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This three-day course teaches System Engineers how to deploy .NET applications and the .NET Framework 1.1, using different deployment techniques. It includes the basic architecture of .NET applications and how to secure, monitor, and maintain them.
The typical audience for this learning product is a skilled System Engineer with at least three years of network and server management experience.
Before attending this course, students must have:
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This three-day course teaches System Engineers how to deploy .NET applications and the .NET Framework 1.1, using different deployment techniques. It includes the basic architecture of .NET applications and how to secure, monitor, and maintain them.
The typical audience for this learning product is a skilled System Engineer with at least three years of network and server management experience.
Before attending this course, students must have:
Module 1: Introduction to the .NET Framework
This module describes the .NET Framework 1.1 components and how they work together. It also describes the architecture of a .NET application and how it relates to various other systems including Microsoft Active Directory directory service, the operating system, IIS, COM , and other services. Overall, it identifies when the .NET Framework 1.1 and .NET applications will and will not affect common existing operational procedures including development, packaging and deployment, testing and monitoring.
Module 2: Implementing a .NET Application Security Strategy
This module identifies the security layers that are built into the .NET Framework 1.1 and describes guidelines for implementing .NET application security.
Module 3: Configuring .NET Application Security
This module describes how to configure code access and role-based security for .NET applications. Application security must be configured before an application can be deployed.
Module 4: Introduction to .NET Application Deployment
This module provides an overview of installing .NET applications including hardware and software requirements, how to troubleshoot problems that may occur during the installation of applications, and guidelines for interoperation. It will outline the tasks for deploying the .NET Framework 1.1 and deploying .NET applications by using Xcopy and No-Touch Deployment. It will also stress best practices for packaging and deploying .NET applications.
Module 5: Deploying .NET Applications by Using Microsoft Windows Installer (MSI)
This module will build on the previous module to describe specifically how to deploy .NET applications by using Microsoft Windows Installer (MSI). The module will cover how MSI works, what the conditions are for a successful deployment, and how to create desktop icons, menu shortcuts, and create custom actions. It will conclude with best practice guidelines for using MSI.
Module 6: Deploying Automatically-updating .NET Applications
This module will complete the deployment cycle by describing how to deploy .NET applications that will automatically update. It will cover the process for combining NTD and MSI installations and how to use the Application Updater Block. Finally, it will explain the guidelines for best practices for deploying .NET applications that will be automatically updated.
Module 7: Signing .NET Assemblies
In this module, the students will learn how to sign an assembly with a strong name, and use additional signing options to ensure the source of an assembly.
Module 8: Managing .NET Assemblies
This module describes how to manage .NET assemblies by deploying an assembly to the Global Assembly Cache (GAC) and configuring assemblies for side-by-side deployment.
Module 9: Configuring .NET Components
This module describes how to configure certain .NET Framework 1.1 components that affect operational tasks, including ASP.NET applications, Enterprise Services, and .NET remoting.
Module 10: Monitoring .NET Applications
The final module of this course will outline the basics of monitoring .NET applications. It will cover the identification and analysis of common problems with .NET applications and provide hands-on experience with monitoring a .NET application with the Enterprise Instrumentation Framework (EIF). It will also cover testing .NET applications using the Windows Application Compatibility Toolkit (ACT). Finally, it will outline the best practices for monitoring .NET applications.