Head of Infrastructure and DevOps at a manufacturing company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
Jan 13, 2023
It is a bit expensive. It could be a little bit lower or have an a la carte option because, in our case, we had to go to the next version of Enterprise X because we needed one feature, which was more than three projects. We don't need all the other capabilities, but we're paying for all those. It's almost twice the cost of the previous version. So, it would be nice to have something along those lines.
Senior DevOps Engineer at a computer software company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
Dec 20, 2022
I am not aware of its cost, but it is worth investing in this. My guess is that its price is not much because we generally prefer open-source solutions, and if we are investing, we don't go for expensive ones. Our selection is based on the market demand and needs, and we invest only if something is worth the cost.
I'm a one-person job, but I have an enterprise license. It's competitively priced when you look at what the feature pack brings and what the options give. Something that is not limited to JFrog and also extends to pretty much every software vendor out there is that if you want to use the more advanced or more enterprise features but you're a very small shop like mine, there usually isn't any way to get those features for a reduced price, which is the way the world works. That's something that sometimes is a bit of a bummer because you're paying for a solution that can host 10,000 users simultaneously but you're the only one using it. Sometimes, that can be a bit of a pain, but if I keep that aside because there are probably not that many companies like mine out there, it's competitively priced.
JFrog Artifactory is a centralized repository that supports multiple artifact types, providing integration into CI/CD pipelines and authentication systems while ensuring secure access control and high availability.JFrog Artifactory offers universal artifact management with features like versioning, global caching, and real-time federation. Organizations appreciate its scalability and consistent artifact handling, which reduces deployment errors and improves collaboration. While integration...
I do not have much experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing, as it was set up by a different team.
The pricing is very competitive and fits well within our budget.
It is a bit expensive. It could be a little bit lower or have an a la carte option because, in our case, we had to go to the next version of Enterprise X because we needed one feature, which was more than three projects. We don't need all the other capabilities, but we're paying for all those. It's almost twice the cost of the previous version. So, it would be nice to have something along those lines.
I am not aware of its cost, but it is worth investing in this. My guess is that its price is not much because we generally prefer open-source solutions, and if we are investing, we don't go for expensive ones. Our selection is based on the market demand and needs, and we invest only if something is worth the cost.
I'm a one-person job, but I have an enterprise license. It's competitively priced when you look at what the feature pack brings and what the options give. Something that is not limited to JFrog and also extends to pretty much every software vendor out there is that if you want to use the more advanced or more enterprise features but you're a very small shop like mine, there usually isn't any way to get those features for a reduced price, which is the way the world works. That's something that sometimes is a bit of a bummer because you're paying for a solution that can host 10,000 users simultaneously but you're the only one using it. Sometimes, that can be a bit of a pain, but if I keep that aside because there are probably not that many companies like mine out there, it's competitively priced.
The price is about what we expect for a tool like this.