SharePoint Intelligence Introduction To Share Point Designer Workflows
-
date post
21-Oct-2014 -
Category
Documents
-
view
1.294 -
download
4
description
Transcript of SharePoint Intelligence Introduction To Share Point Designer Workflows
Introduction to SharePoint Designer 2010 Workflows
http://bit.ly/kOqLnvIvan SandersSharePoint MVP Developer, [email protected] http://twitter.com/@iasanders
Agenda Prototyping in Visio 2010 Implementing in SPD2010 Extending with VS2010 Summary
SPD Workflows? SharePoint Online supports declarative workflows
Code-based workflows aren’t supported in the Sandbox
Prototyping in Visio 2010SharePoint specific flowchart diagramExport to SharePoint Designer 2010
Implement in SharePoint Designer 2010Improved workflow designerIntegration of forms with InfoPath 2010
Extend with Visual Studio 2010Custom SPD2010 actionsEvents
Workflow in SPO? New Workflow targets
Reusable Workflows can be applied to any listSite Workflows can execute on site
New Workflow eventsEmitted by SharePoint Online (i.e. WorkflowStarted)Custom Events, Event Receivers
Visio 2010
Prototyping in Visio 2010 SharePoint specific Workflow template
Design in Visio using SharePoint shapesProvides workflow Visualization
SharePoint Workflow Shapes Terminators
Start/Terminate Conditions
DataPermissionsDates
ActionsSend EmailCreate List Item Check In/Out
Export to SharePoint Designer 2010 Visio exports to a VWI file
Renamed zip file containing all workflow files
.xoml and .xoml.rules define workflow.vdx file contains Visio drawing
SharePoint Designer 2010
SharePoint Designer 2010 Power tool for customizing SharePoint 2010
DataWorkflowDesign the look and feel of your siteCreate Site Templates
New User InterfaceFluent UI from Office 2010/SharePoint 2010Easy navigation from artifact to summary to galleries
Does not require developer/web skillsUseful for Power Users, IT Pros and Developers
Free!
SPD2010 Workflow Supports List, Reusable, Site workflows Custom or based on built in workflows Workflow Summary
Manage settings, start options, forms Task designer
Define advanced settings for process Workflow designer
Actions, Conditions, Steps InfoPath 2010 for forms customization
Creating Custom Workflows New workflows are attached to a container
List Workflows attached to a specific listReusable Workflows are not attached to a list
○ May be constrained to a content type○ Attached later using browser
Site Workflows are attached to the current site
Copy & Modify Workflows
Based on any Globally Reusable WorkflowsApprovalCollect FeedbackCollect SignaturesPublishing Approval
Can be limited to specific Content Type
Workflows Summary
Manage settings for workflow Associated lists Start options
Manual Started for Human Workflows Item created/changed events for
Machine Workflows Initiation Form Parameters
Collect information for workflow Local Variables
Leveraged in workflow execution Association Columns
Applied to associated lists for Reusable Workflows
Workflow Designer Improved declarative workflow designer
Task Process Designer
Actions Actions get work done in the workflow Examples:
Create, copy, change, or delete list items/documents
Check items in or outSend an e-mailCreate a task for person or groupCollect data via task for use in the workflowPause or stop the workflowLog workflow information to a History listSet workflow variables or perform calculations
Conditions Control flow of the workflow Examples:
If any value equals valueIf current item field equals valueCreated by a specific personCreated in a specific date spanTitle field contains keywords
Steps Allow you to organize your workflow Steps performed in Serial or Parallel
ImpersonationWorkflows run with permissions of user
Use impersonation step to run as workflow author
WorkflowSharePoint Designer 2010Implementing Workflows
demo
SP2010 vs. SPO Can’t export from SPD2010 to VS2010 Can’t build Visual Studio code workflows in a
sandboxed solution
Summary Prototype workflows in Visio 2010
Use diagrams to get sign-off Implement the workflow in SharePoint
Designer 2010Custom or copy & modify built in workflowActions, conditions and steps
Develop custom workflow actions and events in Visual Studio 2010
Who can you trust??The blogs I trust through all of the noise.
Maurice Prather http://www.bluedoglimited.com/default.aspx Andrew Connell http://www.andrewconnell.com/blog Spence Harbarhttp://www.harbar.net Jim Duncan Heather Solomon http://www.heathersolomon.com/blog Todd Klindt http://www.toddklindt.com/default.aspx Todd Baginski http://www.toddbaginski.com/blog Todd Bleeker http://bit.ly/edlSm5
Jan Tielens http://weblogs.asp.net/jan Patrick Tisseghem http://www.u2u.info/Blogs/Patrick/default.aspx Wictor Wilen http://www.wictorwilen.se Ted Patisson http://blog.tedpattison.net/default.aspx Lars Fastrup http://www.fastrup.net Carsten Keutmann http://keutmann.blogspot.com Keith Richie http://blog.krichie.com Bill Baer http://blogs.technet.com/b/wbaer
Thank youhttp://bit.ly/kOqLnvIvan Sanders
SharePoint MVP Developer, [email protected] http://twitter.com/@iasanders
What's on the Flash drive
Extras
Extras SharePoint 2007
SharePointSolutionInstaller WSPBuilder KerberosBuddy SharePoint Sushi SharePointManager2007 / 2010 SPViewPermissionSetting.wsp 2007 Office SDK1.5 SQL Scripts
SharePoint 2010 AutoSPInstaller 2010 Documentation BusinessIntelligenceLabs 2010 Tips and tricks SQL Scripts npp.5.8.6 Search.StandardMasterPageAdapter.wsp
Resources Download SharePoint Designer 2010
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/en/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=d88a1505%2D849b%2D4587%2Db854%2Da7054ee28d66
Introducing SharePoint Designer 2010 http://
office.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint-designer-help/introducing-sharepoint-designer-2010-HA101782482.aspx
SharePoint Designer 2010 Workflow http://
office.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint-designer-help/introduction-to-designing-and-customizing-workflows-HA101859249.aspx
Creating SharePoint Workflow Solutions http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee231606.aspx
Walkthrough: Create a Custom Site Workflow Activity http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee231574.aspx
Performance
Addendum
Top Performance killers
Search Search uses SQL in a very I/O intensive fashion. It is sensitive to I/O latencies on
the TempDB and the Query and Crawl file groups. One of the more difficult and time consuming jobs for a Search Administrator is to schedule the Crawls so they are not over lapping while keeping Search results fresh
Indexing/Crawling Crawling and indexing a large volume of information, documents, and Web pages
requires a large amount of computer processing. The crawl process also consumes network and other resources. The SharePoint environment must be configured properly and monitored, to ensure that the crawling and indexing process does not adversely affect the service available to users. For example, content is usually crawled and indexed during off-peak hours when servers are underused in order to maintain peak-hour services for users.
Applications that may be crawling content in your production environment ○ Coveo Full and Incremental crawls to enable search ○ Newsgator to Update all of the colleague information and RSS feeds ○ DocAve for Reporting on and Performing SharePoint Management tasks ○ WSS Search indexes the Help information provided with SharePoint○ SharePoint Profile Import syncs people profile○ Office Search Full and Incremental updates Coveo would replace
Top Performance Killers
Top Performance Killers Profile Import
Profile imports are used with NGES to sync your AD user details to provide access to your feed subscriptions and with SharePoint to sync your AD user details with your SharePoint User Profile
Large List Operations Having large lists by itself is not necessarily a performance issue. When
SharePoint Server renders the many items in those lists, that can cause spikes in render times and database blocking. One way to mitigate large lists is to use subfolders and create a hierarchical structure where each folder or subfolder has no more than 3,000 items. Identify large lists and work with the owners of the sites and lists to archive items or pursue other mitigation strategies
Heavy User Operation List Import/Write Another scenario of users having power they don’t realize. Importing large lists
using excel or synchronizing an access db. In SQL there’s little difference between these types of user operations.
Backup (SQL & Tape) Serious CPU and write disk I/O performance hit. SQL Litespeed or SQL 2008
backup with compression all help to lessen the performance hit.
SharePoint Performance
Database Performance Database Volumes
Separate database volumes into unique LUN’s consisting of unique physical disk spindles.
Prioritize data among faster disks with ranking:○ SQL TempDB data files○ Database transaction log files○ Search database○ Content databases
In a heavily read-oriented portal site, prioritize data over logs.
Separate out Search database transaction log from content database transaction logs.
Database Performance SQL TempDB Data Files
Recommended practice is that the number of data files allocated for TempDB should be equal to number of core CPU’s in SQL Server.
TempDB data file sizes should be consistent across all data files. TempDB data files should be spread across unique LUN’s and
separated from Content DB, Search DB, etc… TempDB Log file separated to unique LUN. Optimal TempDB data file sizes can be calculated using the
following formula: [MAX DB SIZE (KB)] X [.25] / [# CORES] = DATA FILE SIZE (KB)
Calculation result (starting size) should be roughly equal to 25% of the largest content or search DB.
Use RAID 10; separate LUN from other database objects (content, search, etc…).
“Autogrow” feature set to a fixed amount; if auto grow occurs, permanently increase TempDB size.
Content Databases 100 content databases per Web application 100GB per content database
○ CAUTION: Major DB locking issues reported in collaborative DM scenarios above 100GB
○ Need to ensure that you understand the issues based on number of users, usage profiles, etc…
○ Service Level Agreement (SLA) requirements for backup and restore will also have an impact on this decision.
○ KnowledgeLake Lab testing demonstrated SharePoint performance was NOT impacted by utilizing larger DB sizes; tests included content DB sizes that were 100GB, 150GB, 200GB, 250GB, 300GB and 350GB.
Database Performance
Content Databases - Continued Pre-construct and pre-size Script generation of empty database objects “Autogrow” feature on Use RAID 5 or RAID 10 logical units
○ RAID 10 is the best choice when cost is not a concern. ○ RAID 5 will be sufficient and will save on costs, since content
databases tend to be more read intensive than write intensive. Multi-core computer running SQL Server
○ Primary file group could consist of a data file for each CPU core present in SQL Server.
○ Move each data file to separate logical units consisting of unique physical disk spindles.
Database Performance
Search Database Pre-construct and pre-size Script generation of empty database objects “Autogrow” feature on Use RAID 10 logical units
○ Should be a requirement for large-scale systems○ Search database is extremely read/write intensive
Multi-core computer running SQL Server○ Primary file group could consist of a data file for each CPU core
present in SQL Server. ○ Move each data file to separate logical units consisting of
unique physical disk spindles.
Database Performance
Search Database Search database is VERY read/write intensive! Do not place any other database data files on any logical unit
where search database files reside. If possible, try to ensure that the RAID 10 logical units for the
search database data files do not share their physical spindles with other databases.
Place the search database log files on an independent logical unit.
Database Performance
Database Maintenance Physical Volume File Fragmentation:
○ Defragment your physical volumes on a regular schedule for increased performance!
○ LUN’s need to be 20-50% larger than the data stored on them allow for effective defragmentation of the data files.
Performance Monitor Counters to watch:○ Average Disk Queue Length
Single Digit values are optimal.Occasional double-digit values aren’t a large concern.Sustained triple-digit values require attention.
Database Performance
Page Performance Minimize HTTP Requests
80% of the end-user response time is spent on the front-end. Most of this time is tied up in downloading all the components in the page: images, stylesheets, scripts, Flash, etc. Reducing the number of components in turn reduces the number of HTTP requests required to render the page. This is the key to faster pages.
For static components: implement "Never expire" policy by setting far future Expires header
Avoid Redirects Redirects are accomplished using the 301 and 302 status codes.
Here’s an example of the HTTP headers in a 301 response: Optimize Images
After a designer is done with creating the images for your web page, there are still some things you can try before you uploading the images to your web server
Avoid Empty Image src Image with empty string src attribute occurs more than one will expect.