Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
The expert's voice in SharePoint |
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Expert's voice in SharePoint.
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Contents |
Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Steering Away from Disaster -- Real Cost of Failure -- Why Disasters Happen and How to Prevent Them -- Success/Failure -- Your SharePoint Project: Will it Sink or Float? -- High Availability: The Watertight Compartments -- Disaster Recovery -- Recovery Time Objective and Recovery Point Objective -- Networks and the Cloud -- IaaS vs. SaaS -- SharePoint in the Cloud -- Why is Infrastructure Moving to the Cloud? -- Will SharePoint Administrators Become Extinct? -- SharePoint 2010 is a Complicated Beast -- Practical Steps to Avoid Disaster -- What Role Will You Play? -- Stakeholders and Strategy -- Dependencies -- Clear Measurements of Success: Reporting, Analysis, and Prevention -- Applied Scenario: The System is Slowing Down -- Solution -- What is Upper Management's Responsibility? -- Technology is Just a Tool -- Applied Scenario: It's Never Simple -- Some Terminology -- Summary of the Options -- Solution -- Summary -- ch. 2 Planning Your Plan -- Getting the Green Light from Management -- Barriers to Consensus -- Weak Metaphors -- Another Weak Metaphor: Snapshots -- Stronger Metaphors -- Business Impact Assessment -- Who Sets the RTO and RPO? -- Goldilocks Principle -- Consensus -- People -- Physical Dependencies -- Architectural Impact -- Risk Assessment -- Synchronicity -- Recovery Tiers -- 20/20 Hindsight -- Service Level Agreements -- Disaster Coordination -- 4Ci -- DR Script -- Last but Not Least: Supply Stores and Restaurants -- Summary -- ch. 3 Activating Your Plan -- Welcome to the University of Newbridge -- What is a Process? -- Do I Need to Define My Processes and Procedures? -- Benefits of Defining Your Processes and Procedures -- Applied Scenario: A Disaster Recovery Plan -- University of Newbridge Disaster Recovery Plan -- Summary -- ch. 4 High Availability -- High Availability Overview -- Measuring Business Impact -- Nines -- Resilience -- Platform -- SQL Server -- Change Management -- Monitoring -- People -- Redundancy -- Data Centers -- Farms -- Hardware -- Application-Level Redundancy -- Summary -- ch. 5 Quality of Service -- Why Quality of Service is Essential -- Perceptions and Causes of Poor QoS -- Applied Scenario: Flowers and Elephants -- Isolating the Cause -- Fiddlers, Pipes, and Pings: Measuring Tools -- TCP Throughput -- Exploring Possible Solutions -- WAN Acceleration -- Deployment Strategies -- Middle Ground -- Centralized vs. Regional SharePoint Deployment -- Single Hub -- Central Hub with Spokes -- Central Hub and Mini-Hubs -- Cache -- Summary -- ch. 6 Back Up a Step -- Backup Planning and Preparation -- Business Impact Assessment -- Dependencies -- Code and Content -- Backup Tools -- Documentation -- Backup Using SharePoint -- Backup and Restore in Central Administration -- Backup Using PowerShell -- Speeding Up Backups -- Recommendation -- Backup Using SQL Server -- Transaction Logs -- BLOBs -- Backup of the File System -- Workflows -- Summary -- ch. 7 Monitoring -- Maintenance Tasks -- Check Your Backups -- Check Storage -- Monitor Reliability and Performance with Windows -- Check Event Viewer -- Alerts: Instant Monitoring -- Check Task Manager -- SharePoint's Monitoring Tools -- Troubleshooting Errors -- Summary -- ch. 8 DIY DR -- Recycle Bin -- Recycle Bin Settings -- Accessing the Second Stage Recycle Bin -- Exceptions -- Versioning as a Recovery Tool -- Recovering Sites and Site Collections -- Recovery with PowerShell and Service Pack 1 for SharePoint 2010 -- Office as DIY DR Tool -- Content Backup Using Templates -- How to Make a List Template -- How to Make a Site Template -- Summary -- ch. 9 Change Management and DR -- Entropy -- Application Lifecycle Management -- Development Models -- Cost of Change -- Evolution -- Who Controls Change in SharePoint? -- Change Categories -- Change Management -- Impact Assessment -- Change Advisory Board (CAB) Meetings -- Schedule RFC -- Test Change -- Implement and Assess, Perhaps Roll Back -- Review and Close -- Summary -- ch. 10 DR and the Cloud -- SharePoint Time Machine -- SharePoint Past -- SharePoint Present -- SharePoint Future -- Cloud Benefits -- Load Variation -- Agility -- Cloud Architectures -- Public Cloud -- Private Cloud -- Hybrid: the Archaeopteryx -- Architecting for Disaster Recovery in the Cloud -- Multi-Tenancy -- Planning Federation -- Summary -- ch. 11 Best and Worst Practices -- Work Hard and Don't Take Shortcuts -- Typical SharePoint RFP -- Good Practices -- Putting the Cart Before the Horse -- Sidestepping Quagmires -- Migration -- Metadata -- Customization -- Workflows -- Intranet Conflict -- Records Management -- Corporate Facebook -- Change Management -- Governance -- Folders Are Bad -- Have Skills in House -- Permission Inheritance -- Summary -- ch. 12 Final Conclusions -- Key Points By Chapter -- ch. 1 Steering Away from Disaster -- ch. 2 Planning Your Plan -- ch. 3 Activating Your Plan -- ch. 4 High Availability -- ch. 5 Quality of Service -- ch. 6 Back Up a Step -- ch. 7 Monitoring -- ch. 8 DIY DR -- ch. 9 Change Management and DR -- ch. 10 DR and the Cloud -- ch. 11 Best and Worst Practices -- Summary |
Summary |
Few IT professionals take the time to learn what needs to be known to do disaster recovery well. Most labor under the pretense that good administration equals close to five-nines uptime. Most technical people do not see the value of planning for disasters until the unexpected has already happened, and the effects of a disaster involving a SharePoint farm--which today houses business information, line-of-business applications, sensitive information, extranets, and other highly important assets--can be staggering. Pro SharePoint 2010 Disaster Recovery and High Availability will take you through a step-by-step process to show how to build an awareness and reaction plan for the inevitable. With a focus on real-world experiences and war stories, author Stephen Cummins weaves an expert tale of woe response and offers you: Ways to see the warning signs of disaster, and ways to avoid it Ways to respond to a disaster while it is happening Perhaps most importantly, how to develop a plan to deal with disaster when it inevitably does happen |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed November 29, 2017) |
In |
Springer eBooks |
SUBJECT |
Microsoft SharePoint (Electronic resource) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2007067120
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Microsoft SharePoint (Electronic resource). blmlsh |
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Microsoft SharePoint (Electronic resource) fast |
Subject |
Computer science.
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Electronic Data Processing
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Computers
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computers.
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COMPUTERS -- Desktop Applications -- Suites.
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Computer science
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9781430239529 |
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1430239522 |
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