![]() ![]()
The Maxer zip file can be extracted on a server of the SharePoint farm. Maxer for SharePoint 2010 is a command line tool that checks for capacity planning limits as described per the Planning section of the TechNet Wiki SharePoint 2010 Best Practices overview page at. That’s where Maxer for SharePoint 2010 enters the stage… There are SharePoint capacity planning guidelines you can follow to prevent the jar from breaking, but just like a jar of beads can be hard to count, it can be difficult to determine if, how, and where you are crossing capacity boundaries within a SharePoint environment. You can create beautiful things using these beads, but you can also try to stuff too much beads into the jar, in which case bad things will happen. Now, imagine your SharePoint farm is like a jar of beads. Please note: All pictures were taken from either Google search (search term “beads”), or, with permission, from beads. Beads are a lot nicer, they’re not scary, beautiful to look at, and you can create wondrous things with them. So, we switched to another metaphor: a jar of beads. However, the universe is a scary thing and thinking about it is too. At first, we were inclined to use the Big Bang theory as a metaphor to describe the common problem within a SharePoint farm in that it is ever expanding. We were looking for an apt metaphor to describe the need for the Maxer for SharePoint 2010 tool. If you’re looking for a book about the topic of WMI and PowerShell, there really isn’t much competition. It’s written by Richard Siddaway, a PowerShell MVP. The scripts discuss tasks related to system hardware and configuration, disk systems, registry and file system administration, services and processes, printers, network adapters, IIS, server configuration, users and security, logs, jobs, and performance, and administering Hyper-V. The book contains 150 examples (all ready to use scripts) that simplify day-to-day management tasks and demonstrate best practices. ![]() Shareplus ois how to#The book PowerShell and WMI (a collection of Windows management facilities) teaches how to use the combination by example. We thought it would be nice to occasionally discuss some of the books we’ve seen as technical reviewers… In our professional career, we’ve written/co-authored/contributed 10+ IT books, were technical reviewers of dozens of IT books, and have read 100s of them. If you feel the same way, the home of SharePlus is.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |