Tag: SharePoint Server

Moving a SharePoint Server 2016 to Another Farm
Moving a SharePoint Server 2016 to Another Farm
Blog Posts

A SharePoint cultivate is an arrangement of Servers inside a SharePoint Installation that offers a typical design database (SharePoint_Config). The setup database will store every settings and SharePoint farm information inside SharePoint_Config database. SharePoint cultivate is made, while running SharePoint items and design wizard without precedent for a SharePoint Server.   Moving SharePoint Server 2016… READ MORE

Request Management in SharePoint Server 2013
Request Management in SharePoint Server 2013
Blog Posts

SharePoint Server 2013 introduces a new capability called Request Management. Request Management allows SharePoint to understand more about, and control the handling of, incoming requests. Request Management employs a rules based approach, which enables SharePoint to take the appropriate action for a given request based upon administrator supplied configuration.

Request Management in SharePoint Server 2013 Preview Part Two: Example Scenario and Configuration Step by Step
Request Management in SharePoint Server 2013 Preview Part Two: Example Scenario and Configuration Step by Step
Blog Posts

In the first part of this article series I covered the feature capability and provided an architecture overview of Request Management, a new capability introduced with SharePoint Server 2013 Preview. Request Management allows SharePoint to understand more about, and control the handling of incoming requests. This second part details an example scenario and provides a step by step of the necessary configuration.

Issue with Azure SDK on a SharePoint Server
Issue with Azure SDK on a SharePoint Server
Blog Posts

Few weeks ago I and Hilton Giesenow prepared togheter a SharePoint & Azure session for the TechEd Africa and the European SharePoint conference. During the preparation we discovered an issue running the Azure Compute Emulator on a SharePoint box (Azure SDK 1.5 and 1.6). First it seemed that the user profile service screwed up after you had started the emulator for the first time, but further investigations had shown that many service applications didn’t work properly anymore. The problem was, that the emulator sets the IIS anonymous user account to the application pool’s identity. Many thanks to Wictor Wilen for telling us which IIS setting has been affected ( we owe you a pint=>summit 2011 🙂