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Mick's Breeze Blogs - Biztalk/Sharepoint/... - November, 2009
Things hard and not so hard....
# Friday, November 27, 2009

There I was rebuilding a new VPC Image (which I'm running in Virtual Box) and the base VHD is a parent of 16GB.

For an install of Win2008, VS.NET 2010, SQL2008... it's pretty much game over with a full disk.

I spent the last 3 days shifting files around to clear space

So tonight I bit the bullet and Ghosted the partition over to a 200GB - much better :)

This issue I had was that the boot environment was different and 'in the good old days' we'd change the BOOT.INI and bobs your uncle.

Welcome to Vista and beyond...as you know we have the BCD Store
There's a very common tool (blogged about everywhere) called BCDEDIT.EXE which if GUIDs are your think and long command line options, you can 'manually' manage the Store (there's also a bunch of 3rd party apps that say 'lets do this from the UI' - I'm in recovery mode)

For the life of me I couldn't remember the tool I used last time this happened to me, which I said 'don't forget Mick'.

BOOTREC /rebuildbcd
Too easy...then if you can't sleep you could also crack onto BCDEDIT.EXE to 'customise' some aspect. (e.g. booting up off multiple logical CORES)
Bootrec
Bootrec
Bootrec

I will not forget Bootrec

Friday, November 27, 2009 11:24:24 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   General | Tips  | 
# Saturday, November 21, 2009

Hi guys, I’ve been busy over the recent months always working and planning new ways to train, deliver and impart knowledge to *you* in a variety of different ways.

Truth be told our Region with respect to SharePoint Adoption and Knowledge, has been ahead of the curve worlwide – that you guys “SharePoint-ies”.
With the release of SharePoint 2010 soon-ish, we’ve been busy – to bring you the best value and the most effective training for your time.

For the release of SharePoint 2007 some numbers:

  1. We trained over 1400 students on our Breeze SharePoint Bootcamp (we cover technical in-depth approx 80-85% of major SharePoint features in a week. Not for the faint hearted)
  2. You guys demanded excellence and we gave you that.
  3. We train 50% of the time and consult 50% – we bring real world knowledge into the classroom, what works, what doesn’t from a business perspective.
  4. We’ve rolled out over 1000 different SharePoint 2007 sites (and are currently working on migrations to SP2010)
  5. The buck stops with me – which can be good thing…so I’m told :)

    The big congrats goes to you! For being driven, demanding better, demanding more detail and better knowledge, you demand that the bar is raised and meet and excel that challenge.

Breeze has partnered with Microsoft & Excom, allowing us to each focus on our strengths, delivering to you the best possible offering in this space.

I’m pretty excited to announce our SharePoint 2010 Series running in Melb + Sydney initially (+ others soon)
(running at Microsoft Offices)

A Special Blog Reader offer: Would you like me to Webcast these sessions for those whom can’t make it?
Add a comment on this Post to let me know – I’ll get back to you with details.
(we are giving away goodies and offers but I can’t tell you too much)

Here’s the formal blurb: ------ snip ------

image

                     image


 

Microsoft Australia, is pleased to invite you to a FREE Seminar on SharePoint 2010.

Melbourne – December 2, 2009

Sydney – December 11, 2009

Delivered by Breeze & EXCOM Education, this seminar is the first in a series that are designed to get you across the new functionality of SharePoint 2010 and importantly how your business can benefit.

SharePoint 2010 is the business collaboration platform that enables you to connect and empower people through formal and informal business communities, within the enterprise and beyond, and to manage content throughout the information lifecycle.

This next release of SharePoint has some exciting new enhancements for IT Professionals and Developers we think you will want to see for yourself!

This seminar is for all SharePoint enthusiasts from IT Professionals, Developers to Business Decision Makers and Information Workers. Bring along your questions to the unveiling of SharePoint 2010!

Seats are limited. Register NOW !!!!
For more information and to register, click HERE

image

Saturday, November 21, 2009 12:14:28 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [3]   SharePoint | 2010 | Training  | 
# Friday, November 20, 2009
As part of a 'dev' machine setup, I run on my latop Win2008R2 x64 Hyper-V...why? to simply run x64 hosts.
Virtual PC, Virtual Server - will run on x64, but not host x64 O/Ss. So really the only option is Hyper-V in the MS land.

I present, demo + and draw all over my tablet screen on a regular basis as well as cut code in Server O/S.

The main problems I faced:
- was my display was dog slow, especially running VS2010, ppt or generally anything else that an average user might do.
- I remove the Hyper-V role off my machine and low and behold it's back to normal.

A student pointed me to a TechNet article - http://support.microsoft.com/kb/961661 in which the resolution is to install a VGA Display driver.
This is kinda not an option for me presenting etc.

Still I needed to run those x64 bit guests.
I was contemplating getting a monster laptop (the other day I was training with laptops that had 8GB of RAM, 6GB allocated to the VM!) or setting up various 'Demo RDP Connections' back into the office, so when I'm onsite and I need to demo then (somehow) I can get internet connectivity and RDP back to a server based VM - lot's of potential issues with this approach)

So the MS Story in this space at the moment is:
- 1) you want to run 32-bit hosts, VirtualPC or Virtual Server running on x64 or x86. Only x86 guests!
- 2) you want 64-bit guests -> Hyper-V (therefore you're looking at running Win2K8/R2). At work we have 15+ VMs running on Hyper-V machines really well, so no complaints there when running on Servers. It's just running it on my laptop where's it's not special.

Problem is - going fwd, the latest wave of Server Products, SharePoint 2010, Exchange 2010, CRM 5 etc....only run on x64

So onto to my unbelievable experience....

Last night I caught up with a couple of buddies Andrew Mee and Guy Riddle, where Guy mentioned all the pain he'd had in trying to get a x64 but guest up and running on his laptop. Here is his current solution:

Guy mentioned his setup:
1) Win7x64
2) VirtualBox - for VM emulation - WITH USB SUPPORT!!!! wow! In the land of BizTalk RFID, I had major issues with USB devices trying to be picked up inside the VM - 3rd party solutions etc. crazy.


He mentioned there were a few things to do around the disks etc...but he could run x64 guests on his Win7 machine AND the VMs FLEW!

So I thought there was a touch of the amber fluid talking and maybe he was indeed onto something. When I got home later that night I decided tonight was the night to refresh the laptop (fujitsu lifebook t4215/4GB/T7400) and Install Win7x64.

My potential issue with Virtual Box:
-
I have a huge library of VHDs (parents, diffs etc) that for portability suites me down to the ground. I walk into a training room and can transfer my VHDs to the student machines and run them no hassles.
- If there's a VirtualBox specific format (VDI) then it yet another step in my export chain.

Alas - VirtualBox reads/writes VHDs automatically, unbelievable.

So I setup Win7x64 on my latop and got back to 9 sec bootup and shutdown times :-) - gee that was refreshing after so long without.

I installed VirtualBox - it installed like a treat, and does 'snapshots' and has a great user interface. I didn't need to visit the cmd line once.

So now for the test - I was going to fire up my SP2010 Beta2 (Win2K8 R2 x64) VHDs, 40GB in size, differencing and Parent, straight from Hyper-V with Hyper-V extensions (in the past when I've done something like this, there's usually a blue screen invovled saying 'boot device not found')

Let's give it a crack I thought - all from the UI.
1) Within VirtualBox, I created a machine, added 2 CPUs, 1 NIC and 1400MB of RAM.
2) Attached the Child VHD from my SP2010.
3) I even had 3D graphic acceleration options for my VM, along with amd-v and 'nested tables' for some sort of faster memory access. Turn them all on I thought! We'll put it through its paces.

Started the machine......
  1. upon first boot my hyper-v enabled VM booted straight up to the Login screen! Unbelievable I thought.
  2. logged in and it found my NIC within 10 secs and was on the network within 20 secs (through NAT). If you've ever experienced a Hyper-V update where your Guests don't talk to the network anymore, until you put the new hyper-v additions on - you'll know the pain.
  3. mouse/keyboard recognised.
  4. I then thought - let me install the VirtualBox additions - can't hurt.
  5. RDP support etc etc ...it's like shopping @ christmas - how good is this! yes I'll have that...and this...




    So back to Guy's immortal words - "it runs fast. Snappy, responsive etc"

    My SP2010B2 in 1.4GB RAM x64 VM runs fanstastic!
    - Fastest I've seen a VM run on my laptop for a long long time (unless it's WFW 3.11)
        It's just so refreshing to have a responsive VM running in reasonable memory. I found that if I allocated 2.5GB to a VM under hyper-v I wouldn't notice a marked improvement. It's not like it flew, and then I had to tweak it back to find that 'optimum sweet spot'

What an experience! What I'm seeing is that certainly for the desktop machine, VirtualBox can be a serious contender for x64 guests.

Thanks Guy for planting the seed!!!



Friday, November 20, 2009 2:24:03 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   General | Tips | Training  | 
We're moving into a public beta of Dublin "Windows Server AppFabric" which you can grab from HERE.

What does it mean - here's a blurb from the site.

So Velocity (distributed caching mechanism) is rolled up into this Beta (previously a MS Partner did some benchmarking on Velocity which you can find a great white paper HERE)

Previously myself and Scotty wrote a hefty technical Dublin Course which the folks at TechEd loved - we did this on some early bits of 'Dublin'. Realtime monitoring + tracking as well as recoverability were some highlights of our 3D Realtime maze process we built up in the labs.

Here's a blurb from the AppFabric server (it's a shame that SP2010 didn't use this framework for it's WF hosting...but that would have impacted delivery)

Enjoy

-------- Snippet ----------

Windows Server AppFabric has these core capabilities:

  • For Web applications, AppFabric provides caching capabilities to provide high-speed access, scale, and high availability to application data. This feature was previously codenamed "Velocity"
  • For composite applications, AppFabric makes it easier to build and manage services built using Windows Workflow Foundation and Windows Communication Foundation. This feature was previously codenamed "Dublin."



Friday, November 20, 2009 9:12:32 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | Insights | SharePoint | AppFabricServer  | 
# Saturday, November 14, 2009

Recently at the SharePoint Conference (SPC2010) delegates were given a beautiful book with all sorts of developers bits.

The book stars 123 pages of great information, and improvements to many areas that we previously had pain with (lists, queries, and just CAML in general)

There’s also 6 walkthroughs (sort of like HOLs) with code etc. to give you a feel for customising SharePoint.

Grab the PDF version HERE
image

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some snippets which I found interesting from the book are:

  1. Some great object model options now for integrating with SharePoint.

    image
    Points to note here:
    - Client OM + Rest are exposed as WCF Services (based on Client.Svc) and the Client OM is a batched model, so you transmit only what you ask for within Object Collection Hierarchies (unlike SPSite.AllWebs etc etc)
    - LINQ to SharePoint is initially created with SPMetal to create all the LINQ classes (there’s no ‘designer’ support for this yet, like LINQ for SQL – at least in this beta)
    - External Lists are an interesting one, you can develop plugins to expose two-way data syncs within SharePoint. I’m looking to reach out to SAP + Siebel systems when I explore this option :)
  2. Resource Throttling is turned on by default – previously developers could write code like SPList.Items… Usually on a Developer’s machine, with 5 items in a list this was not an issue, 8000 items in a list turns into a different story.

    SharePoint 2010 now has safe guards against this turned on by default.

Enjoy…I’m off to enjoy the sun.

Saturday, November 14, 2009 4:53:07 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   .NET Developer | Office | Deployment | 2010 | Silverlight  | 
# Monday, November 09, 2009

Guys – something that always gets me.
*** Update – I’m actually saying this is not good for a server ***

Q. Why when you install Win2K8/R2 out of the box settings have the POWER MODE=balanced???

I’m always amazed by this – there’s 101 other questions + answers you’re asked and you give. But nowhere does the system say (oh a server system mind you)

“BTW – you know the 8 Cores you have, you’re gonna use 2 of them at any one time…”

It’s a Server O/S not a desktop (Desktop I can totally understand – saving power, greener world etc etc) – server I don’t get.
(The flip side to that coin is - “if the server actually ran at a faster capacity – I’d be finished in 30 mins instead of 4hrs” –> therefore you save 3.30mins of green lush rainforest – or some nuclear radiation from entering the world)

I find this power setting is always one of those elusive settings on Server, upon first start up you get prompted for Roles, Features, Networking even IE Security Settings….but nothing about limping along.

You have been warned – you may think “What’s Mick on about”…did I tell you about the TWO production environments I recently visited and they thought I was a miracle worker…

I wonder is SCOM 2007 R2 reports that setting back to the main console??

Monday, November 09, 2009 8:20:31 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   General | Tips  | 
# Wednesday, November 04, 2009

A while back I created a script that restarts your BizTalk Hosts - pretty simple, here http://blogs.breezetraining.com.au/mickb/2006/10/04/SimpleScriptToRestartAllBizTalkServices.aspx
(also this script didn't pick up your service if it was previously stopped - limitation of the 'sc query' command)


Now with PowerShell it's a one line job:
It goes something like this:
get-service BTS* | foreach-object -process {restart-service $_.Name}

You can also set all your BTS Services to start 'automatic' as follows:
get-service BTS* | foreach-object -process {set-service $_.Name -startuptype automatic}
(I'm actually trying to set the BTS Services to 'Automatic (Delayed)' but haven't been able to do that yet)

Enjoy,
Mick.
Wednesday, November 04, 2009 10:54:54 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | 2009 | Insights | Tips  | 

When automation and word comes to mind, you usually think of COM, Interop and lack of speed with 40 copies of Word running in the background that you’ve got no idea how they got there.

Imagine having your own copy of ‘Word’ Server Side – callable through APIs you could easily create and manipulate Word Documents (Docx) and do a whole bunch of things through the OpenXML.

These Services are to live within SharePoint 2010 and imagine being able to create PDFs on the fly…. :)

http://blogs.msdn.com/microsoft_office_word/archive/2009/10/26/introducing-word-automation-services.aspx

Wednesday, November 04, 2009 6:51:32 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   2010  | 
# Tuesday, November 03, 2009

A few tidbits to share with you so far.

SharePoint 2010 architecture

WSS has gone through a name change (there was a time when WSS stood for ‘Web Storage Server’ that SharePoint V1 + Exchange 5.x were based on) and is now called SharePoint Foundation 2010.

I’m guessing that this name is more inline with Microsoft’s thinking around getting SharePoint as the backend/foundation in Companies, as Office is standard on user’s desktops.

Setting up your Development Environment:

(no more WSPBuilder…the SharePoint tools are baked into VS2010 beta 2. A nice feature is that you can select what a ‘Deploy’ does, or a ‘ReDeploy’ by essentially adding all these actions to your config, such as ‘restart IIS’, recycle app pool, make web.config change… You just package them up – nice!)

  1. SharePoint 2010 Beta Center - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/ee514561.aspx *** Great place to Start ***
  2. SharePoint 2010 SDK - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-au/library/ee557253(office.14).aspx
  3. Visual Studio 2010 Beta 2 - http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/en-us/products/2010/default.mspx (this will work with the upcoming beta release of SharePoint 2010)
    Point to note: .NET 4.0 introduces WF4.0, however at this point SP2010 supports only 3.51. There are some *very* significant changes in Workflow between these 2 versions and we’ll have to wait and see the outcome. Performant 10-30x faster, reduced memory footprint, more flexible, clean XAML, more events etc etc.
  4. One last little point – where is the Public SharePoint 2010 download….unfortunately not yet will be soon and should be up on Dev Center Downloads - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/aa905690.aspx

In the meantime, be sure to check out the changes and enhancements to the SharePoint 2010 API model and some of the new capabilities such as:

  1. Powershell everything
  2. Check out LINQ/ADO.NET Entities integration and querying data
  3. Performing JOINS in CAML
  4. Client.svc – client side proxying, batching of requests and sending them through to SharePoint 2010. Very fast, as we only send what we need.
  5. Workflow exporting/importing from Visio->SPD->VS.NET->Deploy.
  6. Sandbox Solutions – now we can target our SharePoint Solutions to the Site Collection Level (rather than previously targeting only the farm). When we create this solution in VSNET2010, it rebinds to a ‘fake’ Microsoft.SharePoint.dll (v14.0.0.39 from memory) that introduces all the restrictions in your code and provides special intellisense. Commands such as ‘Run Under Elevated Security’… get caught on compile as these are not allowed.

    Could you be in the situation where your code compiles but the *real* SharePoint ‘foundation’ says ‘no!..that instruction is not allowed’ – it’s possible, as you’re not actually compiling against the real DLL.

    Currently there are several projects that you can’t sandbox based on their type – such as Workflow Projects. These still need to be targeted to the Farm.

    Worth checking out – specifically if you’re hosting SP sites.
  7. AJAX through out – even WebPart editor toolparts you can introduce AJAX there for alot of the lookups etc.
  8. Other noted feature is that Throttling is on by default – so if you say “list.Items.AllItems” and that returns back 50000 usually, SP2010 will error. You have to explicitly ask to make the request without Throttling (couple of properties you set before hand)
  9. Your WSSv3.0/MOSS sites can be *supported* in SP2010 and stay at their existing UI Level (look and feel), then at a later point we can flick the switch and see your site under the newer/AJAXY UI – through the APIs we can change it back SPWeb.UIVersion = 3 or 4.

Enjoy,

 

Mick.

Tuesday, November 03, 2009 12:39:37 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   MOSS | Admin | 2010  | 

As far as I know there’s some good news and bad news…

Good news: the existing BizTalk SharePoint Adapter *should* work with SharePoint 2010 – you will however need to add ‘<rebinding>’ section to the existing adapters web.config *if* the SharePoint 2010 is installed locally to the BizTalk Server.

The ‘rebinding’ tells your local .NET app that even though you want V12.0.0.0 of the SharePoint APIs, V14.0.0.0 assemblies will give it to you.

Bad News: there’s no new BTS Adapter on the Horizon for this – AFAIK.

------

With SharePoint 2010 we now have the capability to involve many tighter technologies such as:

1) event notification, rather than polling for the adapter.

2) LINQ and ADO.NET Entities to query the Data.

3) SharePoint Client WCF Service – Client.svc . This is a lightweight and fast interface, where we can batch up requests, send them over the wire and get back just what we ask for.

4) Lists.ASMX web service (+ the others) for backward compatibility.

When I get some time…:D, I’m keen to develop a .NET LOB WCF Adapter.

Tuesday, November 03, 2009 12:05:01 AM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   2009 | BizTalk Adapter Pack | Insights | SharePoint | 2010  | 
# Monday, November 02, 2009

Well – after spending *far* too long trying to get a little Red X to disappear from my BTS Configuration tool, so I can have a green light to configure the SharePoint adapter, I thought “There’s got to be an easier way”

image
Exhibit A – your honour. The SharePoint Adapter Configured.

So – what I did was roll my sleeves up and do this by hand.

This particular install – BTS09 x86, I installed WSS V3.0 with Sp2 and created a local sharepoint web application, site collection and had a whole bunch of SharePoint happiness coming back to me on http://biztalk (my server name).

All good I thought – except the configuration tool didn’t like what it found. I looked at logs, ran network sniffers and even manually ran the tool  Microsoft.BizTalk.KwTpm.StsOmInterop3.exe http://biztalk with success:

image

But still no joy in the configurator.

Here’s how to do it manually:

  1. Setup your local or domain SharePoint Groups
    Typically this is the ‘SharePoint Enabled Hosts’ Group – if it already exists on the domain, then great, if not create it. For this I created my group on the local machine.
    I also added as members, my biztalk service account and my Sharepoint Service Account.
  2. Configure IIS – BTS SharePoint WS Web Application
    1. Within the BizTalk Installed folders – e.g. c:\program files\Microsoft BizTalk 2009\Business Activity Services, you’ll find the set of WebServices to choose from. Select the right one for your SharePoint deployment.
    2. image
    3. As you can see I selected BTSharePointV3AdapterWS (for WSS V2 SP3, select BTSharePointAdapterWS).
    4. This is the folder you will point IIS to later.
    5. Open this folder and you’ll see a web application with a web.config.tmpl
    6. Copy the web.config.tmpl and rename the *copy* to web.config
    7. Open up your Web.Config in Notepad and configure as follows:

        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
        <configuration>
          <system.web>
                <httpModules>
                    <!--add name="UrlAuthorization" type="System.Web.Security.UrlAuthorizationModule" /-->
                </httpModules>

            <!-- Change debug="true" if you want to debug this web service -->
            <compilation defaultLanguage="c#" debug="false" />
            <customErrors mode="Off" />
            <!-- Windows Authentication is required for this web service. -->
            <authentication mode="Windows" />
            <!-- Impersonation is required for this web service. -->
            <identity impersonate="true" />
            <authorization>
                <allow roles="SharePoint Enabled Hosts" verbs="GET,HEAD,POST"/>
                <deny users="*"/>
            </authorization>

            <!-- Uncomment this block if you want to do some tracing of this web service -->
            <!-- <trace enabled="true" requestLimit="10" pageOutput="false" traceMode="SortByTime" localOnly="true" />  -->
            <globalization requestEncoding="utf-8" responseEncoding="utf-8" />

            <!-- The size of a document being posted to SharePoint depends on this setting -->
            <httpRuntime maxRequestLength="100000" />
            <trust level="Full" originUrl="" />
          </system.web>
          <runtime>
            <assemblyBinding xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1">
              <dependentAssembly>
                <assemblyIdentity name="Microsoft.SharePoint" publicKeyToken="71e9bce111e9429c"/>
                <bindingRedirect oldVersion="11.0.0.0" newVersion="12.0.0.0"/>
              </dependentAssembly>
            </assemblyBinding>
          </runtime>
        </configuration>

      1. (you can always go back and tighten security up on this when you’ve got it working).
      2. Note the ‘SharePoint Enabled Hosts’ – local group here.
      3. I’ve also removed the ‘Documentation’ tags so I could get some WSDL to make sure it works within the browser.
      4. Save your web.config within Notepad.
      5. NOTE: make note of the Folder Path to get here as we’ll need it in IIS next.
    8. Configuring IIS
      1. Bring up IIS Admin MMC snapin.
      2. Select your SharePoint enabled Web Site, I selected ‘Default Web Site’. Right click when ‘Default Web Site’ is Selected and select ‘Add Application’
        image
        note: IIS 7.0 Manager shown.
      3. Configure this as follows:
        image
        (Note – the App Pool User should be able to post into BizTalk and SharePoint)
        Physical Path: <path you had previously to either V2 or V3 of your BTSharePointV3Adapter…>
      4. Click OK.
      5. To Test your WS: browse to: http://<your server>/BTSharePointAdapterWS/BTSharePointAdapterWS.asmx
      6. You *should* get this:
        image
        You can invoke the IsAlive function and get TRUE back.
      7. If not, then fix your IIS related errors, at this point you’ve got a WS that uses the SharePoint APIs (locally). Some things to check:
        1. Local file security – make sure the Web App Pool acct can access those directories.
        2. Windows Auth is turned on, on your Web App.
        3. Check IIS log files for clues.
      8. You’re done on the IIS side of things, let’s configure BTS Side.
  3. Configuring BizTalk Side
    Fortunately the WSS Adapter is installed as part of the BizTalk Runtime configuration – it’s just not configured. So as far as registering the adapter with BizTalk it’s already been partly done.
    1. Install the “I’ve been Configured Registry Keys” – I took these from a previously successful 2009 install.
    2. Once the registry keys have been applied you’ll need to go and configure the …\TPM key to reflect your setup as follows:
      1. In Particular – configure your SharePoint SiteID to the one you saw in IIS.
      2. image
  4. How is this Different for a x64 bit Install
    1. The IIS piece is the same.
    2. The BTS Piece – the Perf counters are the same,
      but the ..\TPM piece is under HKLM\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Microsoft\BizTalk Server\3.0\ConfigFramework
    3. So you’ll need to ammend 1 of the above 2 REG files.

You’re done!

Why oh why is this so hard from within the Configurator.

NOTE: There *USED* to be a Registry key that told the BTS WSS Adapter where to go looking for the BTSharePoint WS – a URL (..STSServiceUrl). This eliminated the need for a local machine install of SharePoint/WSS. Alas…this is *NOT* the case with WSS Adapter post BTS06.


Monday, November 02, 2009 9:02:11 PM (AUS Eastern Daylight Time, UTC+11:00)  #    Comments [0]   BizTalk | 2009 | SharePoint | MOSS | 2010  | 
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