In SharePoint 2010 Shared Service Providers (SSP's) are replaced by Service Applications. Services are no longer combined into a SSP. Services are running independent as a service application. Why not SSP?? SSPs were pretty handy in Office SharePoint Server 2007. They allowed us to create a configuration of profiles, audiences, Excel Services, BDC and search that we could share between two Web applications. But what if we wanted one Web application to simply use the same search configuration in one SSP but have a totally different profile / BDC configuration? The only option was to create a new SSP and duplicate the search. But these two SSPs were totally independent. Another trick was the scalability of SSPs. Nor was it easy to share an SSP across SharePoint farms. Here comes the Service Applications. Microsoft took a sledge hammer to the SSP architecture and broke it into pieces. Think of service applications as little programs, but don't think in terms of an individual EXE or DLL. Instead, think of it more like a complete application that may be comprised of multiple assemblies, databases, timer jobs, Win32 services, external systems, etc. From the above diagram, you can see many of the benefits the new Service Model provides. Some of them I have mentioned below With this new Service model, comes some new terms What Service apps are NEW and what actually they do? You've seen from the above that the architecture has been modified and they are lots of NEW Services available in SharePoint 2010. I've provided a brief list of some of the new Services and what they do below:
SharePoint 2010 farm.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
No more SSP’s in Sharepoint 2010
Posted by Rami Reddy Annapu Reddy at 12:24 AM 0 comments
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