Book Image

Microsoft SharePoint 2010 and Windows PowerShell 2.0: Expert Cookbook

By : Yaroslav Pentsarskyy
Book Image

Microsoft SharePoint 2010 and Windows PowerShell 2.0: Expert Cookbook

By: Yaroslav Pentsarskyy

Overview of this book

PowerShell is tightly integrated with SharePoint 2010, demonstrating an important alliance between the fastest growing collaboration and web publishing platform, and the latest task automation framework. The advantages of PowerShell and SharePoint integration help administrators and infrastructure specialists achieve everyday enterprise tasks more efficiently, and this book will ensure you get the most out of SharePoint configuration and management. When it comes to custom SharePoint 2010 solution configuration, creating robust PowerShell scripts is the best option for saving time and providing a point of reference as to the changes made in the server environment. This practical expert cookbook translates the most commonly found scenarios into a series of immediately usable recipes, allowing you to get up and running straight away with writing powerful PowerShell scripts for SharePoint. “Microsoft SharePoint 2010 and Windows PowerShell 2.0: Expert Cookbook” focuses on a range of distinct areas of SharePoint administration, with expert recipes targeting unique business examples.You will learn exactly how solutions were achieved for managing SharePoint list settings with PowerShell, PowerShell configuration of SharePoint FAST Search, and more. You will also learn how to tailor the recipe to your own business needs.With this advanced cookbook in hand, you will be fully equipped with the source code as a starting point for creating your scripts in order to take advantage of the integration between SharePoint and PowerShell.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Microsoft SharePoint 2010 and Windows PowerShell 2.0: Expert Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Managing sandbox solutions in SharePoint site collections


As we've seen in the previous recipe, sandbox solutions give your users the flexibility to run applications within the scope of their site collection without affecting other site collections. Depending on the policies you have established, your users may run sandbox applications which cost significant resources to the system. In this case, you wouldn't want to restrict resource points for all of the sandbox solutions as we discussed in Configuring sandbox solution policies, because all of the solutions will be affected. In an organization where you have just a few site collections, you can instruct your users to avoid using the problem solution. However, in case you're running multiple site collections and you have many users allowed to deploy sandbox solutions to their site collections, you can choose to block a particular sandbox solution from being deployed and used on the farm.

In this recipe, we'll take a look at how PowerShell...