Pro SharePoint 2010 disaster recovery and high availability /
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, a...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berkeley, CA :
Apress,
2011.
Ã2011 |
Colección: | Expert's voice in SharePoint.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional) |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- 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.