The San Antonio SharePoint User’s Group just announced the October 28th presentation on SharePoint High Availability with Database Mirroring.
My friend and collegue, Rich Olivieri, will be presenting based on recent work we’ve done for a client.
Microsoft’s Plan for Redundancy has all the pretty pictures showing database clusters or mirrors. But how easy is this to set up if you’re not a DBA? Turns out, it’s not too hard to switch over when you use the Alias approach.
Rich took the recommendations from the Microsoft Case Study, White Papers and the webcast and put them together in a VM demonstration that you can watch live on the 4th Tuesday in October at New Horizons San Antonio. Please stop by and watch and participate in the discussion.
Reference
My friend and collegue, Rich Olivieri, will be presenting based on recent work we’ve done for a client.
Microsoft’s Plan for Redundancy has all the pretty pictures showing database clusters or mirrors. But how easy is this to set up if you’re not a DBA? Turns out, it’s not too hard to switch over when you use the Alias approach.
Rich took the recommendations from the Microsoft Case Study, White Papers and the webcast and put them together in a VM demonstration that you can watch live on the 4th Tuesday in October at New Horizons San Antonio. Please stop by and watch and participate in the discussion.
Reference
- Case Study: Creating a Highly Available Microsoft Office SharePoint Server Environment by using Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Database Mirroring
- Using Database Mirroring with Office SharePoint Server and Windows SharePoint Services
- Whitepaper: Backing up, restoring, high availability, and disaster recovery for Office SharePoint Server server farms
- Webcast: Backing up, restoring, high availability, and disaster recovery for Office SharePoint Server server farms
Leave a Reply