Microsoft SharePoint(TM) Portal Server 2001 Resource Kit (Examples & Explanations Series)
Appendix C
This table lists the figures used as illustrations in each chapter of this book.
Chapter 3: Introducing SharePoint Portal Server
Figure 3.1. | Approval routes |
Figure 3.2. | SharePoint Portal Server architecture overview |
Figure 3.3. | Single server configuration for document management |
Figure 3.4. | Single server configuration for search services |
Figure 3.5. | Multiple-server configuration for enterprise-level search services |
Figure 3.6. | Multiple-server configuration for enterprise-level document management and search services |
Chapter 4: Introducing the Dashboard Site
Figure 4.1. | The home page of the dashboard site |
Figure 4.2. | Possible content sources |
Figure 4.3. | Best Bets |
Chapter 5: Introducing Microsoft Full-Text Search Technologies
Figure 5.1. | SharePoint Portal Server content crawling and search architecture |
Chapter 6: Planning a Deployment
Figure 6.1. | Enabling enhanced folders |
Figure 6.2. | Security inheritance |
Figure 6.3. | Assigning users to roles |
Figure 6.4. | Using a serial approval route |
Figure 6.5. | Using a parallel approval route |
Figure 6.6. | Adding custom properties to the document profile |
Figure 6.7. | Selecting document profiles |
Figure 6.8. | Identifying key words for searching |
Figure 6.9. | Different content sources that SharePoint Portal Server can crawl |
Figure 6.10. | Selecting a search scope |
Figure 6.11. | Viewing the category hierarchy |
Figure 6.12. | Categorizing document from the document profile |
Chapter 8: Planning Security
Figure 8.1. | SharePoint Portal Server roles |
Figure 8.2. | Access control lists |
Figure 8.3. | Applying group strategy in a single domain |
Figure 8.4. | Publishing model |
Chapter 9: Planning Taxonomies
Figure 9.1. | Traditional folders: single axis of organization |
Figure 9.2. | SharePoint Portal Server: three axes of organization |
Figure 9.3. | Two possible folder organizations |
Figure 9.4. | The new content organization |
Chapter 14: Deploying SharePoint Portal Server across Multiple Sites Using RapPort
Figure 14.1. | RapPort deployment with multiple destination servers |
Figure14.2. | Logical Provisioning Process |
Figure 14.3. | Request submission process |
Figure 14.4. | RapPort wizard request summary |
Figure 14.5. | Workspace creation process |
Figure 14.6. | Template instantiation process |
Figure 14.7. | Roles, virtual server setup, and notifications |
Figure 14.8. | E-mail notification that the portal is ready |
Figure 14.9. | Sample WINS e-mail notification |
Chapter 15: Optimizing Performance of SharePoint Portal Server
Figure 15.1. | Specifying resource usage |
Figure 15.2. | Changing the Application Protection setting |
Figure 15.3. | Specifying the refresh rate |
Chapter 17: Using Categories
Figure 17.1. | Categories viewed on the dashboard site and in Web folders |
Figure 17.2. | Two ways to manually assign categories to a document |
Figure 17.3. | Category Assistant property page |
Figure 17.4. | Designating a document as a category Best Bet |
Chapter 18: Building a Corporate Portal Using Microsoft Office XP
Figure 18.1. | Saving an Office XP document as a Web Part |
Figure 18.2. | Saving a document as a Web Part |
Figure 18.3. | Displaying a spreadsheet as a Web Part on a personal dashboard |
Chapter 19: Architecting Web Parts for Business Applications
Figure 19.1. | Classic 3-tier architecture |
Figure 19.2. | Presentation tier with DDSC |
Figure 19.3. | User-centric business tier |
Figure 19.4. | Data-centric business tier |
Figure 19.5. | Data tier |
Figure 19.6. | Data tier LOB application |
Chapter 22: Creating a Corporate Web Part Catalog
Figure 22.1. | Catalogs of Web Parts |
Figure 22.2. | Web Part catalog on a SharePoint Portal Server computer |
Chapter 27: Migrating from Site Server 3 to SharePoint Portal Server 2001 for Enterprise Search at Microsoft
Figure 27.1. | Project and development timeline |
Figure 27.2. | Site Server 3 search solution architecture |
Figure 27.3. | Enterprise search tiered server architecture |
Figure 27.4. | SharePoint Portal Server architecture |
Figure 27.5. | Creating an index workspace |
Figure 27.6. | Example of content sources |
Figure 27.7. | Example of site path rules |
Figure 27.8. | Example event viewer entries |
Figure 27.9. | Adaptive crawl times |
Chapter 28: KMIT: Deploying SharePoint Portal Server across Multiple Sites
Figure 28.1. | RapPort architecture |