Reviewing the Central Administration Tools on the Home Page in SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010
Whereas
the previous section calls out the service applications that come with
SharePoint Foundation 2010 and the Standard and Enterprise editions of
SharePoint Server 2010, which directly impact the tool sets that the
user community will have, this section covers the administration tools
that the farm administrators will have access to from the home page of
the Central Administration site. A simple overview is that SharePoint
Server 2010 provides a larger number of management tools, and therefore
more time and training is needed to ensure that farm administrators are
comfortable with the full range of tools. This is not an insignificant
point because many IT resources are overburdened and may not be able to
take time off to attend training and so might very well have to educate
themselves on these tools.
SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise Administration Tools Compared
Table 2
compares the tools that are available from the home page for the
Central Administration site for SharePoint Foundation 2010 and
SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise. A quick glance at the table will show
that the toolsets are fairly similar, suggesting that farm
administrators have roughly the same suite of tools to access when
managing their farms.
Table 2. Comparison of Tools Available from the Home Page of the Central Administration Site
Tool | Included in SharePoint Foundation 2010? | Included in SharePoint Server 2010 Standard? | Included in SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise? |
---|
Manage Web Applications | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Create Site Collections | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Manage Service Applications | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Manage Content Databases | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Review Problems and Solutions | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Check Job Status | Yes | Yes | Yes |
View Web Analytics Reports | No | Yes | Yes |
Manage the Farm Administrators Group | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Configure Service Accounts | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Configure Send to Connections | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Configure Content Deployment Paths and Jobs | No | Yes | Yes |
Manage Form Templates | No | No | Yes |
Manage Servers in this Farm | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Manage Services on Server | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Manage Farm Features | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Configure Alternate Access Mappings | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Perform a Backup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Restore from a Backup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Perform a Site Collection Backup | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Convert Farm License Type | No | Yes | Yes |
Check Product and Patch Installation Status | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Check Upgrade Status | Yes | Yes | Yes |
One difference is a
lack of several reporting tools in SharePoint Foundation 2010, as shown
in the table, because SharePoint Foundation 2010 doesn’t include the
View Web Analytics Reports. Also SharePoint Foundation 2010 doesn’t
provide the ability to configure content deployment paths and jobs or to
manage form templates.
Comparing the Monitoring Tools in SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise
If the Monitoring link is
clicked from the Central Administration home page, and the tools further
compared, it can be seen that SharePoint Foundation 2010 provides a
subset of the monitoring tools that SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise
provides.
SharePoint Foundation 2010 provides the following tools that overlap with SharePoint Server 2010:
SharePoint Foundation
2010 does provide several reports out of the box that will be of
interest to the farm administrator. The Health Reports, by default, list
only the slowest pages and top active users. The Configure Usage and
Health Data Collection capabilities are the same for SharePoint
Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010 enterprise, and allow the
farm administrator to log the following events: Content Import Usage,
Content Export Usage, Page Requests, Feature Use, Search Query Usage,
Site Inventory Usage, Timer Jobs, and Rating Usage.
SharePoint Foundation 2010
does not provide the following reporting tools that both SharePoint
Server 2010 Standard and Enterprise offer:
View Administrative Reports
Review Information Management Policy Usage Reports
View Web Analytics Reports
The default
Administrative reports include CrawlRatePerContentSource,
CrawlRatePerType, QueryLatency, QueryLatencyTrend, and
SharePointBackendQueryLatency. The Web Analytics reports provide metrics
on items such as Total Number of Page Views, Average Number of Page
View per Day, Total Number of Daily Unique Visitors per Day, and other
metrics, as shown in Figure 9. Note that when the Analyze tab is selected, the farm administrator
has the option to filter by criteria such as Preceding Day, Preceding 7
Days, Preceding 30 Days, and under the More drop-down menu, 90, 180,
365, or Custom Dates. This allows the farm administrator to get an
“instant” overview of high-level activities transpiring on the farm, and
she can also export these to a spreadsheet it desired.
Comparing General Application Settings in SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise
Although the home
page of the Central Administration site shows similar features and tools
available between SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010
Enterprise, there are some revealing differences in the General
Application Settings page, as shown in Table 3.
The only tools provided in SharePoint Foundation 2010 are the External
Service Connections tools and the SharePoint Designer settings tool.
Table 3. Comparing General Application Settings in SharePoint Foundation 2010 to SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise
Tool | Included in SharePoint Foundation 2010? | Included in SharePoint Server 2010 Standard? | Included in SharePoint Server 2010 Enterprise? |
---|
External Service Connections | Yes | Yes | Yes |
InfoPath Forms Services | No | No | Yes |
Site Directory | No | Yes | Yes |
SharePoint Designer | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Search | No | Yes | Yes |
Content Deployment | No | Yes | Yes |
SharePoint Server
2010 Standard and Enterprise provide numerous other tools such as
InfoPath Forms Services (Enterprise edition only), Site Directory,
Search, and Content Deployment tools. InfoPath Forms Services allows
farm administrators to make InfoPath forms available via the web browser
to SharePoint users, and these users do not need to have InfoPath
available on their desktops. The Site Directory tool allows the farm
administrator to define a site directory, which is a site that captures
new site collections, which is helpful in larger organizations where
there may be hundreds or thousands of sites created, and grouping them
in logical subgroups can make navigation much easier for end users.
As mentioned in the “Search in SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010”
section,both SharePoint Foundation 2010 and
SharePoint Server 2010 provide basic search tools, but SharePoint Server
2010 provides a number of additional management tools that may be of
interest during the architecture and design process. The General
Application Settings page provides access to a selection of farm-level
search settings, such as proxy server, timeout, and the option to ignore
Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) warnings. In addition, crawler impact rules
can be set here, which allow the farm administrator to fine-tune how
many documents are requested at a time from sites being crawled by
SharePoint Server 2010.
Note
Search is a bit
confusing from a design and management standpoint because there are
different tools available for SharePoint Foundation 2010 search and more
advanced configuration and management tools for SharePoint Server 2010
Standard and Enterprise Search. In addition, there is the Search Server
Express 2010 product that can be added to SharePoint Foundation 2010 and
the FAST Search product that can be added to the SharePoint Server 2010
products, making the overall design process somewhat complex for
organizations new to the SharePoint 2010 product line.
Finally,
content deployment is also only included in SharePoint Server 2010
Standard or Enterprise, and is used to deploy content from one site
collection to another site collection. This is typically used by
organizations who create content in one tier (for example, a staging
tier), and then publish it regularly to a production tier, which could
house the production intranet portal, or to an external Internet-facing
farm that houses an Internet website. Content deployment requires the
creation of paths and jobs, which can be full or incremental.