This tutorial is really really cool. It talks about the various options we have to handle large lists in SharePoint 2010.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint-server-help/sharepoint-lists-v-techniques-for-managing-large-lists-RZ101874361.aspx
In summary, we can make use of folders, views, column indexing and Key Filters (metadata based filters) to manipulate large lists.
Additionally we can also use Excel, Access or SharePoint WorkSpace to take the large lists offline to manipulate it.
Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Friday, November 26, 2010
MOSS 2007 upgrade to SharePoint 2010
Requirements, requirements & REQUIREMENTS - gathering, understanding, refinement, gathering, understanding, refinement, gathering ....
We need to understand the business and customers'/users' requirements first. The requirements can be broken into existing SharePoint 2007 usage scenarios and new usage scenarios. Since SharePoint 2010 enables lots of cool new features, we should educate our users on the new features and understand which ones appeals to them.
Once we understand the requirements, we can then map them into the services that is needed to fulfill those requirements. It is good to have some knowledge on the those services especially in terms of hardware requirements to run them properly. We need to truly understand what services are needed and how intensive they will be used. If what we have collected from users cannot answer these two important questions, then we need to go back to users. This is a very important activity as it will help us to get the right hardware to build our SharePoint 2010 environment.
We need to understand the business and customers'/users' requirements first. The requirements can be broken into existing SharePoint 2007 usage scenarios and new usage scenarios. Since SharePoint 2010 enables lots of cool new features, we should educate our users on the new features and understand which ones appeals to them.
Once we understand the requirements, we can then map them into the services that is needed to fulfill those requirements. It is good to have some knowledge on the those services especially in terms of hardware requirements to run them properly. We need to truly understand what services are needed and how intensive they will be used. If what we have collected from users cannot answer these two important questions, then we need to go back to users. This is a very important activity as it will help us to get the right hardware to build our SharePoint 2010 environment.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Perfmon Counters to Monitor SharePoint Environment's Servers
List of perfmon counters that I gathered for MOSS 2007. However, I believe it is applicable for SharePoint 2010 as well.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)