Book Image

Microsoft System Center 2016 Orchestrator Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Michael Seidl, Steve Beaumont, Samuel Erskine (EUR), Andreas Baumgarten
Book Image

Microsoft System Center 2016 Orchestrator Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Michael Seidl, Steve Beaumont, Samuel Erskine (EUR), Andreas Baumgarten

Overview of this book

With Microsoft System Center 2016 Orchestrator Cookbook, you will start by learning how to efficiently install and secure System Center Orchestrator. You will then learn how you can create configuration files for SCO 2016. After initial installation and configuration, you will soon be planning and creating functional and fault-tolerant System Center runbooks to automate daily tasks and routine operations. Next you will delve into runbooks; you will learn how to create powerful and advanced runbooks such as Building your Runbook without a Dead End. You will also learn to create simple and advanced runbooks for your daily tasks. Towards the end of the book, you will learn to use SCO for other interesting tasks and also learn to maintain and perform SCO health checks. By the end of the book, you will be able to automate your administrative tasks successfully with SCO.
Table of Contents (8 chapters)

Understanding the Orchestrator scenario building blocks

This recipe provides a brief overview of SCO basics and serves as a primer for Chapter 4, Building Advanced Runbooks to Chapter 6, Advanced Runbooks for your Daily Tasks . Unlike other recipes, the focus of this recipe is on you understanding it instead of performing. This recipe is, however, equally important, as you will need an understanding of the SCORCH basics in order to create the recipes in the book.

Getting ready

You must have a fully deployed SCO environment. Your environment should have a database server, Management Server, Runbook Server, Runbook Designer, and an orchestration web console. Chapter 1, Unpacking System Center 2016 Orchestrator, discusses and...