You can determine which Microsoft products (SKUs) are available in a SharePoint 2010 farm using the following GUID values.
Value | Product |
84902853-59F6-4B20-BC7C-DE4F419FEFAD | Project Server 2010 Trial |
ED21638F-97FF-4A65-AD9B-6889B93065E2 | Project Server 2010 |
BC4C1C97-9013-4033-A0DD-9DC9E6D6C887 | Search Server 2010 Trial |
08460AA2-A176-442C-BDCA-26928704D80B | Search Server 2010 |
BEED1F75-C398-4447-AEF1-E66E1F0DF91E | SharePoint Foundation 2010 |
1328E89E-7EC8-4F7E-809E-7E945796E511 | Search Server Express 2010 |
B2C0B444-3914-4ACB-A0B8-7CF50A8F7AA0 | SharePoint Server 2010 Standard Trial |
3FDFBCC8-B3E4-4482-91FA-122C6432805C | SharePoint Server 2010 Standard |
88BED06D-8C6B-4E62-AB01-546D6005FE97 | SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise Trial |
D5595F62-449B-4061-B0B2-0CBAD410BB51 | SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise |
926E4E17-087B-47D1-8BD7-91A394BC6196 | Office Web Applications 2010 |
Use PowerShell, CAML queries or other mechanisms to determine if any of these products are installed. SharePoint server-side code, for example, can use the Server Object Model (SPSOM) to investigate the SPFeature.DefinitionId.
These SKUs are posted in this Microsoft Technet article which also provides guidance on how to find these products in the Windows Registry using the Registry Editor.
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