G
Gary Davis
I appreciate your assistance in answering one or both of my questions below.
I am creating a stand-alone sandbox environment to include the following:
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server
Microsoft Project Server
Microsoft Project Portfolio Server
SQL Server Reporting Services
We will not be permitting this configuration in our DAP Enterprise, however
our developers need to get started planning the DAP deployments using this
sandbox server.
1. My first question is if there ever could be a 'best practices' regarding
the order of installing all these on one server, what order of installation
should be applied?
The reason i am throwing together this sandbox environment is that our
current SSRS environment in our Enterprise is 64-bit and we have no intention
of setting up a 32-bit reporting server stack. Project Server or Portfolio
Server requires the installation of a reporting module onto the SSRS server,
however that MSI is only 32-bit.
In our Acceptance and Production environments, I will require them to use a
shared MOSS stack and install MSPS and MSPPS onto it's own stack and connect
to our reporting and SQL servers. All of this will be 64-bit, therefore they
will be waiting on Microsoft's future release of PS.
2. My second question is based on what I mentioned above, is there another
solution I can apply that would get around the 32-bit MSI limitation for the
deployment of the reporting module on our 64-bit SSRS server?
Thank You
Gary Davis
I am creating a stand-alone sandbox environment to include the following:
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server
Microsoft Project Server
Microsoft Project Portfolio Server
SQL Server Reporting Services
We will not be permitting this configuration in our DAP Enterprise, however
our developers need to get started planning the DAP deployments using this
sandbox server.
1. My first question is if there ever could be a 'best practices' regarding
the order of installing all these on one server, what order of installation
should be applied?
The reason i am throwing together this sandbox environment is that our
current SSRS environment in our Enterprise is 64-bit and we have no intention
of setting up a 32-bit reporting server stack. Project Server or Portfolio
Server requires the installation of a reporting module onto the SSRS server,
however that MSI is only 32-bit.
In our Acceptance and Production environments, I will require them to use a
shared MOSS stack and install MSPS and MSPPS onto it's own stack and connect
to our reporting and SQL servers. All of this will be 64-bit, therefore they
will be waiting on Microsoft's future release of PS.
2. My second question is based on what I mentioned above, is there another
solution I can apply that would get around the 32-bit MSI limitation for the
deployment of the reporting module on our 64-bit SSRS server?
Thank You
Gary Davis