Introduction
As with any installation, seven minutes of planning will save an hour
of re-work. With SharePoint it is the software requirements that are
particularly demanding.
Pay particular attention how SharePoint fits in with Exchange 2000,
Windows 2000 and IIS. SharePoint is particularly fussy about
the edition of Exchange 2000 that it will run on, only the standard
edition is supported (not the enterprise).
Note: You cannot install Exchange AFTER SharePoint, so planning is the
key.
As you may expect, SharePoint Portal Server 2001 must have an operating
system to run on. Windows 2000 server works fine provided you have
service pack 2 or later. It surprised me that it would not work with
Windows Server 2003, however, there is a new version, SharePoint Portal
2003, that will run on Windows Server 2003. The issue is probably
with IIS; SharePoint is designed to work with IIS v 5.0's SMTP
service not the new IIS v 6.0.
- Web Storage System - Relies on IIS's SMTP Service
- MSSearch V2.1 - Upgrade of Windows 2000 MSSearch
- SharePoint Administration - MMC Snap-in
- Client Component - By far the best client is Office XP (or later).
If that is not feasible then you can install a client from the
SharePoint Portal CD.
The actual installation menus and format reminded me of Exchange 2000
install, it was as thought the same team had designed both interfaces.
After the files have been copied, the setup program calls the Workspace
wizard to configure the front end of SharePoint.
Pay close attention to the name that workspace name that wizard asks
for, it will not be easy to change later if you make a spelling misnake!
The answer is to install Office XP (or Later). If you are unable to get
Office XP there is a perfectly good client on the SharePoint Server CD. To
install go to the Setup Front menu, and select Client.
The install adds a component called Office 2000 COM, this enables users to
check-in check-out and publish documents.
The client install also upgrades the web folders to allow http calls to the
documents stored in SharePoint.
- Check the Event Viewer. Not just the system log, but also the
application log.
- SharePoint has its own Setup Logs, these are useful for pinpointing
the task that caused install to fail.
- Check the software requirements. The program itself will
probably alert you to the deficiency. E.g. 'Cannot install because
detected Exchange 2000 ENTERPRISE edition'.
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