What good is it though? You still have to reboot in order to use Windows. Perhaps you are thinking of running virtualization on a dedicated partition?
What good is it? As good as the utility it offers to the OP.
I wasn't thinking about anything except for giving him an alternative solution; namely that Bootcamp isn't really necessary and he can run Windows the way he wants.
If I was thinking of a dedicated partition for virtualization, I would have said that.
Echoing CorporateFelon - Servers are not meant to be rebooted unless you are doing updates or you have a crash of some sort. There is zero point to running Boot Camp in a server scenario since you would be constantly taking your server down. That's why you have virtualization - so that you do not have to compromise your server solution. If you are going to be running windows with any frequency with OSX server, you are going to either need a dedicated box to run windows on it or do virtualization. Otherwise I question the need to run OSX server - taking down your server is never a good idea if all you need to do is run Windows.
No one is disputing this. If you are relying on the server it doesn't make sense to take it down. That wasn't what the OP asked about, is it?
My recommendation:
If you are operating a server environment:
1) Get a dedicated Windows Box
2) Virtualization - expecially if you just need to run a few apps.
3) Doing the above or running boot camp on your client desktop and not on the server
If you are not operating a server environment:
1) Run Boot camp on the client OSX - Server OS is being wasted since it is not intended to run as a client desktop - things are different.
2) Virtualize.
Great recommendations, except, I am guessing you mean production environment. In which case, if he is not in one he can do whatever he wants with his server. Which includes booting in Windows.
Rebooting your sever OS in a production environment where resources are needed full time should always be a last case scenario. If this is not the case - then I question the OP's need to be running OSX server in the first place.
If you really need Windows and performance to boot - running it on a client machine is best - constantly rebooting a server is a waste of an OS.
I don't see how it is a "waste of an OS." What if someone is serving with OS X client? Are they wasting their OS by booting into Windows?
The OP asked if Bootcamp was supposed to come on OS X Server. For obvious reasons, it does not. If he wants to do a Bootcamp solution, who are we to say he shouldn't. Neither of your scenarios allowed for this and the non-production scenario should allow for the OP to have a Bootcamp solution. What if he is simply playing around in OS X Server for fun?
Too many assumptions here. Answer the question. No, Bootcmap doesn't come with OS X Server for the reasons that have been repeated ad nauseam here. However, you don't need Bootcamp which is what my post was explaining.
I think the OP gets the point and he can decide for himself.