mode.
That evening, a secret meeting convened in Conference Room C, which had a whiteboard and a door that locked.