Professional SQL Server™ 2005 Administration
by Brian Knight, Ketan Patel, Wayne Snyder, Jean-Claude Armand, Ross LoForte, Brad McGehee, Steven Wort, Joe Salvatore, Haidong Ji
Chapter 2. SQL Server 2005 Installation Best Practices
SQL Server is relatively easy to install. You can put the CD or DVD into the drive, in most cases click straight though, and you'll get a running, useful install. Several decisions are made by default as you click through, however. In this chapter, you learn about those decisions and discover the related gotchas and how to avoid them.
The installation process should be something like this:
Plan the system.
Get the hardware and software.
Install the operating system and service packs.
Setup the IO subsystem.
Install SQL Server and service packs.
Burn in the system.
Do post-install configurations if necessary.
Clean up for deployment and go!
We will focus our attention on the plan and the actual install.
Planning the System
Preinstallation planning will pay off with happier users and time-savings for you. Because it is so easy to pop in the CD and click through to install the product, it is equally easy to forego the planning process—but resist the temptation!
You will involve several functions in your planning, including the funding source, network group, and infrastructure (hardware/operating systems group). The funding source or business group will need to tell you something about the dollars available and the planning period that this configuration should support. Are you building something to last for four months or two years? The business people will also have some requirements around up-time and scalability. Incremental up-time and ...
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