ࡱ>  '` a1bjbjBB S((;DȔpppȔ[ d|4J'@ \#T%T%T%T%T%T%T$^h|`tITe"IT$[nnnB#Tn#Tnn+3 X 8 p.*.>=[0[..`X`|!3/3`C3T nITITn[ȔȔȔ̃ȔȔȔ̃ȔȔ  Guide for IT Pros for Office Web Apps Beta Microsoft Corporation Published: February 2010 Author: Microsoft Office System and Servers Team (itspdocs@microsoft.com) Abstract This document supports a preliminary release of Microsoft Office 2010 Beta. The content in the book covers information about how to plan, configure, deploy, maintain, secure, and troubleshoot installations of Microsoft Office 2010 Beta. The documentation is intended for IT professionals who plan, implement, and maintain Office installations in their organizations. For current content that supports the released version of Microsoft Office 2010, see  HYPERLINK "Office Web Apps 2010 technical library" Office Web Apps 2010 technical library (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=181453).  The information contained in this document represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation on the issues discussed as of the date of publication. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information presented after the date of publication. This document is for informational purposes only. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT. Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user. Without limiting the rights under copyright, no part of this document may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), or for any purpose, without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation. Microsoft may have patents, patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document. Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft, the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property. Unless otherwise noted, the example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places and events depicted herein are fictitious, and no association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, e-mail address, logo, person, place or event is intended or should be inferred. 2010 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Active Directory, Excel, Outlook, SharePoint, Microsoft, Windows, WindowsServer, and WindowsVista are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners. Contents  TOC \o "1-4" \h \z  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421220" Getting help  PAGEREF _Toc258421220 \h vii  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421221" Office Web Apps Beta (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products  PAGEREF _Toc258421221 \h 1  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421222" Newly published Office Web Apps content for  PAGEREF _Toc258421222 \h 2  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421223" Published the week of February 22, 2010  PAGEREF _Toc258421223 \h 2  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421224" Updated the week of February 22, 2010  PAGEREF _Toc258421224 \h 2  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421225" Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)  PAGEREF _Toc258421225 \h 3  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421226" Office Web Apps versions  PAGEREF _Toc258421226 \h 3  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421227" Integration with SharePoint  PAGEREF _Toc258421227 \h 4  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421228" Understanding the Office Web Apps user experience  PAGEREF _Toc258421228 \h 4  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421229" Viewing and editing Office documents  PAGEREF _Toc258421229 \h 4  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421230" Improving the user experience with Silverlight  PAGEREF _Toc258421230 \h 5  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421231" Configuring the default open behavior for browser enabled documents  PAGEREF _Toc258421231 \h 5  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421232" Understanding Office Web Apps architecture  PAGEREF _Toc258421232 \h 5  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421233" Understanding how Office Web Apps work  PAGEREF _Toc258421233 \h 7  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421234" Viewing and editing Word documents using the Word Web App  PAGEREF _Toc258421234 \h 7  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421235" Viewing and editing PowerPoint presentations using the PowerPoint Web App  PAGEREF _Toc258421235 \h 7  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421236" PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show presentations using the PowerPoint Web App  PAGEREF _Toc258421236 \h 8  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421237" Viewing and editing Excel workbooks using the Excel Web App  PAGEREF _Toc258421237 \h 9  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421238" Viewing and editing OneNote notebooks using the OneNote Web App  PAGEREF _Toc258421238 \h 9  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421239" Planning Office Web Apps in your organization  PAGEREF _Toc258421239 \h 9  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421240" Deploying Office Web Apps in your organization  PAGEREF _Toc258421240 \h 10  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421241" Summary  PAGEREF _Toc258421241 \h 10  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421242" Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)  PAGEREF _Toc258421242 \h 11  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421243" Plan software prerequisites  PAGEREF _Toc258421243 \h 11  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421244" Plan browser support  PAGEREF _Toc258421244 \h 12  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421245" Plan mobile device support  PAGEREF _Toc258421245 \h 13  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421246" Plan server distribution  PAGEREF _Toc258421246 \h 13  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421247" Plan default open behavior for documents  PAGEREF _Toc258421247 \h 15  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421248" Plan Office Web Apps Feature activation  PAGEREF _Toc258421248 \h 15  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421249" Worksheet  PAGEREF _Toc258421249 \h 16  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421250" Summary  PAGEREF _Toc258421250 \h 16  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421251" Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)  PAGEREF _Toc258421251 \h 17  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421252" Understanding Office Web Apps deployment  PAGEREF _Toc258421252 \h 18  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421253" Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing stand-alone SharePoint server  PAGEREF _Toc258421253 \h 19  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421254" Run Office Web Apps setup  PAGEREF _Toc258421254 \h 19  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421255" Run PSConfig to register the services  PAGEREF _Toc258421255 \h 19  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421256" Start the service instances  PAGEREF _Toc258421256 \h 20  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421257" Create the service applications and the service application proxies  PAGEREF _Toc258421257 \h 21  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421258" Activate the Office Web Apps Feature  PAGEREF _Toc258421258 \h 22  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421259" Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new stand-alone SharePoint server  PAGEREF _Toc258421259 \h 24  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421260" Run Office Web Apps setup  PAGEREF _Toc258421260 \h 24  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421261" Run PSConfig to register the services, start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature  PAGEREF _Toc258421261 \h 24  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421262" Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server farm  PAGEREF _Toc258421262 \h 25  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421263" Run Office Web Apps setup  PAGEREF _Toc258421263 \h 25  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421264" Run PSConfig to register services  PAGEREF _Toc258421264 \h 25  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421265" Start the service instances  PAGEREF _Toc258421265 \h 26  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421266" Create the service applications and the service application proxies  PAGEREF _Toc258421266 \h 27  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421267" Activate the Office Web Apps Feature  PAGEREF _Toc258421267 \h 29  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421268" Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new SharePoint server farm  PAGEREF _Toc258421268 \h 30  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421269" Run Office Web Apps setup  PAGEREF _Toc258421269 \h 30  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421270" Run PSConfig to register services  PAGEREF _Toc258421270 \h 31  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421271" Run the SharePoint Farm Configuration Wizard to start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature  PAGEREF _Toc258421271 \h 31  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421272" Additional configuration (optional)  PAGEREF _Toc258421272 \h 32  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421273" Configure the SharePoint default open behavior for browser-enabled documents  PAGEREF _Toc258421273 \h 32  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421274" Troubleshooting  PAGEREF _Toc258421274 \h 33  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421275" PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show  PAGEREF _Toc258421275 \h 35  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421276" Understanding Broadcast Slide Show  PAGEREF _Toc258421276 \h 36  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421277" Broadcast Slide Show Overview  PAGEREF _Toc258421277 \h 36  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421278" Understanding the presenter experience  PAGEREF _Toc258421278 \h 37  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421279" Understanding the attendee experience  PAGEREF _Toc258421279 \h 37  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421280" Broadcast Slide Show features  PAGEREF _Toc258421280 \h 37  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421281" Managing Broadcast Slide Show  PAGEREF _Toc258421281 \h 38  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421282" Broadcast Slide Show and Microsoft Live Meeting  PAGEREF _Toc258421282 \h 38  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421283" Summary  PAGEREF _Toc258421283 \h 39  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421284" Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421284 \h 40  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421285" Plan service types  PAGEREF _Toc258421285 \h 40  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421286" Plan broadcast site location  PAGEREF _Toc258421286 \h 41  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421287" Plan permissions  PAGEREF _Toc258421287 \h 42  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421288" Use Group Policy to manage Broadcast Slide Show  PAGEREF _Toc258421288 \h 42  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421289" Summary  PAGEREF _Toc258421289 \h 42  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421290" Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421290 \h 43  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421291" Configure a PowerPoint Broadcast site  PAGEREF _Toc258421291 \h 43  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421292" Configure Broadcast Slide Show performance (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421292 \h 47  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421293" Deploy a dedicated SharePoint server farm  PAGEREF _Toc258421293 \h 47  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421294" Configure broadcast capacity  PAGEREF _Toc258421294 \h 48  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421295" Configure the polling interval  PAGEREF _Toc258421295 \h 49  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421296" Modify throttling to limit Web front-end resource usage  PAGEREF _Toc258421296 \h 50  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421297" Change the maximum duration of a broadcast  PAGEREF _Toc258421297 \h 51  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421298" Set a time limit for idle broadcasts  PAGEREF _Toc258421298 \h 51  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421299" Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show)  PAGEREF _Toc258421299 \h 53  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421300" Manage Broadcast Slide Show by using Group Policy  PAGEREF _Toc258421300 \h 53  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421301" Disable Broadcast Slide Show by using Group Policy  PAGEREF _Toc258421301 \h 53  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421302" Manage Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)  PAGEREF _Toc258421302 \h 55  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421303" Activate the Office Web Apps Feature on site collections  PAGEREF _Toc258421303 \h 56  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421304" Activate the Office Web Apps Feature for a site collection  PAGEREF _Toc258421304 \h 56  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421305" Manage the Office Web Apps cache  PAGEREF _Toc258421305 \h 59  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421306" Manage the Office Web Apps cache  PAGEREF _Toc258421306 \h 59  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421307" Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421307 \h 62  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421308" Configure the default open behavior for documents  PAGEREF _Toc258421308 \h 62  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421309" Configure PowerPoint service application settings  PAGEREF _Toc258421309 \h 66  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421310" Configure the PowerPoint service application settings  PAGEREF _Toc258421310 \h 66  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421311" Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell  PAGEREF _Toc258421311 \h 67  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421312" Configure Word Viewing service settings  PAGEREF _Toc258421312 \h 69  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421313" Configure the Word Viewing service application settings  PAGEREF _Toc258421313 \h 69  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421314" Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell  PAGEREF _Toc258421314 \h 70  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421315" Configure Excel Services Application settings (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421315 \h 72  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421316" Technical reference (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421316 \h 73  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421317" Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps  PAGEREF _Toc258421317 \h 74  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421318" SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell  PAGEREF _Toc258421318 \h 75  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421319" Overview  PAGEREF _Toc258421319 \h 75  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421320" Accessing Windows PowerShell for SharePoint 2010 Products  PAGEREF _Toc258421320 \h 75  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421321" Permissions  PAGEREF _Toc258421321 \h 76  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421322" Learning Windows PowerShell  PAGEREF _Toc258421322 \h 77  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421323" Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps reference  PAGEREF _Toc258421323 \h 79  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421324" Excel Web App cmdlets  PAGEREF _Toc258421324 \h 80  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421325" Office Web Apps cmdlets  PAGEREF _Toc258421325 \h 82  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421326" System Center Operations Manager knowledge articles (Office Web Apps)  PAGEREF _Toc258421326 \h 83  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421327" Merge failures high (Microsoft OneNote Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421327 \h 84  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421328" Request processing slow (Microsoft OneNote Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421328 \h 85  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421329" PowerPoint document high download time (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421329 \h 86  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421330" PowerPoint high number of queued conversion requests (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421330 \h 87  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421331" PowerPoint high rate of "No Available Server" errors (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421331 \h 89  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421332" PowerPoint high rate of cache write operations (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421332 \h 91  HYPERLINK \l "_Toc258421333" PowerPoint rate of BroadcastGetData requests too high (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App)  PAGEREF _Toc258421333 \h 93  Getting help Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this book. This content is also available online in the Office System TechNet Library, so if you run into problems you can check for updates at: http://technet.microsoft.com/office If you do not find your answer in our online content, you can send an e-mail message to the Microsoft Office System and Servers content team at: itspdocs@microsoft.com If your question is about Microsoft Office products, and not about the content of this book, please search the Microsoft Help and Support Center or the Microsoft Knowledge Base at: http://support.microsoft.com Office Web Apps Beta (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products Microsoft Office Web Apps is the online companion to Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications that enables users to access documents from anywhere. Users can view, share, and work on documents with others online across personal computers, mobile phones, and the Web. Office Web Apps is available to users through Windows Live and to business customers with Microsoft Office 2010 volume licensing and document management solutions based on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. The articles in this section are intended for IT Pros planning to use Office Web Apps installed on SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organizations. In this section: ArticleDescriptionHYPERLINK \l "z8480064e14a44b46ad6b0c836b192af2"Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)This article provides valuable information to help IT Pros understand an Office Web Apps on-premises solution and how it can benefit users in their organizations.HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)This article provides information to help IT Pros plan an Office Web Apps on-premises solution in their organization.HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)This article provides IT Pros information on how to deploy Office Web Apps.HYPERLINK \l "z989e99e5747e4badbe344ed527bdb846"PowerPoint Broadcast Slide ShowArticles in this section provide IT Pros information about understanding, planning, and managing PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show as part of an Office Web Apps on-premises solution.HYPERLINK \l "z2311c247ff5b430ca23c254630954151"Manage Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)Articles in this section can help administrators manage Office Web Apps in their organizations. Newly published Office Web Apps content for This article contains a list of new or updated content for Microsoft Office Web Apps. Published the week of February 22, 2010 HYPERLINK \l "z8a58e6c29a0e4355ae414df25e5e6eee"Office Web Apps Beta (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products)This section contains the following new articles about such Office Web Apps-related topics as planning and deployment: New articles: HYPERLINK \l "z8480064e14a44b46ad6b0c836b192af2"Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) HYPERLINK \l "z989e99e5747e4badbe344ed527bdb846"PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show HYPERLINK \l "z50935f738c40466281e1319b7325cbd7"Understanding Broadcast Slide Show HYPERLINK \l "z2838dd310a054be9b1f43f6dee707b82"Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps) HYPERLINK \l "z791c9613498a47b087977a0346d3f6db"Configure Broadcast Slide Show performance (Office Web Apps) HYPERLINK \l "zb03d1ce9c336482bab695cc83ec2e08f"Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show) Updated the week of February 22, 2010 The following articles contain important updates based on recent changes in Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 functionality: HYPERLINK \l "z8a58e6c29a0e4355ae414df25e5e6eee"Office Web Apps Beta (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) HYPERLINK \l "zcc38b439f9af42e6972dbc92648b09dd"Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps) HYPERLINK \l "z2311c247ff5b430ca23c254630954151"Manage Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) HYPERLINK \l "z0bef827314134cb293a7b9332de74c3d"Activate the Office Web Apps Feature on site collections HYPERLINK \l "z9a75a4616c864b61be98bcaf9290f2da"Manage the Office Web Apps cache HYPERLINK \l "ze27e0bc85fb54bb18157d7c90654175e"Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps) Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) Microsoft Office Web Apps is the online companion to Office Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications that enables users regardless of their location to access documents and edit documents. Users can view, share, and work on documents with others online across personal computers, mobile phones, and the Web. Office Web Apps is available to users through Windows Live and to business customers with Microsoft Office 2010 volume licensing and document management solutions based on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. Note: An appropriate device, Internet connection, and supported Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Safari browser are required. Some mobile functionality requires Office Mobile 2010, which is not included in Office 2010 applications, suites, or Web Apps. There are some differences between the features of Office Web Apps, Office Mobile 2010 and the Office 2010 applications. Information provided in this article is intended for IT Pros planning to use Office Web Apps on SharePoint 2010 Products on-premise in their organizations. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. New and updated content will be published on a regular basis. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z61"Office Web Apps versions HYPERLINK \l "z62"Integration with SharePoint HYPERLINK \l "z63"Understanding the Office Web Apps user experience HYPERLINK \l "z64"Understanding Office Web Apps architecture HYPERLINK \l "z65"Understanding how Office Web Apps work HYPERLINK \l "z66"Planning Office Web Apps in your organization HYPERLINK \l "z67"Deploying Office Web Apps in your organization Office Web Apps versions Office Web Apps is available to consumers and businesses through: Windows LiveFor consumers and small business users, Office Web Apps is available on Windows Live as a free service. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180798&clcid=0x40"Using Office Web Apps in Windows Live(http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180798&clcid=0x40). On-premisesBusiness customers licensed for Microsoft Office 2010 through a Volume Licensing program can run Office Web Apps on a server running Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 or Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010. Information in this article pertains to an on-premise Office Web Apps solution with SharePoint 2010 Products. Integration with SharePoint Office Web Apps is tightly integrated with SharePoint 2010 Products. When you install Office Web Apps, the. Office Web Apps Services are added to the list of SharePoint Services and the Office Web Apps Feature is added to the available SharePoint Features. Office Web Apps services include the Word Viewing Service, PowerPoint Service, and Excel Calculation Services that are created and run within the context of SharePoint Services. The Office Web Apps Feature and services integrate with SharePoint's robust enterprise content management capabilities to provide users the ability to access and work on your organization's documents from anywhere using a Web browser. Understanding the Office Web Apps user experience Viewing and editing Office documents Office Web Apps gives users a browser-based viewing and editing experience by providing a representation of an Office document in the browser. When a user clicks on a document stored in a SharePoint document library, the document opens directly in the browser. The document appears in the browser similar to how it appears in the Office client application. The Web app also provides many of the same editing features as an Office client application. Office Web Apps provides this representation of an Office Word document, PowerPoint presentation, Excel workbook, or OneNote notebook using native browser objects such as HTML, JavaScript, and images. Each document type is handled differently depending on the Office Web Apps services started and whether or not the Office Web Apps Feature is activated. A document in the Word Web App, PowerPoint Web App, or Excel Web App can be edited in the browser or can be opened for editing in the associated Office client application. If while viewing or working in a Web app a user clicks the Edit in Browser button on the Home tab of the toolbar, the user can perform light editing tasks in the browser. A notebook in the OneNote Web App can be edited in the browser natively without needing to click the Edit in Browser button or it can be opened for editing in the OneNote client application by clicking Open in OneNote. If while in a Web app a user clicks the Open in Word, Open in PowerPoint, Open in Excel, or Open in OneNote button on the toolbar, the document will open in the associated Office client application if installed on the client computer. Important If while in a Web app a user clicks the Open in Word, Open in PowerPoint, Open in Excel, or Open in OneNote button on the toolbar, a message may be displayed stating the file cannot be opened in the client application. This can be caused by any one or more of the following conditions: Improving the user experience with Silverlight Silverlight is a free plugin that can provide richer Web experiences for many different browsers. The Silverlight plugin is not required to be installed on the client browser to use Office Web Apps. However, having the Silverlight plugin installed on the browser can provide the following benefits: When using the Word Web App on browsers with the Silverlight plugin installed, users can experience faster page loading, improved text fidelity at full zoom, ClearType tuner settings support, and improved accuracy in location of search string instances when using the find on this page feature. When using the PowerPoint Web App on browsers with the Silverlight plugin installed, users can experience faster page loading, animations will appear smoother than without, and presentation slides will scale with the browser window size. Having Silverlight installed on the client browser does not provide any additional benefits in Excel Web App and OneNote Web App. For more information on Silverlight, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188454&clcid=0x409"http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/. Configuring the default open behavior for browser enabled documents SharePoint 2010 Products uses the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting to determine how a document is opened when a user clicks on a document in SharePoint. By default, this option is set to open documents in their associated client application. When Office Web Apps is installed, setup will change this setting to open documents in the browser. However, if the Office Web Apps Services and Feature have not been activated, when a user clicks on a document, the user may receive an error message indicating the service cannot be found. The error message includes a button that the user clicks to open the document in the associated Office client application. For information on how to configure the default open behavior setting in SharePoint, see HYPERLINK \l "ze27e0bc85fb54bb18157d7c90654175e"Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps). Understanding Office Web Apps architecture Office Web Apps is comprised of multiple server components that create and provide renditions of Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, Excel workbooks, and OneNote notebooks stored in SharePoint for viewing and editing in a browser. Each Web app uses some or all of these server components depending on content type, user changes, and feature activation. Office Web Apps server components include: ServicesWhen you install Office Web Apps on a server, the Word Viewing Service, PowerPoint Service, and Excel Calculation Services are created in SharePoint Services. Each of these services acts as a service instance for each Office Web App on a stand-alone server or a service instance for each Office Web App on each server in a server farm. Only one service instance for each Office Web App can exist on a single server, but multiple service instances can exist for each Office Web App in a server farm. Each service instance provides a location where a service application is run. The Office Web Apps service applications are middle-tier components that manage requests from the Web front-end components, cache renditions, store, calculate, and render documents for consumption by the Web front-end. Not all of the Office Web Apps have a service application. The OneNote Web App for example enables the user to edit .one documents using only the OneNote.aspx without needing a service application. Each service application operates within a service instance property. Administrators can load-balance services in a server farm by choosing to run service instances on particular servers and not on others. Load balancing can be especially useful in environments where one type of Web app might be used more than others. Administrators create and start service instances when deploying Office Web Apps. The service applications will run in their associated service instances automatically. After Office Web Apps has been installed on at least one server and the service applications are running in a service instance, administrators can configure service application settings by using SharePoint Central Administration and by using Windows PowerShell. Each service uses a service application proxy in the SharePoint service application proxy group. The proxies provide the location of a service instance within the farm and manage sessions between the Web front-end components and the service applications. The Word Viewing service application, PowerPoint service application, and Excel Calculation Services each has service application proxies in the SharePoint service application proxy group. Worker processesThe Word Viewing service application and the PowerPoint service application uses worker processes to convert documents and presentations into a series of PNG images or into XAML (if Silverlight is installed), and temporarily stores output locally on-disk. Administrators can configure worker process settings to optimize performance by using SharePoint Central Administration and by using Windows PowerShell. Web front-end componentsOffice Web Apps includes a series of .ASPX, .ASHX, and JavaScript files that run on the front-end SharePoint servers. These are ASP.NET Web applications that render markup for the browser and respond to and manage client events (state) that run on the server. Office Web Apps also uses a series of handlers that run as part of the Web front-end to support rendering HTML and servicing requests made in JavaScript. Office Web Apps CacheWord Web App and the PowerPoint Web App store document renditions in a cache. Renditions in the cache are then used for future requests of a view of the same document. Using the cache can reduce use of excessive amounts of system resources to create a rendition. When you deploy Office Web Apps, by default the cache is created as a site collection in the SPContentDatabase. Like other site collections, the cache can be moved to another database depending on performance or backup needs. Cache size and expiration period can also be configured depending on usage and performance requirements. Office Web Apps also includes two timer jobs associated with the cache. Managing the cache can be done by using SharePoint Central Administration and by using Windows PowerShell. For more information on how to manage the cache, see HYPERLINK \l "z9a75a4616c864b61be98bcaf9290f2da"Manage the Office Web Apps cache. Understanding how Office Web Apps work Each Web app uses some or all of the components described in the previous section to provide a viewable Office document in the browser and an editable document in either the browser or the client application. Viewing and editing Word documents using the Word Web App For viewing Word document types, a combination of images, HTML, and Java Script are used to render a document viewable by the user. If Silverlight is installed on the client browser, some images will be displayed using XAML. When a user clicks on a Word document in SharePoint, and the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in the browser, WordViewer.aspx will check the Office Web Apps cache to determine if a rendition of the document is already available. If a rendition of the document is available in the cache, Word Web App front-end components will display the document in view mode in the browser. If a rendition of the document is not available in the cache, the front-end component will call the Word Viewing service application to render the document. The Word Viewing service application then initializes and manages a worker process to render the document by converting it into a series of PNG images or XAML (if Silverlight is installed). The Word Viewing service application then returns the rendered document to WordViewer.aspx and to the cache. WordViewer.aspx then displays the document in the browser in view mode. The Word Viewing service application can initialize and manage multiple worker processes, each process dedicated to a single session. If while in view mode, the user clicks the Edit in Browser button on the Microsoft Word Web App toolbar, WordViewer.aspx will navigate to the Word Editor (edit mode). The Word Editor is a Web front-end component that creates the browser based editing surface that enables the user to work on the document without loss of fidelity. If while in view mode or edit mode the user clicks the Open in Word button on the Microsoft Word Web App toolbar, the document will open in the Word client application, if it is installed on the client computer. Viewing and editing PowerPoint presentations using the PowerPoint Web App For viewing PowerPoint presentation types, a combination of images, HTML, and JavaScript is used to render a presentation viewable by the user. If Silverlight is installed on the client browser, some images will be displayed using XAML. When a user clicks on a PowerPoint presentation in SharePoint, and the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in the browser, the front-end components will check the Office Web Apps cache to determine if a rendition of the presentation is already available. If a rendition of the presentation is available in the cache, PowerPoint Web App front-end components will display the presentation in view mode in the browser. If a rendition of the presentation is not available in the cache, PowerPointFrame.aspx will call the PowerPoint service application to render the presentation. The PowerPoint service application then initializes and manages a worker process to render the document by converting it into a series of PNG images or XAML (if Silverlight is installed). The PowerPoint service application then returns the rendered document to PowerPointFrame.aspx and to the cache. PowerPointFrame.aspx then displays the document in the browser in view mode. The PowerPoint service application can initialize and manage multiple worker processes, each process dedicated to a single editing session. If while in view mode, the user clicks the Edit in Browser button on the Microsoft PowerPoint Web App toolbar, PowerPointFrame.aspx will navigate to PowerPoint Editor (edit mode). PowerPoint Editor is a Web front-end component that creates the browser based editing surface that enables the user to work on the document without loss of fidelity. PowerPointFrame.aspx will send updates to the PowerPoint service application which services editing requests, manages a single worker process for each editing session, manages re-rendering, auto saves, and returns the updated rendition to PowerPointFrame.aspx. PowerPointFrame.aspx then displays the updated presentation rendition in the browser. If while in view mode or edit mode, the user clicks the Open in PowerPoint button on the Microsoft PowerPoint Web App toolbar, the presentation will open in the PowerPoint client application, if installed on the client computer. PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show presentations using the PowerPoint Web App When Office Web Apps is installed and the PowerPoint service application is created, the PowerPoint Broadcast Service and a default broadcast site are also created. When a user (presenter) opens a presentation in SharePoint using PowerPoint 2010, the user can then click Broadcast Slide Show on the Slide Show tab to start a Broadcast Slide Show presentation. When the user clicks Broadcast Slide Show, the presentation will automatically be uploaded to the Broadcast site, and the Broadcast Service will start a broadcast session. The PowerPoint service application will request the presentation from the Broadcast site. The PowerPoint service application then instructs worker processes to convert the presentation into a series of images or XAML (if Silverlight is installed), and temporarily store output locally on disk. The PowerPoint service application then creates an attendee URL and returns the URL and broadcast session information to PowerPointFrame.aspx. PowerPointFrame.aspx then returns the attendee URL to the presenters browser who then can send the URL in e-mail or post the link for attendees. During the presentation session, PowerPointFrame.aspx determines the presenter's current location in the presentation, retrieves the current slide from the cache, and renders the updated slide in the browser. Attendee browsers poll PowerPoint.aspx once per second to check for updates in the slide show presentation. Viewing and editing Excel workbooks using the Excel Web App The Excel Web App uses DHTML and JavaScript to render and enable editing an Excel workbook without the need for downloading ActiveX controls to the browser running on the client computer. The Excel Web App uses Excel Calculation Services to load the workbook, calculate in full fidelity, refresh external data if needed, and maintain the session. When a user clicks on an Excel workbook in SharePoint, and the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in the browser, the Excel Web App will use the Excel Services Application Web Service Application Proxy to direct calls to and from Excel Calculation Services. If while in view mode, the user clicks the Edit in Browser button on the Microsoft Excel Web App toolbar, the user can then edit the workbook in the browser. The browser will send updates to the Excel Calculation Services which will service those editing requests and return updated results to the browser. If while in view mode or edit mode, the user clicks the Open in Excel button on the Microsoft Excel Web App toolbar, the workbook will open in the Excel client application, if it is installed on the client computer. Viewing and editing OneNote notebooks using the OneNote Web App The OneNote Web App uses a combination of HTML and JavaScript to create a rendition of a notebook that can be viewed and edited by the user. When a user clicks on a OneNote notebook in SharePoint, and the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in the browser, OneNote.aspx will display the notebook in the browser. The user can edit the notebook in the browser. If the user clicks the Open in OneNote button on the Microsoft OneNote Web App toolbar, the notebook will open in the OneNote client application, if it is installed on the client computer. Planning Office Web Apps in your organization How you deploy Office Web Apps will depend on how users in your organization will use the Web apps to view and edit Office documents in your SharePoint environment. Your Office Web Apps deployment will also depend on your SharePoint server configuration and hardware resources. In smaller organizations, all of the Office Web Apps components can be deployed on a single SharePoint 2010 Products server. While this type of solution does have limitations, as your needs change, you can later expand your Office Web Apps and SharePoint solution to a multiple server farm. For medium and large-scale organizations, you can install Office Web Apps on multiple servers in a SharePoint 2010 Products server farm. You can optimize performance not only for users viewing and editing Office documents using Office Web Apps, but also for other SharePoint services running on the same server farm. For more information about planning an Office Web Apps solution for your organization, see HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). Deploying Office Web Apps in your organization Deploying Office Web Apps involves three primary phases: Installing Office Web Apps by running setup, activating the services, and then activating the Office Web Apps Feature. Office Web Apps can be installed on a SharePoint 2010 Products stand-alone server or server farm. When deploying on a server farm, Office Web Apps must be installed on every server in the farm, however, the services do not have to be activated on every server in the farm. You can choose to balance load by activating the Office Web Apps services on particular servers in the farm. You can also optimize performance by configuring the Office Web Apps cache and worker processes to your particular requirements. For more information on how to deploy Office Web Apps on-premise in your organization, see HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). Summary Information in this article provides an understanding of how Office Web Apps installed on SharePoint 2010 Products work. This information can help you when planning Office Web Apps in your organization. The next step in your on-premises Office Web Apps solution is to plan your SharePoint and Office Web Apps server configuration. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) This article discusses planning considerations for Microsoft Office Web Apps. Office Web Apps is the online companion to Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications that enables users regardless of their location to access and edit documents. Users can view, share, and work on documents with others online across personal computers, mobile phones, and the Web. Office Web Apps is available to users through Windows Live and to business customers with Microsoft Office 2010 volume licensing and document management solutions based on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. Note: An appropriate device, Internet connection, and supported Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Safari browser are required. Some mobile functionality requires Office Mobile 2010, which is not included in Office 2010 applications, suites, or Web Apps. There are some differences between the features of Office Web Apps, Office Mobile 2010 and the Office 2010 applications. Information provided in this article is intended for IT Pros planning to use Office Web Apps on SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organizations. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. New and updated content will be published on a regular basis. Before planning your Office Web Apps solution, it is recommended you first read HYPERLINK \l "z8480064e14a44b46ad6b0c836b192af2"Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z78"Plan software prerequisites HYPERLINK \l "z79"Plan browser support HYPERLINK \l "z710"Plan mobile device support HYPERLINK \l "z711"Plan server distribution HYPERLINK \l "z712"Plan default open behavior for documents HYPERLINK \l "z713"Plan Office Web Apps Feature activation HYPERLINK \l "z714"Worksheet HYPERLINK \l "z715"Summary Plan software prerequisites An on-premises deployment of Office Web Apps requires SharePoint Server 2010 or SharePoint Foundation 2010. For more information about how to implement SharePoint in your organization, see Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products online at HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=168780&clcid=0x419"http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=168780&clcid=0x419. Worksheet actionThe Office Web Apps worksheet (HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet) (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409) is provided to record your Office Web Apps planning decisions. Use this worksheet to record your SharePoint installation. Plan browser support Supported browsers When planning your Office Web Apps solution, for users working either via intranet or extranet, all client computer Web browsers must meet minimum version requirements. Office Web Apps is supported in the following browsers: Internet Explorer 7.0 Internet Explorer 8.0 Firefox 3 Safari 4 for the Macintosh Known issues If while using an Office Web App, a user clicks the Open in Word, Open in PowerPoint, Open in Excel, or Open in OneNote button on the toolbar, a message may be displayed stating the file cannot be opened in the client application. This can be caused by any one or more of the following conditions: The user is running a 64-bit version of Internet Explorer. The ActiveX control necessary for opening the file in the Office client application not being installed or not running in the browser. Microsoft Office is not installed on the client computer. The version of Office that is installed is earlier than Office 2003 Security settings in Internet Explorer prevent ActiveX controls from running. The client browser is Firefox, but the Firefox plugin for ActiveX is not installed. This plugin enables Firefox to open Office documents. The browser does not support ActiveX. Worksheet actionThe Office Web Apps worksheet (HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet) (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409) is provided to record your Office Web Apps planning decisions. Use this worksheet to record if Web browsers in your organization support using Office Web Apps. Plan mobile device support Users in your organization can use browser-enabled cell phones and mobile devices to read Excel, PowerPoint, and Word documents stored on a SharePoint server running Office Web Apps, if views and content are enabled for mobile access published externally outside a firewall. The following devices provide mobile support for Office Web Apps in SharePoint: Windows Mobile BlackBerry iPhone, iPod Touch Nokia S60 Japan feature phones, including NTT DOCOMO, SoftBank and au by KDDI To access pages using mobile devices, the URL is the identical to that used by browsers run on client computers. This, however, can vary depending on the configuration and presence of Web proxies. Users can click E-mail a Link on the Share & Track tab of the SharePoint ribbon to receive the address in e-mail on an SMTP service enabled SharePoint server. Plan server distribution Important: Capacity and performance numbers suggested in this article will be different from those used in real-world environments. The numbers in this article are intended to provide a starting point for the design of an appropriately scaled environment. After you have completed your initial system design, test the configuration to determine whether your system will support the factors in your environment. How you deploy Office Web Apps in your organization will depend largely on how your SharePoint installation is configured. If you will be installing Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server farm, it is important to plan for, test, and monitor how Office Web Apps will affect other aspects of your SharePoint server performance. For the purposes of planning an Office Web Apps server configuration, components can be divided among the following tiers: Web front-endOffice Web Apps front-end components run within the SharePoint Web front-end. Office Web Apps front-end components include a series of ASP.NET Web applications that render markup for the browser, and respond to and manage client events (state) that run on the server. Middle-tierOffice Web Apps middle tier components include the Web apps services. These services run within the same context as other SharePoint services. Back-endOffice Web Apps will create and use a cache to render documents viewable by the user. The cache exists as a site collection in the SPContentDatabase as part of the SharePoint back-end. Cache performance efficiency will have a direct effect on rendered page load times. Planning for server distribution If you expect less than 500 simultaneous users, Office Web Apps server components can be installed on a single stand-alone SharePoint server that hosts all tiers. If you expect more than 1500 simultaneous Office Web Apps users at any one time, consider deploying a separate SharePoint server farm dedicated to Office Web Apps server components. For PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show, if you expect in excess of 300 simultaneous Broadcast Slide Show attendees at any one time on a regular basis, consider deploying a separate SharePoint server farm dedicated to PowerPoint.aspx Web front-end components, and the PowerPoint service application at the middle-tier. Use the following table to plan Office Web Apps server requirements determined by the peak number of simultaneous users. UsersFront-end serversMiddle-tier servers>100011>200022>300032 Note: When installing Office Web Apps in a server farm, it must be installed on every server in that farm. However, the Office Web Apps services do not have to be activated on every server in the farm. Optimizing performance You can set the maximum number of worker processes that are permitted to service requests for the Word Viewing service application and the PowerPoint service application to allow for a maximum number of service requests without diminishing worker processes from other applications. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z545c8c8ca7334df3b355493c7518e5b9"Configure Word Viewing service settings, and HYPERLINK \l "zd044e2396a184a9bae584011abf713fd"Configure PowerPoint service application settings. Additionally, you can reduce the resource demands on databases by the Word Viewing service application and the PowerPoint service application by configuring the cache size, expiration period, and cache location. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z9a75a4616c864b61be98bcaf9290f2da"Manage the Office Web Apps cache. For more information about performance and capacity planning for SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/fd081152-5fdd-4e47-9afb-c887fbf1ce22(Office.14).aspx"Plan for server farms and environments (SharePoint Server 2010) (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/fd081152-5fdd-4e47-9afb-c887fbf1ce22(Office.14).aspx) and HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a8e97903-c472-4c13-a1e1-2c075b2f8585(Office.14).aspx"Server farm and environment planning (SharePoint Foundation 2010). (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a8e97903-c472-4c13-a1e1-2c075b2f8585(Office.14).aspx) Worksheet actionThe Office Web Apps worksheet (HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet) (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409) is provided to record your Office Web Apps planning decisions. Use this worksheet to record the number of Web front-end and middle-tier servers required. Plan default open behavior for documents SharePoint 2010 Products use a default open behavior setting to determine how a document is opened when a user clicks on a document in SharePoint. By default, when Office Web Apps is installed, setup will configure SharePoint registration such that Office documents are opened in the browser with the associated Web app. You can override the default open behavior at the site collection and document library level before or after Office Web Apps is installed by using Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. For information on how to configure the default open behavior setting in SharePoint, see HYPERLINK \l "ze27e0bc85fb54bb18157d7c90654175e"Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps). Worksheet action The Office Web Apps worksheet (HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet) (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409) is provided to record your Office Web Apps planning decisions. Use this worksheet to record the default open behavior for site collections and libraries. Plan Office Web Apps Feature activation The Office Web Apps Feature can be activated at the SharePoint site collection level. The feature should be activated on every site collection for which any of the Web apps will be available. Site collections created after Office Web Apps is installed will have the feature activated automatically. Typically, you activate the feature on existing site collections during the deployment phase after you run setup and activate the services; however, in some cases, you can choose to later activate the feature only on particular site collections and deactivate on others. To provide a consistent user experience, it is strongly recommended the feature be activated on all site collections. If the feature is activated for a site collection, and the Ddefault open behavior for browser-enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in browser (SharePoint OpenInClient feature is disabled for the site collection), when a user clicks on a document in a document library, the document will open in view mode in the browser. The user can edit the document in the browser by clicking the Edit in Browser button on the toolbar. If the user clicks on the Edit Control Block (ECB) for a document, the View in Browser and Edit in Browser menu items will appear along with Edit in Microsoft Word, Edit in Microsoft PowerPoint, Edit in Microsoft Excel, or Edit in Microsoft OneNote menu items. If the feature is not activated for a site collection, and the Default open behavior for browser-enabled documents setting in SharePoint is set to open in browser, when a user clicks on a document in a document library in that site collection, the document will open in view mode in the browser. The user can edit the document in the browser by clicking the Edit in Browser button on the toolbar. However, if the user clicks on the ECB for a Word, PowerPoint, or OneNote document, the View in Browser and Edit in Browser menu items will not appear. For more information on how to activate the Office Web Apps Feature for a site collection, see HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) and HYPERLINK \l "z0bef827314134cb293a7b9332de74c3d"Activate the Office Web Apps Feature on site collections. Worksheet actionThe Office Web Apps worksheet (HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet) (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409) is provided to record your Office Web Apps planning decisions. Use this worksheet to record which site collections will have the Office Web Apps Feature activated. Worksheet You can download and use the following worksheet to record the information discussed in this article: HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409"Office Web Apps Worksheet (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=180808&clcid=0x409). Summary Information provided in this article can help you when planning an Office Web Apps solution for your organization. The next step in your on-premises Office Web Apps solution is to deploy Office Web Apps on a stand-alone SharePoint server or a SharePoint server farm. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) This article discusses how to deploy Microsoft Office Web Apps. Office Web Apps is the online companion to Office Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications that enables users to access documents from anywhere. Users can view, share, and work on documents with others online across personal computers, mobile phones, and the Web. Office Web Apps is available to users through Windows Live and to business customers with Microsoft Office 2010 volume licensing and document management solutions based on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. Note: An appropriate device, Internet connection, and supported Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Safari browser are required. Some mobile functionality requires Office Mobile 2010, which is not included in Office 2010 applications, suites, or Office Web Apps. There are some differences between the features of Office Web Apps, Office Mobile 2010 and the Office 2010 applications. Information provided in this article is intended for IT Pros planning to deploy Office Web Apps on SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organizations. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. This article does not provide guidance or instructions on deploying SharePoint 2010 Products. New and updated content will be published on a regular basis. It is recommended you read HYPERLINK \l "z8480064e14a44b46ad6b0c836b192af2"Understanding Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) and HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) available on HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=78003&clcid=0x409"Microsoft TechNet (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=78003&clcid=0x409) prior to deploying Office Web Apps in your organization. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z816"Understanding Office Web Apps deployment HYPERLINK \l "z817"Additional configuration (optional) HYPERLINK \l "z818"Troubleshooting In addition to the above sections, one of the following sections will apply to your specific Office Web Apps deployment: HYPERLINK \l "z819"Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing stand-alone SharePoint server HYPERLINK \l "z820"Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new stand-alone SharePoint server HYPERLINK \l "z821"Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server farm HYPERLINK \l "z822"Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new SharePoint server farm Understanding Office Web Apps deployment For both stand-alone SharePoint servers and SharePoint server farms, deploying Office Web Apps involves three primary phases: Running setup and PSConfigTasks include running Setup.exe and SharePoint Products and Technologies Post Setup and Configuration Wizard (PSConfig) on a stand-alone SharePoint server or each server in a SharePoint server farm. Running Setup.exe installs Office Web Apps files and components on a server. Running PSConfig is required as part of Office Web Apps setup in order to register the Office Web Apps services and, depending on the SharePoint installation type, start the service instances, create the service applications and service application proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature. Activating the Office Web Apps servicesIncludes starting the service instances, and creating the service applications and service application proxies. Whether or not you need to activate the services will depend on the state of SharePoint and whether or not PSconfig and the SharePoint Farm Configuration Wizard have previously been run. Activating the Office Web Apps FeatureIncludes activating the Office Web Apps Feature on all existing SharePoint site collections where the Office Web Apps should be available. If PSconfig or the SharePoint Farm Configuration Wizard have been run prior to installing Office Web Apps, at least one site collection will exist. The feature will be activated automatically for new site collections created after Office Web Apps is installed. Note: Some procedures in this article require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in is already registered, and the snap-in is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing stand-alone SharePoint server This section applies only if you are installing Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server and PSConfig was previously run as part of SharePoint setup. Caution: When you run Setup.exe, Office Web Apps setup configures the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents in SharePoint to open documents in the browser. If Office Web Apps setup has been run, but the Office Web Apps Services and Feature has not yet been activated, a user may get a broken link when opening a document in the browser. When deploying Office Web Apps on a live production server farm, to prevent broken links to documents while completing additional deployment tasks after running setup, it is recommended you enable the OpenInClient feature on existing site collections prior to running setup. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z817"Additional configuration (optional). Run Office Web Apps setup Complete this task to install Office Web Apps components and files on a server. To run Office Web Apps setup 1. From the root folder, run Setup.exe. 2. On the Enter your Product Key page, enter your product key, and then click Continue. 3. On the Choose a file location page, click Install Now to install to the default location. To install to a different location, specify the location that you want to install to and then click Install Now. 4. When Setup finishes, a dialog box prompts you to complete the configuration of your server. Be sure that the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box is selected and then click Close to start PSConfig.Run PSConfig to register the services Complete this task to register the Office Web Apps services on the SharePoint server. To run PSConfig to register the services 1. If you left the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box selected in the previous step, on the PSconfig Welcome to SharePoint Products page, click Next. 2. In the dialog box that notifies you that some services might need to be restarted or reset during configuration, click Yes. 3. On the Configuration Successful page, click Finish. Your new SharePoint site opens.Start the service instances A service instance provides the physical location for a service application. You must start the service instances before creating the service applications and the service application proxies. You can start the service instances by using SharePoint Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. Procedures in this task will start the service instances on the server specified. To start the service instances by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, in System Settings, click Manage services on this server. 3. On the Services on server:page, start Excel Calculation Services, Word Viewing Service, and PowerPoint Service. The OneNote Web App does not use a SharePoint service.To start the service instances by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $machinesToActivate = @("contosoapp1" $serviceInstanceNames = @("Word Viewing Service", "PowerPoint Service", "Excel Calculation Services") foreach ($machine in $machinesToActivate) { foreach ($serviceInstance in $serviceInstanceNames) { $serviceID = $(Get-SPServiceInstance | where {$_.TypeName -match $serviceInstance} | where {$_.Server -match "SPServer Name="+$machine}).ID Start-SPServiceInstance -Identity $serviceID } } 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value $machinesToActivate Server name 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Create the service applications and the service application proxies After the service instances have been started, the service applications and the service application proxies which connect the SharePoint Web front-ends to the service applications must be created. You can create the service applications and the service application proxies for the Word, PowerPoint, and Excel Web apps by using Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. The OneNote Web app does not require a service application. After created, the service applications will run on started service instances automatically. Procedures in this task will create the Office Web Apps service applications and service application proxies for the Word, PowerPoint, and Excel Web apps. This task can only be completed after you have started the service instances. To create the service applications and the service application proxies by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, in Application Management, click Manage service applications. 3. On the Service Applications page, click New, and then click Word Viewing Service. 4. In the Word Viewing Service Application dialog box, in Name, type Word Viewing Service Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default), and then click OK. 5. On the Service Applications page, click New, and then click PowerPoint Service Application. 6. In the PowerPoint Service Application dialog box, in Name, type PowerPoint Service Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default), and then click OK. 7. On the Service Applications page, click New, and then click Excel Services Application. 8. In the Excel Services Application dialog box, in Name, type Excel Services Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default), and then click OK. Note: You can choose to create a new application pool to be used with a service application. When creating a new application pool, you can specify the security account used by the application pool to be a predefined Network Service account, or you can specify a managed account. The account must have read\write privileges for the SPContent database and SPConfig database. To create the service applications and the service application proxies by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $appPool = Get-SPServiceApplicationPool -Name "SharePoint Web Services Default" New-SPWordViewingServiceApplication -Name "WdView" -ApplicationPool $appPool | New-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationProxy -Name "WdProxy" New-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -Name "PPT" -ApplicationPool $appPool | New-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy -Name "PPTProxy" New-SPExcelServiceApplication -Name "Excel" -ApplicationPool $appPool 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Activate the Office Web Apps Feature After the service instances have been started, and the service applications and service application proxies have been created, to use Office Web Apps require the Office Web Apps Feature be activated on existing site collections. You can activate the feature on a site collection by using Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. If you have a large number of site collections, you can activate the feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell. Procedures in this task will activate the Office Web Apps Feature on one or more site collections. This task must be completed only once after the service applications and the service application proxies have been created. Note: This task does not need to be completed for new site collections created after the feature has been activated. To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, click Site Actions and then click Site Settings. 3. On the Site Settings page, in Site Collection Administration, click Site Collection Features. 4. On the Features page, for Office Web Apps, click Activate.To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id $singleSiteCollection = Get-SPSite -Identity http:// Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value Identity URL 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new stand-alone SharePoint server This section applies only if you are installing Office Web Apps on a new SharePoint installation where PSConfig has not previously been run as part of SharePoint setup. Run Office Web Apps setup Complete this task to install Office Web Apps components and files on a server. To run Office Web Apps setup 1. From the root folder, run Setup.exe. 2. On the Enter your Product Key page, enter your product key, and then click Continue. 3. On the Choose a file location page, click Install Now to install to the default location. To install to a different location, specify the location that you want to install to, and then click Install Now. 4. When Setup finishes, a dialog box prompts you to complete the configuration of your server. Be sure that the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box is selected, and then click Close to start PSConfig.Run PSConfig to register the services, start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature Complete this task to register the services, start the service instances, create the service applications and service application proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature. To run PSConfig to register the services, start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature 1. If you left the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box selected in the previous task, on the PSconfig Welcome to SharePoint Products page, click Next. 2. In the dialog box that notifies you that some services might need to be restarted or reset during configuration, click Yes. 3. On the Configuration Successful page, click Finish. Your new SharePoint site opens.Install and configure Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server farm Peform the tasks in this section only if you are installing Office Web Apps on an existing SharePoint server farm where the Farm Configuration Wizard has previously been run. Caution: When you run Setup.exe, Office Web Apps setup configures the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents in SharePoint to open documents in the browser. If Office Web Apps setup has been run, but the Office Web Apps Services and Feature has not yet been activated, a user may get a broken link when opening a document in the browser. When deploying Office Web Apps on a live production server farm, to prevent broken links to documents while completing additional deployment tasks after running setup, it is recommended you enable the OpenInClient feature on existing site collections prior to running setup. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z817"Additional configuration (optional). Run Office Web Apps setup Complete this task to install Office Web Apps on a single SharePoint server. This task must be performed on each server in the server farm. To run Office Web Apps Setup 1. From the root folder, run Setup.exe. 2. On the Enter your Product Key page, enter your product key, and then click Continue. 3. On the Choose a file location page, click Install Now to install to the default location. To install to a different location, specify the location that you want to install to, and then click Install Now. 4. When Setup finishes, a dialog box prompts you to complete the configuration of your server. Be sure that the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box is selected. 5. Click Close to start the configuration wizard.Run PSConfig to register services Complete this task to register the Office Web Apps services on a single SharePoint server. This task must be performed on each server in the server farm. To run PSConfig to register the services 1. On the Welcome to SharePoint Products page, click Next. 2. In the dialog box that notifies you that some services might need to be restarted or reset during configuration, click Yes. 3. On the Modify server farm settings page, select Do not disconnect from this server farm, and then click Next. 4. On the Configuration Successful page, click Finish. Your new SharePoint site opens.Start the service instances A service instance provides the physical location for a service application. For each server that you want to run the Office Web Apps service applications; you must start the service instances. You can start the service instances by using SharePoint Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. Procedures in this task will start the service instances on those servers specified. This task must be completed after you have run WCSetup and PSConfig on each server in the farm. To start the service instances by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, in System Settings, click Manage services on this server. 3. On the Services on server:page, in Server, select a server, and then start Excel Calculation Services, Word Viewing Service, and PowerPoint Service. Repeat this step for each server in the farm you want to run Office Web Apps services. The OneNote Web App does not use a SharePoint service.To start the service instances by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $machinesToActivate = @("contosoapp1", "contosoapp2") $serviceInstanceNames = @("Word Viewing Service", "PowerPoint Service","Excel Calculation Services") foreach ($machine in $machinesToActivate) { foreach ($serviceInstance in $serviceInstanceNames) { $serviceID = $(Get-SPServiceInstance | where {$_.TypeName -match $serviceInstance} | where {$_.Server -match "SPServer Name="+$machine}).ID Start-SPServiceInstance -Identity $serviceID } } 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value $machinesToActivate Server name 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Create the service applications and the service application proxies After the service instances have been started, the service applications and the service application proxies that connect the SharePoint Web front-ends to the service applications must be created. You can create the service applications and the service application proxies for the Word, PowerPoint, and Excel Web apps by using Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. The OneNote Web app does not require a service application. After created, the service applications will run on started service instances automatically. In this task you will create the Office Web Apps service applications and service application proxies for the Word, PowerPoint, and Excel Web apps. This task can be completed only after you have started the service instances. To create the service applications and the service application proxies by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, in Application Management, click Manage service applications. 3. On the Service Applications page, click New, and then click Word Viewing Service. 4. In the Word Viewing Service Application dialog box, in Name, type Word Viewing Service Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default), and then click OK. 5. On the Service Applications page, click New, and then click PowerPoint Service Application. 6. In the PowerPoint Service Application dialog box, in Name, type PowerPoint Service Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default) and then click OK. 7. On the Service Applications page, click New and then click Excel Services Application. 8. In the Excel Services Application dialog box, in Name, type Excel Services Application. In Application Pool, select Use existing application pool, and then in the listbox, select SharePoint Web Services Default. In Add to default proxy list, verify Add this service application's proxy to the farm's default proxy list is selected (default) and then click OK. Note: You can choose to create a new application pool to be used with a service application. When creating a new application pool, you can specify the security account used by the application pool to be a predefined Network Service account, or you can specify a managed account. The account must have read\write privileges for the SPContent database and SPConfig database. To create the service applications and the service application proxies by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $appPool = Get-SPServiceApplicationPool -Name "SharePoint Web Services Default" New-SPWordViewingServiceApplication -Name "WdView" -ApplicationPool $appPool | New-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationProxy -Name "WdProxy" New-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -Name "PPT" -ApplicationPool $appPool | New-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy -Name "PPTProxy" New-SPExcelServiceApplication -Name "Excel" -ApplicationPool $appPool 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Activate the Office Web Apps Feature After the service instances have been started, and the service applications and service application proxies have been created, Office Web Apps requires that the Office Web Apps Feature be activated on existing site collections for which the Web apps will be available. You can activate the feature on a site collection by using Central Administration or by using Windows PowerShell. If you have a large number of site collections, you can activate the feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell. Procedures in this task will activate the Office Web Apps Feature on one or more site collections. This task must be completed after the service applications and the service application proxies have been created. Note: This task does not need to be completed for new site collections created after the feature has been activated. To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, click Site Actions, and then click Site Settings. 3. On the Site Settings page, in Site Collection Administration, click Site Collection Features. 4. On the Features page, for Office Web Apps, click Activate.To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id $singleSiteCollection = Get-SPSite -Identity http:// Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value Identity URL 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Install and configure Office Web Apps on a new SharePoint server farm Perform the tasks in this section only if you are installing Office Web Apps on a new SharePoint server farm where the Farm Configuration Wizard has not previously been run. Run Office Web Apps setup In this task you will install Office Web Apps files and components on a single SharePoint server in a new server farm where the Farm Configuration Wizard has not previously been run. This task must be completed on each server in the server farm. To run Office Web Apps Setup 1. From the root folder, run Setup.exe. 2. On the Enter your Product Key page, enter your product key, and then click Continue. 3. On the Choose a file location page, click Install Now to install to the default location. To install to a different location, specify the location that you want to install to, and then click Install Now. 4. When Setup finishes, a dialog box prompts you to complete the configuration of your server. Be sure that the Run the SharePoint Products and Technologies Configuration Wizard now check box is selected. 5. Click Close to start the Farm Configuration Wizard.Run PSConfig to register services In this task you will register the Office Web Apps services on a single SharePoint server. This task must be completed on each server in the server farm. To run PSConfig to register the services 1. On the Welcome to SharePoint Products page, click Next. 2. In the dialog box that notifies you that some services might need to be restarted or reset during configuration, click Yes. 3. On the Modify server farm settings page, select Do not disconnect from this server farm, and then click Next. 4. On the Configuration Successful page, click Finish. Your new SharePoint site opens.Run the SharePoint Farm Configuration Wizard to start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature In this task you will start the service instances on all servers in the farm, create the service applications and service application proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature on all existing site collections. This task must be completed after Setup.exe and PSConfig has been run on each server in the server farm. To run the SharePoint Farm Configuration Wizard to start the service instances, create the service applications and proxies, and activate the Office Web Apps Feature 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, click Configuration Wizards. 3. On the Configuration Wizards page, click Launch the Farm Configuration Wizard. 4. In the Farm Configuration Wizard welcome page, choose Walk me through the settings using this wizard, and then click Next. 5. On the Configure your SharePoint Farm page, in Service Account, type a name for the Farm admin account. 6. In Services, select the Office Web Apps services that you want to activate, and then click Next. 7. Create an optional new top-level site. On the Create Site Collection page, follow the wizard steps to create a new top-level site. 8. On the Configure your SharePoint Farm page, click Finish.Additional configuration (optional) This section discusses additional configurations that are optional. Configure the SharePoint default open behavior for browser-enabled documents In SharePoint, you can configure whether browser-enabled documents are opened in a client application or in the browser. By default, when Office Web Apps is installed, Office documents will then open in the browser. You can override this setting using the SharePoint OpenInClient feature. The OpenInClient feature can be configured in Central Administration or by using the SPFeature cmdlet in Windows PowerShell. How documents open in SharePoint varies depending on whether or not the OpenInClient feature is present, and either enabled or disabled: If the OpenInClient feature is not present and Office Web Apps is not installed, documents will open in the client application (SharePoint default). If the OpenInClient feature is not present, Office Web Apps is installed and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents will open in the browser (Office Web Apps default). If the OpenInClient feature is present and enabled, and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents will open in the client application. If the OpenInClient feature is present and disabled, and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents in will open in the browser. Caution: When you run Setup.exe to install Office Web Apps, setup will take control of the default open behavior in SharePoint to register Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote documents to be opened in their associated Web app. If a user clicks on a document in SharePoint after Setup.exe has been run, but before the Office Web Apps Services and Feature have been activated, the user can get a broken link in the browser. When installing Office Web Apps in a live production environment, it is strongly recommended that you enable the OpenInClient Feature prior to running Office Web Apps setup. To set the default open behavior for site collections by using Central Administration 1. In SharePoint Central Administration, click Site Actions, and then click Site Settings. 2. On the Site Settings page, under Site Collection Administration, click Site Collection Features. 3. On the Features page, for the Open Documents in Client Applications by Default feature, click Activate (OpenInClient Feature is enabled) to open documents in the client application. Click Deactivate (OpenInClient Feature is disabled) to open documents in the browser.To set the SharePoint Default open behavior for browser-enabled documents to open in the browser by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example disables the default open behavior in SharePoint. $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OpenInClient"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{ Disable-SPFeature $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To set the SharePoint Default open behavior for browser-enabled documents to open in the client application by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file, and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example sets the default open behavior for all documents in all sites to open in the client application (if available). $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OpenInClient"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{ Enable-SPFeature $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1Troubleshooting ProblemOffice Web Apps is installed, but documents do not open in their associated Web app in the browser. SolutionVerify the Office Web Apps Feature has been activated for the site collection in which the document resides. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z825"Activate the Office Web Apps Feature. SolutionVerify the service instances have been started. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z824"Start the service instances. SolutionVerify the service applications and proxies have been created. In SharePoint Central Administration, in Application Management, click Manage service applications. Verify the Word Viewing service application, PowerPoint service application, and Excel Services Application are started. If they are not started, verify the service instances have been started. SolutionVerify the SharePoint OpenInClient Feature is not enabled. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z817"Additional configuration (optional). ProblemThe Office Web Apps opens fine in view mode, but when a user clicks the Edit in Word, Edit in PowerPoint, or Edit in Excel button on the toolbar, an error is displayed. SolutionVerify that the Office Web Apps Feature is activated and the Word Viewing Service, PowerPoint Service, and Excel Calculation Services are started. ProblemWhen running setup, the product key will not validate. SolutionVerify you are installing an Office Web Apps version compatible with your version of SharePoint 2010 Products. Office Web Apps Trial Edition cannot be installed on a server with licensed SharePoint 2010 products. SolutionVerify you have a valid Microsoft Office 2010 volume license. PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show Articles in this section provide IT Pros information about understanding, planning, and configuring Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Broadcast Slide Show as part of Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organization. In this section: ArticleDescriptionHYPERLINK \l "z50935f738c40466281e1319b7325cbd7"Understanding Broadcast Slide ShowThis article provides valuable information to help IT Pros understand Broadcast Slide Show and how it can benefit users in their organizations.HYPERLINK \l "z2838dd310a054be9b1f43f6dee707b82"Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps)This article provides information to help IT Pros plan how to use Broadcast Slide Show in their organizations.HYPERLINK \l "zcc38b439f9af42e6972dbc92648b09dd"Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps)This article provides IT Pros information on how to configure a Broadcast site.HYPERLINK \l "z791c9613498a47b087977a0346d3f6db"Configure Broadcast Slide Show performance (Office Web Apps)This article provides IT Pros information on how to configure a Broadcast Slide Show for maximum performance.HYPERLINK \l "zb03d1ce9c336482bab695cc83ec2e08f"Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show)This article provides information about using Group Policy to manage certain features in Broadcast Slide Show. Understanding Broadcast Slide Show Broadcast Slide Show is a new capability in Microsoft Office 2010 that enables presenters to broadcast a slide show from Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 to remote viewers who watch in a Web browser. Broadcast Slide Show provides organizations with a low-infrastructure presentation broadcast capability that works through the Web. The proliferation of high-bandwidth networks and growing ubiquity of wireless connectivity have brought significant changes in the way people communicate and collaborate. After its initial release, PowerPoint was used primarily as a tool for making presentations to an in-person, on-site audience. Over time, however, it has become more and more common for users to present a slide show over a Web or network connection to remote attendees or to mix remote and on-site attendees for the same presentation. Broadcast Slide Show now offers this capability to users through the public HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=182216&clcid=0x409"PowerPoint Broadcast Service (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=182216&clcid=0x409), and to business customers with Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organizations. Information provided in this article is intended for IT Pros planning to use Broadcast Slide Show in their organizations. New and updated content will be published on a regular basis. For more information about how to plan effectively for Broadcast Slide Show in your organization, see HYPERLINK \l "z2838dd310a054be9b1f43f6dee707b82"Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps). SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z1029"Broadcast Slide Show Overview HYPERLINK \l "z1030"Understanding the presenter experience HYPERLINK \l "z1031"Understanding the attendee experience HYPERLINK \l "z1032"Broadcast Slide Show features HYPERLINK \l "z1033"Managing Broadcast Slide Show HYPERLINK \l "z1034"Broadcast Slide Show and Microsoft Live Meeting HYPERLINK \l "z1035"Summary Broadcast Slide Show Overview Broadcast Slide Show provides a low-infrastructure remote slide show capability through PowerPoint 2010. Common broadcast scenarios include: Provide an impromptu, one-on-one broadcast Invite multiple viewers at remote locations to view a presentation at any time Present a slide show to both on-site and remote attendees at the same time in the context of a training session, meeting, or conference call Understanding the presenter experience Broadcast Slide Show gives presenters a streamlined user experience that works through PowerPoint 2010 without any additional client software. Within PowerPoint 2010, the presenter clicks the Slide Show tab, and selects Broadcast Slide Show. The presenter is then provided a list of broadcast services to choose from. This list may include internal and external providers, and can be centrally controlled by administrators. The presenter then clicks Start Broadcast and is provided with a URL that attendees can use to connect to the slide show through the Web. The presenter can then send this URL to attendees in a number of ways, including an automatically generated e-mail message, or through instant messaging (IM). During the broadcast, the presenter can pause the slide show at any time, resend the Broadcast URL to any attendees, or switch to another application without interrupting the broadcast or showing their computer's desktop to attendees. Understanding the attendee experience Broadcast Slide Show enables attendees to quickly connect to a slide show broadcast through the Web without requiring any additional client software installation. Supported browsers include: Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 and 8 Firefox 3.5 Safari 4 on the Macintosh An attendee receives the slide show URL or link from the presenter through e-mail, IM, or other channel. The attendee then clicks the link and connects to the slide show URL in a Web browser. Until the presenter begins, attendees will see a message telling them that the slide show has not yet started. When the presenter begins, attendees will then see the slide show presentation in their local browser in real-time, as it is presented. When the presenter ends the broadcast, all attendees will see a message telling them that the broadcast is over. Broadcast Slide Show features Attendees can see a near full-fidelity slide show synchronized with the presenter, including animations that play at the same time. While a Broadcast Slide Show can provide a near full-fidelity experience, the following limitations do apply: AudioSlide show audio will not be heard by attendees through PowerPoint. For remote presentations, users may elect to supplement slide show broadcasts with audio through a personal phone call or conference call. VideoAttendees will only see the static poster frame of any video clips. TransitionsAttendees will only see a fade-in transition between slides. Ink drawings and markupPresenters will not be able to add ink annotations or markup during the broadcast. ActiveX controlsAttendees will see only a static image of the control and will not be able to interact with it. Hyperlinks to other presentationsIf the presenter clicks a hyperlink to another presentation, attendees will continue to see the most recent slide the presenter showed in the original presentation. Managing Broadcast Slide Show Broadcast Slide Show is designed to provide administrators a simple management experience without requiring extensive additional infrastructure. Broadcast Slide Show provides the following: Available ServicesAdministrators can choose between a locally-hosted broadcast service, the public PowerPoint Broadcast Service, or both. Up to 10 broadcast services can be used. Service ListA presenter who initiates a broadcast is given a list of broadcast services to choose from. This can be managed through Group Policy. For example, administrators can decide whether to include the public PowerPoint Broadcast Service in this list, a local server, or both. Permissions Administrators can determine which users or groups have permission to broadcast slide shows or attend slide show broadcasts. Group PolicyBroadcast Slide Show can be managed using Group Policy and includes the ability to enable or disable the service, manage the service list, and customize the user experience. For more information about managing Broadcast Slide Show using Group Policy, see HYPERLINK \l "zb03d1ce9c336482bab695cc83ec2e08f"Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show). Broadcast Slide Show and Microsoft Live Meeting Broadcast Slide Show and Microsoft Live Meeting are complementary technologies, each providing a different level of functionality and end-user experience. Microsoft Live Meeting provides a hosted solution for broad communication and collaboration, including sharing applications, interactive collaboration, chat, and other collaboration features. Broadcast Slide Show and Microsoft Live Meeting Broadcast Slide ShowMicrosoft Live MeetingClient SoftwareIncluded in Office PowerPoint 2010LiveMeeting clientHostingAvailable with or without internally hosted serverInternally hosted or through an externally hosted serviceBroadcastPowerPoint slide show onlyAny desktop applicationPurposeJust-in-time shared slideshowsBroad communication and collaboration capabilitiesUse whenYou want a low-infrastructure solution for impromptu slideshow broadcastsYou want a complete Web conferencing solution with collaboration tools Summary Broadcast Slide Show gives organizations options to provide broadcast slideshow services to users either as an internally-hosted service or as a service accessed over the Internet. This flexibility helps organizations to provide a low-infrastructure slide show option that fits their business scenarios and requirements. The next step in implementing Broadcast Slide Show in your organization is to plan how both presenters and attendees will use Broadcast Slide Show and how administrators can configure Broadcast Slide Show. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z2838dd310a054be9b1f43f6dee707b82"Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps). Planning Broadcast Slide Show (Office Web Apps) Broadcast Slide Show is a new capability in Microsoft Office 2010 that enables presenters to broadcast a slide show from Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 to remote viewers who watch in a Web browser. Broadcast Slide Show provides companies with a low-infrastructure presentation broadcast capability that works through the Web. Information provided in this article is intended for IT Pros planning to use Broadcast Slide Show as part of Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on-premises in their organizations. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. New and updated content will be published on a regular basis. Before planning your Broadcast Slide Show solution, it is recommended you first read HYPERLINK \l "z50935f738c40466281e1319b7325cbd7"Understanding Broadcast Slide Show. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z1137"Plan service types HYPERLINK \l "z1138"Plan broadcast site location HYPERLINK \l "z1139"Plan permissions HYPERLINK \l "z1140"Use Group Policy to manage Broadcast Slide Show HYPERLINK \l "z1141"Summary Plan service types Two types of broadcast services are available: PowerPoint Broadcast ServiceBy default, PowerPoint 2010 provides all presenters with a link to the public PowerPoint Broadcast Service hosted by Microsoft. This service requires presenters to sign in with a Windows Live ID. Presenters who use this service receive a public Internet link that they can share with anyone on the Internet they invite. Internal ServicesYou can host your own broadcast service with Office Web Apps installed on SharePoint 2010 Products. You create one or more broadcast services by creating sites collections that use the PowerPoint Broadcast site template and set permissions for who can use the service through group membership on the site. Up to ten services can be specified. Service types Service typeUser typeConnection typeIntended forPowerPoint Broadcast ServiceInternal & ExternalInternet ConnectionSmaller businesses with limited IT resources Organization wanting a low impact solution for internal and external presentations Organizations with fewer content security or compliance requirementsInternal ServiceUsers with permissions to SharePoint broadcast siteOffice Web Apps installed on SharePoint 2010 ProductsLarger businesses with dedicated IT resources Organization whose communication and collaboration needs are primarily internal Organizations with strict content security or compliance requirements Plan broadcast site location If you perform a standalone installation of Office Web Apps, or run the Farm Configuration Wizard with the PowerPoint service application service selected, the PowerPoint service application is automatically created. A default broadcast site collection is also created under the default Web application at http:///sites/broadcast. In most cases, this URL is http:///sites/broadcast, where is the name of the server. NT Authority/Authenticated Users is automatically added to the Broadcast Presenters and Broadcast Attendees groups of this default site, granting all users access to create and view broadcasts. You can also create one or more broadcast sites manually by creating a new site collection in SharePoint using the PowerPoint Broadcast Site template. For more information about creating a Broadcast Slide Show site, see HYPERLINK \l "zcc38b439f9af42e6972dbc92648b09dd"Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps). Plan permissions An internal deployment of Broadcast Slide Show enables broadcasting using the functionality provided by PowerPoint Web App and a SharePoint site. Administrators can control which users can present and attend by giving users the appropriate permissions to this site. Three levels of permission are available: Broadcast PresenterGives users permission to broadcast. Broadcast AttendeesGives users permission to attend broadcasts. Broadcast AdministratorsGives users permission to change membership on the site. Most organizations will be able to provide broadcast services to all their users through a single default installation of Broadcast Slide Show. For additional flexibility, an organization may choose to configure multiple broadcast sites with different permissions. For example, a company wants to provide broadcast services to their product marketing department to share presentations internally. They create a new broadcast site and grant permissions only to members of the marketing department. Use Group Policy to manage Broadcast Slide Show Organizations can use Group Policy to configure and manage Broadcast Slide Show. Broadcast Slide Show supports the following Group Policy controls: List of Broadcast Services Up to 10 services may be specified Ability to specify name, URL, and description for each Disable access to the public PowerPoint Broadcast Service Prevent users from adding to the list of broadcast services Turn off access to Broadcast Slide Show through the PowerPoint desktop application Turn off programmatic access to the Broadcast Slide Show object model For more information on how to use Group Policy to manage Broadcast Slide Show, see HYPERLINK \l "zb03d1ce9c336482bab695cc83ec2e08f"Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show). Summary Information provided in this article can help you when planning a Broadcast Slide Show solution for your organization. The next step in your Broadcast Slide Show solution is to configure broadcast sites. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "zcc38b439f9af42e6972dbc92648b09dd"Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps). Configure a Broadcast site (Office Web Apps) The information provided in this article about configuring a Broadcast Slide Show site is aimed at IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Configure a PowerPoint Broadcast site Broadcast Slide Show requires that Office Web Apps be installed on SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or server farm, the PowerPoint service application be created, and a broadcast site collection be created. If the PowerPoint service application has been created during post-setup configuration of a stand-alone installation or by running the Farm Configuration Wizard, a default broadcast site is also created. In most cases, the default sites URL is http:///sites/broadcast. Setup also installs a broadcast site template. Multiple site collections that use the broadcast site template can be created. If the PowerPoint service application has not been created during post-setup configuration of a stand-alone installation or by running the Farm Configuration Wizard, you can create the PowerPoint service application manually. To learn about creating Office Web Apps service applications manually, see Activate the Office Web Apps services and feature by using PowerShell in HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). If the PowerPoint service application is created manually, to use PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show, a PowerPoint Broadcast site must also be created manually. For Broadcast Slide Show sites that were created manually, administrators must give users appropriate permissions through SharePoint 2010 Products to broadcast a slide show and to attend broadcast slide shows. For Broadcast Slide Show sites that were created by default, authenticated users are added to both the Broadcast Presenters and Broadcast Attendees groups; however, it is recommended that administrators verify that appropriate permissions are given for their organization. Important: Users should not be granted Full Control or Full Read policy permissions to a Web Application that contains a broadcast site collection. This circumvents the permissions on the broadcast site and might allow users to access broadcast documents. Procedures in this task: HYPERLINK \l "z1243"To create a PowerPoint broadcast site by using Central Administration HYPERLINK \l "z1244"To create a PowerPoint broadcast site by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z1245"To configure permissions on the broadcast site by using a Web browser HYPERLINK \l "z1246"To configure permissions on the broadcast site by using Windows PowerShell Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin is already registered, and the snapin is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To create a PowerPoint broadcast site by using Central Administration 1. Verify that you have the following administrative credentials: To create a PowerPoint broadcast site, you must be a member of the Farm Administrators SharePoint group on the computer that is running the SharePoint Central Administration Web site. 2. On the Central Administration Web site, in Application Management, click Create site collections. 3. On the Create Site Collection page, specify the following settings. Web ApplicationSpecify the Web application that will contain the site or use the default selection (recommended). TitleEnter the user-friendly title of the site. DescriptionEnter an optional description of the broadcast service URLThis is the URL where users will access this broadcast service. Template SelectionClick Enterprise and then select PowerPoint Broadcast Site. Primary Site Collection AdministratorEnter or browse for a user to be the primary site collection administrator. Secondary Site Collection AdministratorEnter or browse for a user to be the secondary site collection administrator (optional). Quota TemplateAdd a quota template to this site (optional). 4. Verify settings and then click OK.To create a PowerPoint broadcast site by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $rootSites = Get-SPWebApplication | Get-SPSite -Limit ALL | where { $_.ServerRelativeUrl -eq "/" } $bcastTmpl = Get-SPWebTemplate | where { $_.Name -eq "PowerPointBroadcast#0" foreach ($rootSite in $rootSites) { $url = $rootSite.Url + "/sites/broadcast" New-SPSite -Url $url -OwnerAlias "contoso\admin" -Template $bcastTmpl} 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value URL Broadcast Site URL OwnerAlias Domain\alias 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To configure permissions on the broadcast site by using a Web browser 1. In a Web browser, browse to the broadcast site. 2. In the broadcast site, click Site Actions, and then click Site Permissions. 3. On the Permissions menu bar, click Grant Permissions, and then select one of the following. To allow users or groups to broadcast, add them to the Broadcast Presenters group. To allow users or groups to attend a slide show presented through Broadcast Slide Show, add them to the Broadcast Attendees group. To allow users or groups to administer the site and change group membership, add them to the Broadcast Administrators group.To configure permissions on the broadcast site by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. New-SPUser -web $url -UserAlias "NT AUTHORITY\Authenticated Users" -Group "Broadcast Attendees" New-SPUser -web $url -UserAlias "NT AUTHORITY\Authenticated Users" -Group "Broadcast Presenters" 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value -UserAlias Domain\Name Domain\Group -Group Broadcast Attendees Broadcast Presenters 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/11d6521f-f99c-433e-9ab5-7cf9e953457a(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPWebApplication (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/11d6521f-f99c-433e-9ab5-7cf9e953457a(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPSite (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/dfd10bac-c304-4f3f-bea9-eb0af5f96df5(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPWebTemplate (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/dfd10bac-c304-4f3f-bea9-eb0af5f96df5(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/b8d7f8df-d5df-4497-a55b-dbe56b1c6fbb(Office.14).aspx"New-SPUser (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/b8d7f8df-d5df-4497-a55b-dbe56b1c6fbb(Office.14).aspx) Configure Broadcast Slide Show performance (Office Web Apps) The information provided in this article about configuring Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Broadcast Slide Show performance is intended for IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm on-premises in their organization. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Important: Performance and capacity guidance provided in this article is preliminary and subject to change. Your results may vary. When using Microsoft PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show, the Broadcast Slide Show attendee's browser will poll the Broadcast Slide Show server once per second to check for updates in the slide show presentation. If there is a high number of attendees, this can cause an excessive load on the Web front-end servers, and in extreme cases can disrupt other services on the server farm. By default, Broadcast Slide Show is optimized to support broadcasts of fewer than 50 attendees; however, additional attendees are not prevented from joining the presentation. In cases where a Broadcast Slide Show presentation may have more attendees, administrators can optimize Broadcast Slide Show performance by using one or more of the methods described in this article. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z1352"Deploy a dedicated SharePoint server farm HYPERLINK \l "z1353"Configure broadcast capacity HYPERLINK \l "z1354"Configure the polling interval HYPERLINK \l "z1355"Modify throttling to limit Web front-end resource usage HYPERLINK \l "z1356"Change the maximum duration of a broadcast HYPERLINK \l "z1357"Set a time limit for idle broadcasts Deploy a dedicated SharePoint server farm In organizations that will use PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show for a high number of attendees on a regular basis, administrators can deploy a dedicated SharePoint server farm for PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show. For more information about how to plan and deploy a dedicated server farm, see HYPERLINK \l "z3bd0a6175f124a7ebb75b15c86c7e504"Planning Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) and HYPERLINK \l "za5276781133b413cbecab851e17c2081"Deploy Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products). Configure broadcast capacity To increase the rate at which the PowerPoint service processes broadcast requests, administrators can add the behaviorConfiguration="MaxPendingRecieves" setting for endpoint elements for the BroadcastStateService service and add the MaxPendingReceives behavior to the endpointBehaviors element in the Web.config file on middle-tier servers. Important: Adding this setting will increase the number of attendees who can attend broadcasts. However, this may increase resources used by middle-tier servers. This setting is recommended only for a dedicated broadcast server farm, or for a server farm where significant broadcast usage is anticipated. Adding this setting may require modifying multiple Web.config files on each farm server. For more information about working with Web.config files, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=183741&clcid=0x409"Working with Web.config Files at (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms460914(office.14).aspx.) To increase broadcast capacity, use Notepad to edit the Web.config file at C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Web Server Extensions\14\WebServices\PowerPoint\Web.config The following example increases broadcast service capacity by adding the behaviorConfiguration="MaxPendingRecieves" setting and adding the MaxPendingReceives behavior to the endpointBehaviors element in the Web.config file: Recommended values To increase capacity, the recommended value specified for the maxPendingRecieves setting is 10. By default, when the MaxPendingRecieves behavior is not present, the effective value is 1. BehaviorSettingValueMaxPendingReceivesmaxPendingReceives10 Caution: Changes that you make to Web.config may be overwritten when you install updates or service packs for SharePoint 2010 Products, or when you upgrade an installation to the next product version. Configure the polling interval In organizations that will use PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show for a high number of attendees on a regular basis, but cannot deploy a dedicated SharePoint server farm for PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show, administrators can change the polling interval value, which determines how frequently attendees poll the Broadcast Slide Show server to check for updates in the presentation. Increasing the polling interval value will decrease polling traffic, but will increase time elapsed before attendees see changes in presentation. The polling interval can be specified in milliseconds (1000 milliseconds = 1 second) by using Windows PowerShell. To configure the polling interval by using Windows PowerShell 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt (PS C:\>), type the following command, and then press ENTER: Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy | Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy -BroadcastBrowserHealthyStatePollIntervalInMilliSeconds 2000 For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx), and HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx).Modify throttling to limit Web front-end resource usage Administrators can modify the maxConcurrentCalls setting for the serviceThrottling element for ViewServiceTypeBehaviors and ViewServiceTypeBehaviorsHttps behaviors in the PowerPoint viewing Web.config file. This setting limits Web front-end resources used for views by the PowerPoint Web App and PowerPoint Broadcast Slide Show. Modifying this setting requires modifying the Web.config files on each front-end farm server. For more information about working with Web.config files, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=183741&clcid=0x409"Working with Web.config Files at (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms460914(office.14).aspx.) To modify throttling to limit Web front-end usage, use notepad to edit the Web.config file in IIS at C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Web Server Extensions\14\isapi\ppt\Web.config The following example specifies four serviceThrottling maxConcurrentCalls for each behavior on a server with four CPUs: Recommended values The values specified should be determined by the number of CPUs on the server. BehaviorSettingValueViewServiceTypeBehaviorsserviceThrottling maxConcurrentCalls2-5ViewServiceTypeBehaviorsHttpsserviceThrottling maxConcurrentCalls2-5 Caution: Changes that you make to Web.config may be overwritten when you install updates or service packs for SharePoint 2010 Products, or when you upgrade an installation to the next product version. Change the maximum duration of a broadcast By default, a broadcast will expire after 12 hours. This supports long meetings and presenters who create a broadcast and send invitations several hours before starting a meeting. However, a long broadcast duration can cause continued server load if a presenter neglects to end the broadcast after the meeting and attendees keep their browser open after the meeting. The maximum duration of a broadcast can be specified (in seconds) by using Windows PowerShell. To change the maximum duration of a broadcast by using Windows PowerShell 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt (PS C:\>), type the following command, and then press ENTER: Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy | Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy -BroadcastSessionTimeoutInSeconds 21600. 6. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt (PS C:\>), type the following command, and then press ENTER: Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplication | Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -BroadcastStateIdleTimeoutInSeconds 21600. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx), and HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx).Set a time limit for idle broadcasts An additional setting can be enabled to force PowerPoint to end a broadcast after a specified length of time being idle. By default, this setting is 0 indicating that there is no idle limit. Care should be taken when changing this setting as valid broadcasts may be idle if the presenter creates the broadcast several hours before a meeting or if there are breaks during a meeting. The broadcast idle timeout (in seconds) can be specified by using Windows PowerShell. To set a limit for idle broadcasts by using Windows PowerShell 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt (PS C:\>), type the following command, and then press ENTER: Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy | Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy -BroadcastPresenterIdleTimeoutInSeconds 14400 For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/016dd429-d58a-451e-bf40-7fa3b10131c0(Office.14).aspx), and HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplicationProxy. (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5e6bf5f6-e715-4e9c-af99-d61c9914ccd4(Office.14).aspx) Configure Group Policy settings (Broadcast Slide Show) The information provided in this article about configuring Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Broadcast Slide Show Group Policy settings is aimed at IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm on premises in their organization. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Manage Broadcast Slide Show by using Group Policy To use Group Policy to manage Broadcast Slide Show requires the Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Administrative Template. To configure Broadcast Slide Show Group Policy settings in the administrative template, use Group Policy Object Editor. The Broadcast object in the Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 Administrative Template includes the following policy settings: Disable default service Enable the Disable default service policy to remove the default PowerPoint Broadcast Service from the Broadcast Slide Show dialog box. Disable programmatic accessEnable the Disable programmatic access policy to restrict the ability to create a broadcast programmatically. Prevent access to user-specified servicesEnable this policy to prevent users from adding their own services or accessing services they previously added through the Broadcast Slide Show dialog box In the Broadcast Services object, you can configure up to 10 broadcast services. Broadcast service policy settings include the following properties: Name:The name of the service as it will appear to users in the Broadcast Slide Show dialog bog. Service URL: The URL of the broadcast SharePoint site you created earlier. Description:An optional description of the service. Information URL: An optional URL for users to get more information about the service. Service agreement URL:An optional URL for users to find a service agreement for the service. Disable Broadcast Slide Show by using Group Policy You can disable the Broadcast Slide Show button on the Slide Tab of PowerPoint 2010 by using Group Policy. To disable the Broadcast Slide Show button on the Slide Tab 1. In Group Policy Management Editor, expand User Configuration, expand Administrative Templates, expand Microsoft PowerPoint 2010, expand Disable Items in User Interface, and then select Predefined. 2. In the right pane, double-click Disable Commands. 3. Select Enabled, and then select Slide Show tab | Start Slide Show | Broadcast Slide Show.. Manage Office Web Apps (Installed on SharePoint 2010 Products) This section explains how to perform common management tasks for Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. In this section: ArticleDescriptionHYPERLINK \l "z0bef827314134cb293a7b9332de74c3d"Activate the Office Web Apps Feature on site collectionsProvides information on how to activate or deactivate the Office Web Apps Feature on existing site collections.HYPERLINK \l "z9a75a4616c864b61be98bcaf9290f2da"Manage the Office Web Apps cacheProvides information on how to manage the Office Web Apps cache that is part of a SharePoint content database.HYPERLINK \l "ze27e0bc85fb54bb18157d7c90654175e"Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps)Provides information on how to configure how documents in SharePoint are opened after Office Web Apps is installed.HYPERLINK \l "zd044e2396a184a9bae584011abf713fd"Configure PowerPoint service application settingsProvides information on how to configure settings for the PowerPoint service application.HYPERLINK \l "z545c8c8ca7334df3b355493c7518e5b9"Configure Word Viewing service settingsProvides information on how to configure settings for the Word Viewing service.HYPERLINK \l "z5541c41e4aff4471bf29cd667b2eb382"Configure Excel Services Application settings (Office Web Apps)Provides information on how to configure settings for the Excel Services Application. Activate the Office Web Apps Feature on site collections The information in this article on how to activate the Microsoft Office Web Apps Feature on site collections is intended for IT pros who maintain Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Activate the Office Web Apps Feature for a site collection The Office Web Apps Feature should be activated on every site collection for which any of the Web apps will be available. Typically, you activate the Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection during the deployment phase after you run setup and activate the services; however, in some cases, you can choose to later activate only on particular site collections and deactivate on others. Important: Office Web Apps will not work for documents in Information Rights Management (IRM) protected libraries. For IRM-protected document libraries, it is recommended that the Default open behavior for browser enabled documents setting be configured to open in the client application. For more information about configuring the default open behavior, see HYPERLINK \l "ze27e0bc85fb54bb18157d7c90654175e"Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps). Procedures in this task: HYPERLINK \l "z1659"To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z1660"To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Central Administration HYPERLINK \l "z1661"To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on a single site collection by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z1662"To deactivate the Office Web Apps Feature on a single site collection by using Windows PowerShell Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in is already registered, and the snap-in is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on all site collections by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 3. From the Windows PowerShell command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To activate Office Web Apps Feature on a site collection by using Central Administration 1. Click Start, point to All Programs, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products, and then SharePoint 2010 Central Administration. 2. On the SharePoint Central Administration home page, click Site Actions and then click Site Settings. 3. On the Site Settings page, in Site Collection Administration, click Site Collection Features. 4. On the Features page, for Office Web Apps, click Activate.To activate the Office Web Apps Feature on a single site collection by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id $singleSiteCollection = Get-SPSite -Identity http:// Enable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId -Url $singleSiteCollection.URL 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value Identity URL 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To deactivate the Office Web Apps Feature on a single site collection by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. $webAppsFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OfficeWebApps"}).Id $singleSiteCollection = Get-SPSite -Identity http:// Disable-SPFeature $webAppsFeatureId -Url $singleSiteCollection.URL 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value Identity URL 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPSite (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f00cddab-fc38-42fb-8bb7-c9aec2e99a28(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPFeature (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f00cddab-fc38-42fb-8bb7-c9aec2e99a28(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/9b68c192-b640-4cb8-8a92-a98008169b27(Office.14).aspx"Enable-SPFeature (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/9b68c192-b640-4cb8-8a92-a98008169b27(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/c10fbc69-088c-4e49-9005-fde54c035f23(Office.14).aspx"Disable-SPFeature (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/c10fbc69-088c-4e49-9005-fde54c035f23(Office.14).aspx) Manage the Office Web Apps cache The information provided in this article about managing the Microsoft Office Web Apps cache is intended for IT pros who maintain Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Manage the Office Web Apps cache The Microsoft Word Web App and Microsoft PowerPoint Web App generate a series of images to create a rendition of a document that is viewable in the browser. If Microsoft Silverlight 3 is installed, XAML is used to create the rendition. Creating the rendition can consume large amounts of computer resources. To reduce resource consumption, the Word Web App and PowerPoint Web App store the renditions in a cache, created as part of a SharePoint content database. Renditions in the cache are then used for future requests of a view of the same document. In an environment where most documents change infrequently, but are viewed regularly, maximizing the space dedicated to the cache or the expiration period, can improve performance and reduce resource consumption. In an environment where most documents change frequently, you can optimize performance by reducing the amount of space that is dedicated to the cache, or by reducing the amount of time documents are stored in the cache. Both the Word Web App and PowerPoint Web App will run in the context of a single SharePoint Web application. Only one cache is created per SharePoint Web application. If multiple site collections that are stored in different content databases have the Office Web Apps Feature activated, they will all use the same cache. You can configure the cache by using the following settings: Cache sizeSpace available in bytes to render documents. By default, when you install Office Web Apps on a stand-alone server or a server farm, the cache available to render documents is 100 GB (1073741824 in bytes). Expiration periodNumber of days that document renditions can remain in the cache before they are purged and rendered again. By default, the cache expiration period is 30 days. LocationDatabase location for the cache (a SharePoint content database). You may want to isolate the Office Web Apps cache from other content, so that you can exclude it from backups. To do so, you can create a separate content database, set it to contain only one site collection, and then configure the Office Web Apps cache to use that database. Timer jobsOffice Web Apps includes two timer jobs associated with the cache. You can view timer job definitions, job status, and edit timer job settings in Central Administration. Timer job titleDescriptionOffice Web Apps Cache CreationEnsures that every SharePoint Web application, on which the Office Web Apps are activated, has an Office Web Apps cache associated with it.By default, this timer job runs every 5 minutes.Office Web Apps ExpirationExpires older documents, and ensures that the Office Web Apps cache does not run out of space.By default, this timer job runs nightly. Procedures in this task: HYPERLINK \l "z1767"To set the Office Web Apps cache size and expiration period by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z1768"To move the Office Web Apps cache database location by using Windows PowerShell Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin is already registered, and the snapin is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To set the Office Web Apps cache size and expiration period by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example sets a cache size of 200 in bytes and an expiration period of 30 days. $200gbInBytes = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 * 200 Get-SPWebApplication | Set-SPOfficeWebAppsCache -ExpirationPeriodInDays 30 -MaxSizeInBytes $200gbInBytes 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value ExpirationPeriodInDays Number (in days) MaxSizeInBytes Number (in bytes) 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. To run the script, in the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To move the Office Web Apps cache database location by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example moves the cache associated with the http://contoso Web application to the ContosoDB database. $webapp = "http://contoso" $newDB = New-SPContentDatabase -Name ContosoDB -WebApplication $webapp -DatabaseServer ContosoServer1 Get-SPOfficeWebAppsCache -WebApplication $webapp | Move-SPSite -DestinationDatabase $newDB 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value -WebApplication Web application URL -Name Database name DatabaseServer Server name 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. To run the script, in the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/36abcf93-dfc5-4577-b773-20e9272efdca(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPOfficeWebAppsCache (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/36abcf93-dfc5-4577-b773-20e9272efdca(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a54567ed-8156-4bcf-905b-91a20db68a89(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPOfficeWebAppsCache (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a54567ed-8156-4bcf-905b-91a20db68a89(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/11d6521f-f99c-433e-9ab5-7cf9e953457a(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPWebApplication (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/11d6521f-f99c-433e-9ab5-7cf9e953457a(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a4a83bb0-0bab-4cad-9b59-0fd89a16f57b(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPContentDatabase (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a4a83bb0-0bab-4cad-9b59-0fd89a16f57b(Office.14).aspx) Configure the default open behavior for browser-enabled documents (Office Web Apps) Information provided in this article about configuring the default open behavior for documents is intended for IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. Configure the default open behavior for documents In SharePoint, you can configure whether browser-enabled documents are opened in a client application or in the browser. By default, when Office Web Apps is installed, Office documents will open in the browser. You can override this setting using the SharePoint OpenInClient feature. The OpenInClient feature can be configured in Central Administration or by using the SPFeature cmdlet in Windows PowerShell. How documents open in SharePoint varies depending on whether or not the OpenInClient feature is present, and either enabled or disabled: If the OpenInClient feature is not present and Office Web Apps is not installed, documents will open in the client application (SharePoint default). If the OpenInClient feature is not present, Office Web Apps is installed and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents will open in the browser (Office Web Apps default). If the OpenInClient Feature is present and enabled, and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents will open in the client application. If the OpenInClient Feature is present and disabled, and Office Web Apps service applications are activated, documents in will open in the browser. Caution: When you run Setup.exe to install Office Web Apps, setup will take control of the default open behavior in SharePoint to register Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote documents to be opened in their associated Web app. If a user clicks on a document in SharePoint after Setup.exe has been run, but before the Office Web Apps Services and Feature have been activated, the user can get a broken link in the browser. When installing Office Web Apps in a live production environment, it is strongly recommended that you enable the OpenInClient Feature prior to running Office Web Apps setup. Procedures in this task: HYPERLINK \l "z1871"To set the default open behavior for site collections by using Central Administration HYPERLINK \l "z1872"To set the default open behavior for site collections by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z1873"To set the default open behavior for a document library by using the document library settings page HYPERLINK \l "z1874"To set the default open behavior for IRM protected document libraries by using Windows PowerShell Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snap-in is already registered, and the snap-in is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183975&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183975&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To set the default open behavior for site collections by using Central Administration 1. In SharePoint Central Administration, click Site Actions, and then click Site Settings. 2. On the Site Settings page, under Site Collection Administration, click Site Collection Features. 3. On the Features page, for the Open Documents in Client Applications by Default feature, click Activate (OpenInClient Feature is enabled) to open documents in the client application. Click Deactivate (OpenInClient Feature is disabled) to open documents in the browser.To set the default open behavior for site collections by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. The following example sets the default open behavior for all documents in all sites to open in their associated client application (if available). $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OpenInClient"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{ Enable-SPFeature $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId -url $_.URL } The following example sets the default open behavior for all documents in all sites to open in the browser. $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId = $(Get-SPFeature -limit all | where {$_.displayname -eq "OpenInClient"}).Id Get-SPSite -limit ALL |foreach{ Disable-SPFeature $defaultOpenBehaviorFeatureId -url $_.URL } 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value limit The type must be a valid non-negative number. Specify ALL to return all site collections for the given scope. 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1To set the default open behavior for a document library by using the document library settings page 1. On the : All Documents page, under Library Tools, click Library. 2. In the library tool bar, click Library Settings. 3. On the Document Library Settings page, click Advanced Settings. 4. On the Advanced Settings page, in Opening Document in the Browser, select one of the following options: Open in the client applicationWhen a user clicks on a document in this library, the document will open in the corresponding client application (if available). Open in the browserWhen a user clicks on a document in this library, the document will open in the Web browser Web app for that document type. When the document has been opened in the Web app, the user can then choose to open the document in the client application Use the server defaultWhen a user clicks on a document in this library, the document will open by using the default open behavior specified for the server on which SharePoint 2010 Products is installed.To set the default open behavior for IRM protected document libraries by using Windows PowerShell 1. Using Notepad, open a new text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. The following example sets the default open behavior for IRM protected document libraries in all sites to open in their associated client application (if available). Get-SPWeb -site http://contoso | % {$_.Lists} | where {$_.IrmEnabled -eq $true} | % {$_.DefaultItemOpen =[Microsoft.Sharepoint.DefaultItemOpen]::PreferClient; $_.Update()} 2. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value site URL 3. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 4. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/9bf9284f-e3b9-439d-8a5f-74020e1eccaf(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPWeb (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/9bf9284f-e3b9-439d-8a5f-74020e1eccaf(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPSite (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f3422bf4-0f9b-4f22-94c8-2a0606a31b16(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f00cddab-fc38-42fb-8bb7-c9aec2e99a28(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPFeature (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/f00cddab-fc38-42fb-8bb7-c9aec2e99a28(Office.14).aspx) Configure PowerPoint service application settings The information provided in this article about configuring the PowerPoint service application is aimed at IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. This article contains the following sections: HYPERLINK \l "z1979"Configure the PowerPoint service application settings HYPERLINK \l "z1980"Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell Configure the PowerPoint service application settings The PowerPoint service application settings page allows administrators to set supported file formats, determine or specify a broadcast site URL, and disable presentation scanning. To configure the PowerPoint service application settings 1. Verify that you have the following administrative credentials: To change settings for the Office Web Apps service applications, you must be a member of the Farm Administrators SharePoint group on the computer that is running the SharePoint Central Administration Web site. 2. On the Central Administration Web site, in the Application Management section, click Manage service applications. 3. On the Service Applications page, click PowerPoint Service Application. 4. On the PowerPoint Service Application page, configure the following settings: Supported File FormatsSpecify which presentation types users will be able to view by using this PowerPoint service application. If the file format is not selected, consumers of this service will receive an error when they attempt to view this file type in the Web browser. Office Open XML PresentationSelect this setting to support .pptx, .pptm, .potx, and .potm file formats. PowerPoint 97-2003 PresentationSelect this setting to support .ppt and .pot file formats. Broadcast SiteUsers can connect to a broadcast site from Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 and broadcast a slide show to remote attendees who can watch by using a Web browser. When the PowerPoint service application is created, a default site will be created and its URL displayed. You can create another broadcast site at another location by creating a new site collection using the PowerPoint Broadcast Site template. PowerPoint 97-2003 Presentation ScanningTo provide added security when you are loading Microsoft PowerPoint 97 through PowerPoint 2003 documents, the PowerPoint service application performs extra checks for malicious content before opening the document in the browser. These checks can have an effect on overall server performance. Disable this setting only if you trust all documents that are loaded by this service instance. By default, document scanning is enabled. To disable scanning, select Disable PowerPoint 97-2003 presentation scanning.Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell You can set the maximum number of worker processes that are permitted to service requests for the PowerPoint service application. Set the value for maximum worker processes high enough to allow for a maximum number of service requests without diminishing worker processes from other applications. A low number of worker processes can reduce performance and resource consumption of the PowerPoint service application. Other factors such as cache size and computer specifications might suggest a different number of maximum worker processes. For typical use, it is recommended that you set two worker processes for each service application per core processor. Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin is already registered, and the snapin is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To set maximum worker processes for the PowerPoint Viewing service application by using Windows PowerShell 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example specifies two worker processes for each core processor on a server with four core processors (2 worker processes x 4 core processors): Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplication | Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -ViewingWorkerProcessCount 8 3. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value -ViewingWorkerProcessCount Number (total worker processes) 4. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 5. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/46c1ad6f-a56d-4580-b282-6c76c58292cd(Office.14).aspx"Get-SPPowerPointServiceApplication (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/46c1ad6f-a56d-4580-b282-6c76c58292cd(Office.14).aspx) HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5f934016-0321-4d87-aed3-2ae78e2a5024(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5f934016-0321-4d87-aed3-2ae78e2a5024(Office.14).aspx) Configure Word Viewing service settings The information provided in this article about configuring the Word Viewing service application is aimed at IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm. SharePoint 2010 Products in this article refers to Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010 unless otherwise noted. This article contains the following sections: HYPERLINK \l "z2083"Configure the Word Viewing service application settings HYPERLINK \l "z2084"Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell Configure the Word Viewing service application settings The Word Viewing service application settings page allows administrators to set supported file formats, embedded font support, document scanning, and process settings for users viewing Word documents in a Web browser by using the Word Viewing Web App. To configure the Word Viewing service application settings 1. Verify that you have the following administrative credentials: To change settings for the Office Web Apps service applications, you must be a member of the Farm Administrators SharePoint group on the computer that is running the SharePoint Central Administration Web site. 2. On the Central Administration Web site, in the Application Management section, click Manage service applications. 3. On the Service Applications page, click Word Viewing Service. 4. On the Word Viewing Service page, configure the following settings: Supported File Formats ViewingSpecify which document types users can view by using this Word Viewing service application. If the file format is not selected, consumers of this service will receive an error message when they attempt to view this file type in the Web browser. By default, all file formats are supported. Open XML DocumentSelect this setting to support .docx, .dotx, .docm, and .dotm file formats. Word 97-2003 DocumentSelect this setting to support .doc and .dot file formats. Embedded Font SupportTo preserve visual fidelity across different computers, a user can choose to embed a font within the document. You can use this setting to determine whether embedded fonts are used when viewing or converting documents and presentations. By default, embedded fonts are enabled. Word 97-2003 Document ScanningTo provide added security when loading Microsoft Word 97 through Word 2003 documents, the Word Viewing service application performs extra checks for malicious content before opening the document in the browser. These checks can have an effect on overall server performance. Disable this setting only if you trust all documents that are loaded by this service instance. By default, document scanning is enabled. To disable scanning, under Disable Word 97-2003 presentation scanning select Yes. Recycle ThresholdSpecify the number of files which a process should be allowed to render before the process is recycled. Whenever this threshold is reached, the worker processes will be recycled, which prevents an application from indefinitely increasing memory consumption. A change to this setting requires using the IISReset command to restart IIS. By default, the recycle threshold is 5. Total Active ProcessesSpecify the number of worker processes that are dedicated to viewing Word documents. Set the value for total worker processes high enough to allow for a maximum number of service requests without diminishing worker processes from other applications. A low number of worker processes can reduce the performance and resource consumption of the Word Viewing service application. Other factors such as cache size and computer specifications might suggest a different number of total worker processes. For typical use, it is recommended that you set two worker processes for each service application per core processor. By default, three total worker processes are set. You can also configure this setting by using Windows PowerShell. For more information, see HYPERLINK \l "z2084"Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell later in this article.Set maximum worker processes by using Windows PowerShell You can set the maximum number of worker processes that are permitted to service requests for the Word Viewing service application. Set the value for maximum worker processes high enough to allow for a maximum number of service requests without diminishing worker processes from other applications. A low number of worker processes can reduce performance and resource consumption of the Word Viewing service application. Other factors such as cache size and computer specifications might suggest a different number of maximum worker processes. For typical use, it is recommended you set two worker processes for each service application per core processor. Some procedures in this task require using Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell to run cmdlets. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets in Windows PowerShell, you must add the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin by using the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, or you can run the SharePoint 2010 cmdlets by using SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. By default, the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell snapin is already registered, and the snapin is added to the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. To run SharePoint 2010 cmdlets, you must be a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. To run scripts in Windows PowerShell or SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, you must set the execution policy by using the set-executionpolicy cmdlet, using the unrestricted parameter. For more information about the Add-PSSnapin cmdlet, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409"Add-PSSnapin(http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=188450&clcid=0x409). For more information about using Windows PowerShell with SharePoint 2010 Products, see HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell. To set maximum worker processes for the Word Viewing service application by using Windows PowerShell 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. Using Notepad, create a text file and then copy and paste the following script into the file. This example specifies two worker processes for each core processor on a server with four core processors: $serviceAppId = (Get-SPServiceApplication | where {$_.DisplayName -eq "Word Viewing Service"}).ID Set-SPWordViewingServiceApplication -Identity $serviceAppId -MaxActiveProcessCount 8 3. Specify the following parameters: Parameter Value -MaxActiveProcessCount Number (total worker processes) -eq Name of the word viewing service application whose value you wish to change 4. Save the file with a .ps1 file name extension to a folder where you run scripts (typically C:\scripts). 5. In the Windows PowerShell console, at the command prompt (that is, PS C:\>), type the following command and press ENTER: C:\\.ps1See Also HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/70f22625-3874-413b-a338-88206a56992f(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPWordViewingServiceApplication(http://technet.microsoft.com/library/70f22625-3874-413b-a338-88206a56992f(Office.14).aspx) Configure Excel Services Application settings (Office Web Apps) The information provided in this article about configuring Excel Services Application settings is aimed at IT pros who maintain Microsoft Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products on a stand-alone server or on a server farm. Excel Services Application is included in Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 and Office Web Apps installed on Microsoft SharePoint Foundation 2010. When you install Office Web Apps on SharePoint Server 2010, the Microsoft Excel Web App will use Excel Services Application in SharePoint Server 2010. Excel Services Application is a shared service that you can use to view and edit Excel workbooks. Configuration settings on the Excel Services Application Web service application page will affect both Excel Services Application within the context of SharePoint Server 2010 and how Excel Services Application is used by the Excel Web App. For more information about configuring Excel Services Application, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a96cfa2d-87f8-4991-801c-fd5482d49d0b(Office.14).aspx"Excel Services administration (SharePoint Server 2010) (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/a96cfa2d-87f8-4991-801c-fd5482d49d0b(Office.14).aspx) Technical reference (Office Web Apps) Technical references includes information about the Office Web Apps provider for Windows PowerShell and other useful reference information about general settings, security, and tools. In this section: HYPERLINK \l "z56bfd3b3f563423daea065b331f73b96"Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps Windows PowerShell can be used with Office Web Apps to perform both simple and complex administrative tasks. Information about cmdlets in Office Web Apps is currently accessible using command-line Help. For information about Windows PowerShell in general, visit the HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=167152"Windows PowerShell Technology Center (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=167152). In this section: HYPERLINK \l "zae4901b4505a42a9b8d4fca778abc12e"SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell HYPERLINK \l "z2783bff1b53c489f98fe000bafcf20a3"Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps reference SharePoint 2010 Products administration by using Windows PowerShell This article describes how to use Windows PowerShell with Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products and provides an overview of basic Windows PowerShell cmdlets and concepts necessary to get the most benefit from this powerful functionality. In this article: HYPERLINK \l "z2487"Overview HYPERLINK \l "z2488"Accessing Windows PowerShell for SharePoint 2010 Products HYPERLINK \l "z2489"Permissions HYPERLINK \l "z2490"Learning Windows PowerShell Overview Windows PowerShell is a command-line scripting tool that provides an administrator full access to applicable application programming interfaces (APIs), along with the ability to unlock the capability to interact directly with SharePoint 2010 Products to manipulate Web applications, site collections, sites, lists and much more. In addition, the administrator has the ability to script cmdlets (pronounced "command-lets"), which makes for an improved experience from past product versions. Windows PowerShell 2.0 is a pre-requisite for installing SharePoint 2010 Products. It will be installed, if necessary, when you run the Microsoft SharePoint Products Preparation Tool. By default, Windows PowerShell is located at the following path: <%SystemRoot%>\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\PowerShell.exe. Note: Windows PowerShell 2.0 is backward compatible with Windows PowerShell 1.0 and subsequently installs to the v1.0 folder. For a list of new features for Windows PowerShell version 2.0, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=113247"About Windows PowerShell 2.0 (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=113247). We recommend that you use Windows PowerShell when performing command-line administrative tasks. The Stsadm command-line tool has been deprecated, but is included to support compatibility with previous product versions. Accessing Windows PowerShell for SharePoint 2010 Products After installing SharePoint 2010 Products, the applicable Windows PowerShell cmdlets are available by using the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell, or by using the Windows PowerShell console. With the management shell, you can manage every aspect of SharePoint 2010 Products. You can create new site collections, Web applications, user accounts, service applications, proxies, and more. The commands from the management shell output SharePoint objects based on the Microsoft .NET Platform. These objects can be applied as input to subsequent commands or stored in local variables for later use. With the management shell, you do not have to register the snap-in that contains the cmdlets. Registration of the Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell.dll module for SharePoint 2010 cmdlets is automatic, as a result of the line Add-PSSnapin Microsoft.SharePoint.PowerShell in the SharePoint.ps1 file located in %CommonProgramFiles%\Microsoft Shared\Web Server Extensions\14\Config\PowerShell\Registration. If you choose to use the Windows PowerShell console, you must register this snap-in manually. Whether you are using the management shell or the Windows PowerShell console, you can also load additional snap-ins. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183166"Customizing Profiles (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183166). To access the SharePoint 2010 Management Shell 1. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 2. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 3. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell.Note: The SharePoint 2010 Management Shell and the Windows PowerShell console also differ in the use of the ReuseThread option, which defines how the threading model is used. The management shell's use is defined by this line, {Host.Runspace.ThreadOptions = "ReuseThread"}, which is in the SharePoint.ps1 file. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183145"PS Thread Options (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=183145). Permissions Before you can use the management shell and the Windows PowerShell cmdlets, verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. If you do not have membership in the SharePoint_Shell_Access role or WSS_Admin_WPG local group, use the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet. When the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet is used, the user is added to the WSS_Admin_WPG group in all front-end Web servers and is added to the SharePoint_Shell_Access role. If the target database does not have a SharePoint_Shell_Access role, the role is automatically created. Once the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet has been run, the user can run SharePoint 2010 Windows PowerShell cmdlets in a multiple-server farm environment. When you run the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet to add a user to the SharePoint_Shell_Access role, you must have the following security permissions: Securityadmin server role access on the SQL instance and the db_owner role in a database. Administrative permission on the local computer. Note: Typically, the person that will use the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet must be associated with the user account that was used for Setup. You must run the Add-SPShellAdmin cmdlet for all databases to which you want to grant access. If no database is specified, the farm configuration database is used. If you do specify a database, the farm content database will be included in addition to the farm configuration database you specify. To see a list of all of the *SPShellAdmin cmdlets, from a Windows PowerShell command prompt, type Get-Command Noun SPShellAdmin. Learning Windows PowerShell There are several Windows PowerShell learning resources for SharePoint IT professionals who are not familiar with Windows PowerShell. TechNet Scripting Center The TechNet Scripting Center includes many resources for learning the basics of using Windows PowerShell. It also contains script repositories with samples of scripts commonly used with various Microsoft products. The following table shows the main learning resources. PageDescriptionHYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187813"Windows PowerShell Documentation on TechNet (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187813)This section of the TechNet Library contains Web copies of the core Windows PowerShell Get-Help topics. The section also has Web copies of the Windows PowerShell Getting Started document, the PowerShell.exe help, and a Windows PowerShell primer.HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187815"Scripting With Windows PowerShell (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187815)The home page for Windows PowerShell scripting learning resources.HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187817"Windows PowerShell Owner's Manual (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187817)Web-based guide for getting started with Windows PowerShell.HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187819"Windows PowerShell Quick Reference (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187819)Downloadable copy of the Quick Reference document installed with Windows PowerShell. 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Also available as a download from the TechNet Scripting Center. As you read these resources, consider that the following concepts and cmdlets are useful ones to learn before using Windows PowerShell for SharePoint 2010 Products: HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171069"Get-Command (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171069) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171070"Get-Member (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171070) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171068"Get-Help (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=171068). HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=113207"Aliasing (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=113207) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187808"Piping and the Pipeline in Windows PowerShell (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187808) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187810"Cmdlet Parameter Sets (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187810) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187812"Foreach-Object (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187812) HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187811"Where-Object (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=187811) Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps reference The following articles list Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Office Web Apps Beta. For the associated compiled Help (.chm) file, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128"Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps Beta (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128). Category articleRelated .chm fileExcel Web AppsExcelServicesApplicationCmdlets.chmOffice Web AppsOfficeWebAppsCmdlets.chm Excel Web App cmdlets Excel Services Application is a service application that you can use to share, secure, and manage Microsoft Excel 2010 workbooks (.xlsx, .xlsb, and .xlsm extensions) as interactive reports in a consistent way throughout the enterprise. All Excel Services Application settings will support backup and recovery regardless of whether there is a UI setting in the Central Administration Web site. This means that all global settings, trusted locations, user-defined-functions, data connection libraries, and trusted data provider settings will support backup and recovery. However, the following items will not be backed up as part of the backup and recovery process: User-defined function assemblies. These assemblies will not be backed up or restored because they are binary files and not simply settings; however, the data in the list of trusted user-defined functions is backed up. Trusted data provider binaries. (The full list of trusted data providers and all associated properties, however, are backed up.) Any Excel Web Access (EWA) Web Part properties. Office data connection (.odc extension) files and workbook files. Note: URLs of any kind (that is, URLs to trusted locations, user-defined functions, or data connection libraries) must be manually fixed after a restore operation because they may no longer be valid. In addition to using Windows PowerShell for Excel Services Application backup and recovery functionality, you can use Windows PowerShell to provision the service application from scratch or provision a new instance that uses settings from a previous backup, and manage and configure trusted file locations, data providers, data connection libraries, and settings for user-defined function assemblies. You can also change global settings for Excel Services Application. The following cmdlets are available for Beta. Cmdlet NameGet-SPExcelBlockedFileTypeNew-SPExcelBlockedFileTypeRemove-SPExcelBlockedFileTypeGet-SPExcelDataConnectionLibraryNew-SPExcelDataConnectionLibraryRemove-SPExcelDataConnectionLibrarySet-SPExcelDataConnectionLibraryGet-SPExcelDataProviderNew-SPExcelDataProviderRemove-SPExcelDataProviderSet-SPExcelDataProviderGet-SPExcelFileLocationNew-SPExcelFileLocationRemove-SPExcelFileLocationSet-SPExcelFileLocationGet-SPExcelServiceApplicationNew-SPExcelServiceApplicationSet-SPExcelServiceApplicationGet-SPExcelUserDefinedFunctionNew-SPExcelUserDefinedFunctionRemove-SPExcelUserDefinedFunctionSet-SPExcelUserDefinedFunction To download the ExcelServicesApplicationCmdlets.chm file, see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128"Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps Beta (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128). See Also HYPERLINK "http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepointserver/HA101054761033.aspx"Introduction to Excel Services (http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepointserver/HA101054761033.aspx) Office Web Apps cmdlets Office Web Apps is a new Web-based productivity offering from Microsoft Office 2010 suites. Office Web Apps include companions to Microsoft Word 2010, Microsoft Excel 2010, Microsoft PowerPoint 2010, and Microsoft OneNote 2010. These Web-based applications are stand-alone applications focused on offering access to Word 2010, PowerPoint 2010, Excel 2010, and OneNote 2010 documents through any browser across multiple platforms; lightweight creation and editing capabilities in standard formats; sharing and collaboration on those documents through the browser; and a variety of Web-enabled scenarios. Documents created by using Office Web Apps are no different than documents created by using the corresponding desktop applications. The associated services are used to prepare documents for viewing and editing in a Web browser All Office Web Apps will support backup and recovery regardless of whether there is a UI setting. However, backup and recovery only applies to the service-level and administrative-level settings; Web Part properties are not backed up as part of this process. Also, URLs must be fixed after a restore process. In addition to providing backup and restore functionality, Office Web Apps provide Windows PowerShell functionality that you can use to provision the service from scratch or provision a new instance that uses settings from a previous backup, configure and manage application proxies and service applications, and configure the global settings of the service. The following cmdlets are available for Beta. Cmdlet nameSet-SPNotebookApplicationConfigNew-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationSet-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationNew-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationProxySet-SPWordViewingServiceApplicationProxy To download the OfficeWebAppsCmdlets.chm file see HYPERLINK "http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128"Windows PowerShell for Office Web Apps Beta (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=179128). System Center Operations Manager knowledge articles (Office Web Apps) The articles in this section are knowledge articles for the Microsoft Office 2010 Beta management pack for Microsoft System Center Operations Manager 2007. Typically, you would see these articles after clicking a link in an alert in the Operations Manager console. You can use these articles to help you troubleshoot and resolve problems in Office 2010 Beta. In this section: HYPERLINK \l "z3149d51349ef4d4299681f0ebe9170cf"Merge failures high (Microsoft OneNote Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z9c935e5ad449425688e34b50fa24dbaa"Request processing slow (Microsoft OneNote Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z6b5aa2d75d4e468ca479bf85cd8739b4"PowerPoint document high download time (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z430cb0a0feff4bb5bcb45f11f5dc3c97"PowerPoint high number of queued conversion requests (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z56108dbba948454f86cc9fc168a0505f"PowerPoint high rate of "No Available Server" errors (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z07b6d99ee88b4359960fc25ef75a41df"PowerPoint high rate of cache write operations (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) HYPERLINK \l "z1b7d9fa93e4a4323957d2cb956011ef4"PowerPoint rate of BroadcastGetData requests too high (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Merge failures high (Microsoft OneNote Web App) Alert Name:Merge failures high Event ID:None Summary:With Microsoft OneNote Web App, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 users can modify their notebooks by using a Web browser. The front end Web server portion of the feature is responsible for ensuring that all updates to the notebook that were made in the Web browser are saved to the server and reflected across all client computers. The front-end Web server portion of this feature is also responsible for merging and reconciling changes that were made to the same content by multiple users. Symptoms:Should the front-end Web server portion of the feature fail to synchronize simultaneous merge requests, edits may take a long time to replicate across multiple users who are editing the same document. Cause:This might be caused by OneNote Web App competing for scarce resources. Resolution:Restart Internet Information Services 1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is a member of the local Administrators group. 2. At the command prompt, type iisreset force and press ENTER.Resolution:Add another server to the farm 1. If this failure keeps occurring, you should add a server to the farm to help load-balance the workload. Request processing slow (Microsoft OneNote Web App) Alert Name:Request processing slow Event ID:None Summary:With Microsoft OneNote Web App, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 users can modify their notebooks by using a Web browser. The front end Web server portion of the feature is responsible for ensuring that all updates to the notebook that were made in the Web browser are saved to the server and reflected across all client computers. Symptoms:If the front-end Web server starts taking a long time to process requests, you may observe the following symptoms: Edits that are made by multiple authors who edit the document at the same time take a long time to replicate across multiple browsers. OneNote Web App takes a long time to exit. Cause:This might be caused by OneNote Web App competing for scarce resources. Resolution:Restart Internet Information Services 1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is a member of the local Administrators group. 2. At the command prompt, type iisreset force and press ENTER.Resolution:Add another server to the farm 1. If this failure keeps occurring, you should add a server to the farm to help load-balance the workload. PowerPoint document high download time (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Alert Name:PowerPoint document high download time Event ID:No event ID Summary:With Microsoft PowerPoint Web App, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 users can view and modify their presentations by using a Web browser. If the average time it takes to download the document is too high, it may mean something is wrong with the application server or the database server. Symptoms:One or more of the following might be the cause: Users who use PowerPoint Web App to view documents experience very poor performance. In worst-case scenarios, users cannot use PowerPoint Web App to view documents because they do not receive responses from the application server. Cause:One or more of the following might be the cause: The database server is malfunctioning or is overloaded. The document being downloaded is very large. Resolution:Verify availability of database and application servers 1. Verify that the database servers are consistently available. 2. Verify that the farm application servers are consistently available.Resolution:Add another node to the SQL Server cluster 1. If this failure keeps occurring, you should add a server to the SQL Server cluster to help load-balance the workload. PowerPoint high number of queued conversion requests (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Alert Name:PowerPoint high number of queued conversion requests Event ID:No event ID Summary:With Microsoft PowerPoint Web App, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 users view and modify their presentations by using a Web browser. When a high number of viewing conversion requests are queued, something might be wrong with the application server, or PowerPoint Web App might be unable to serve all requests from users. Symptoms:One or more of the following symptoms might appear: Users who use PowerPoint Web App to view documents experience very poor performance. Users cannot use PowerPoint Web App to view documents because they do not receive responses from the application server. Cause:One or more of the following might be the cause: The application server is malfunctioning. There are not enough PowerPoint Web App viewing worker processes. There are not enough application servers in the farm. Resolution:Check the general availability of farm servers 1. Check the availability of the farm servers by performing a PING command to each server and checking the response times.Resolution:Increase the maximum number of worker processes 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt, type the following command: Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -Identity <ID>  ViewingWorkerProcessCount <N> Where: <ID> is the name or ID of the PowerPoint Web App service application. <N> is the number of viewing worker threads.Resolution:Reset Internet Information Services on all front-end Web servers 1. At the command prompt, type the following command, and then press ENTER: iisresetResolution:Add another server to the farm 1. If this failure keeps occurring even after you have followed the steps in all other resolutions, you should add a server to the farm to help load-balance the workload. PowerPoint high rate of "No Available Server" errors (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Alert Name:PowerPoint high rate of "No Available Server" errors Event ID:No event ID Summary:With Microsoft PowerPoint Web App, Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products users can view and modify their presentations by using a Web browser. A high rate of "No Available Server" responses to editing requests may mean there are issues with the application server, or that PowerPoint Web App is unable to serve all user requests. Symptoms:One or more of the following symptoms might appear: Users who use PowerPoint Web App to edit documents experience very poor performance. Users who use PowerPoint Web App are unable to edit documents because they do not receive responses from the application server. Cause:One or more of the following might be the cause: The application server is malfunctioning. There are not enough PowerPoint Web App editing worker processes. There are not enough application servers. Resolution:Increase the maximum number of worker processes 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt, type the following command: Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -Identity EditingWorkerProcessCount <N> Where: <ID> is the name or ID of the PowerPoint Web App service application. <N> is the number of editor worker processes. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5f934016-0321-4d87-aed3-2ae78e2a5024(Office.14). 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At the command prompt, type the following command, and then press ENTER: iisresetResolution:Add another server to the farm 1. If this failure keeps occurring even after you have followed the steps in all other resolutions, you should add a server to the farm to help load-balance the workload. PowerPoint high rate of cache write operations (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Alert Name:PowerPoint high rate of cache write operations Event ID:No event ID Summary:With Microsoft PowerPoint Web App, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 users can view and modify their presentations by using a Web browser. A high number of writes to the cache on the front-end Web server may mean that something is wrong with the front-end Web server, or that PowerPoint Web App is unable to serve all requests from users. Symptoms:One or more of the following symptoms might appear: Users who use PowerPoint Web App to view documents experience very poor performance. In some cases, users cannot view documents by using PowerPoint Web App because they do not receive responses from the application server. Cause:One or more of the following might be the cause: The servers do have affinity set to the front-end Web servers. The front-end Web server cache is too small. Resolution:Increase the size of the front-end Web server cache 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. One any farm server, on the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt, type the following command: Set-SPOfficeWebAppsCache -WebApplication <ID> -MaxFrontEndCacheSizeInMB <S> -MaxFrontEndDocumentInfoCacheItems <N> Where: <ID> is name or ID of PowerPoint service application. <S> is the size, in megabytes (MB), that you want to set the cache to. <N> is the maximum number of items that you want to store in the front-end Web server cache. Each item will take up 1MB (or less) of data. MaxFrontEndDocumentInfoCacheItems should always be equal to, or greater than, MaxFrontEndCacheSizeInMB. 6. At a command prompt on each front-end Web server, type the following command, and then press ENTER:iisresetResolution:Set affinity in the load balancer for the Web servers 1. For the steps to set affinity, see the load balancer software or hardware documentation. PowerPoint rate of BroadcastGetData requests too high (Microsoft PowerPoint Web App) Alert Name:PowerPoint rate of BroadcastGetData requests too high Event ID:No event ID Summary:A high rate of BroadcastGetData requests indicates that a large number of users are viewing PowerPoint Broadcasts. This means PowerPoint Broadcast viewers may be using more CPU time in front-end Web servers than is optimal. This can reduce overall server performance if total CPU usage is high. Symptoms:Users of this Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010 farm may experience very poor performance. If this is the case you should take steps to correct the problems that might be causing poor performance. Otherwise, this monitor only serves as a warning and you do not need to take further action. Cause:One or more of the following might be the cause: A large number of users are viewing PowerPoint Broadcasts. PowerPoint Broadcast users poll the server too often. If users of this SharePoint farm experience poor performance, compare CPU usage on the front-end Web servers to the rate of BroadcastGetData requests. If spikes in CPU usage occur only with high rates of BroadcastGetData requests, you should increase the PowerPoint Broadcast polling interval. This will decrease the amount of traffic generated by PowerPoint Broadcast viewers. Resolution:Check the general availability of farm servers 1. Check the availability of the farm servers by performing a PING command to each server and checking the response times.Resolution:Increase the PowerPoint Broadcast polling interval 1. Verify that you meet the following minimum requirements: You are a member of the SharePoint_Shell_Access role on the configuration database and a member of the WSS_ADMIN_WPG local group on the computer where SharePoint 2010 Products is installed. 2. On the Start menu, click All Programs. 3. Click Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Products. 4. Click SharePoint 2010 Management Shell. 5. At the Windows PowerShell command prompt, type the following command: Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication -Identity BroadcastBrowser()*+# + - . V a      "   > B XdNR27DP[}8@v|ݵݯݯݯݯݧݧݯݧݧݖݐݐݐݐ݉ hZk0J hMhZk hZk0J jgh?hZkUmHnHuhZkOJQJ hZk0J jch?hZkUmHnHu hZk0J jC_h?hZkUmHnHuhZkh>( h'\6h>(h>(6jhZkU hZk0J1, - [    V     jhfhhhh<kdcg$$Iflh#" t64ahytZkc & F hh$If^h`gdZk<kd'c$$Iflh#" t64ahytZk > XNRLU` & F $If^`gdZkW$IfC$Ifc & F hh$If^h`gdZk_ & F hh^h`gdZkLPV}LTVWNY z~ko :Ee,N,T,V,f,j,r,,,,U hMhZk hZk0J joth?hZkUmHnHu j3ph?hZkUmHnHuhZkOJQJ hZk0J jkh?hZkUmHnHu hZk0JhZk hZk0JhZkhZkOJQJ:UVN Cjhfhhhhh<kdo$$Iflh#" t64ahytZkc & F hh$If^h`gdZk<kdk$$Iflh#" t64ahytZk Cz-<gV,X,f,W$IfC$If<kdt$$Iflh#" t64ahytZkc & F hh$If^h`gdZkW_ & F hh^h`gdZkHealthyStatePollIntervalInMilliSeconds <N> Where: <ID> is name or ID of the Power Point service application. <N> is number of milliseconds. The default interval is 1 second, and the next recommended value is 2 seconds. Increasing this interval beyond 2 seconds may negatively affect the end-user experience while viewing PowerPoint Broadcasts. This change will only affect new viewers of PowerPoint Broadcasts. For more information, see HYPERLINK "http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5f934016-0321-4d87-aed3-2ae78e2a5024(Office.14).aspx"Set-SPPowerPointServiceApplication. (http://technet.microsoft.com/library/5f934016-0321-4d87-aed3-2ae78e2a5024(Office.14).aspx)Resolution:Reset Internet Information Services on all front-end Web servers 1. At the command prompt, type the following command, and then press ENTER: iisresetResolution:Add another server to the farm 1. If this failure keeps occurring even after you have followed the steps in all other resolutions, you should add a server to the farm to help load-balance the workload.     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Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55D#v#vD:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55D#v#vD:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 89 b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D/sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`Ddhl  HA?Picture 25b70Hx$E4 sn 0Hx$E4PNG  IHDR;OPLTE33fff̠3fffff̙֭3̙f̙33ffffwwwUUU.#tRNSf)bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Se Ǩ#av7ٔ"?<6[դ iQm9G!ur%,"yu]Gj[7%t1x|`y㷟9&|IԬ`]V%0,Lބ"ay%E*m3V ʷ/|<(IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 88b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dbsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdhl  HA?Picture 15b70Hx$E4 sn 0Hx$E4PNG  IHDR;OPLTE33fff̠3fffff̙֭3̙f̙33ffffwwwUUU.#tRNSf)bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Se Ǩ#av7ٔ"?<6[դ iQm9G!ur%,"yu]Gj[7%t1x|`y㷟9&|IԬ`]V%0,Lބ"ay%E*m3V ʷ/|<(IENDB`Ddl  HA?Picture 87b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 86b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 85b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 84b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 83b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DIsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdhl  HA?Picture 14b/`Ӎ%PSVٰ sn`Ӎ%PSVٰ PNG  IHDRv2PLTEnnnMBA'4vww;% 1g*((fcby%V @ B3J M? >W*WB#ZQQPa90u#: GJJw%>1:566,)\\\}i^aa\ .TAtRNS0UbKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Su0 Cq j+P8,zگ&7 Pspl4B A LOqa=Z6e''@tʼn4$VwK-.Wj` nBzGOJ>oc9>;.9HrЃxLk82@$ĀOZY6IENDB`Ddl  HA?Picture 82b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dtsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 81b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 80b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 79b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D(%sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55D#v#vD:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55D#v#vD:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 78b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D(+sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`Ddhl  HA?Picture 24b70Hx$E4 /sn 0Hx$E4PNG  IHDR;OPLTE33fff̠3fffff̙֭3̙f̙33ffffwwwUUU.#tRNSf)bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Se Ǩ#av7ٔ"?<6[դ iQm9G!ur%,"yu]Gj[7%t1x|`y㷟9&|IԬ`]V%0,Lބ"ay%E*m3V ʷ/|<(IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl  HA?Picture 77b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D[2sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdhl  HA?Picture 13b70Hx$E4 6sn 0Hx$E4PNG  IHDR;OPLTE33fff̠3fffff̙֭3̙f̙33ffffwwwUUU.#tRNSf)bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Se Ǩ#av7ٔ"?<6[դ iQm9G!ur%,"yu]Gj[7%t1x|`y㷟9&|IԬ`]V%0,Lބ"ay%E*m3V ʷ/|<(IENDB`Ddl   HA?Picture 76b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D9sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ! HA?Picture 75 b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D=sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl " HA?Picture 74!b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DCsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl # HA?Picture 73"b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DHsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl $ HA?Picture 72#b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DBLsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl % HA?Picture 71$b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D~Psn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdhl & HA?Picture 12%b/`Ӎ%PSVٰ Tsn`Ӎ%PSVٰ PNG  IHDRv2PLTEnnnMBA'4vww;% 1g*((fcby%V @ B3J M? >W*WB#ZQQPa90u#: GJJw%>1:566,)\\\}i^aa\ .TAtRNS0UbKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Su0 Cq j+P8,zگ&7 Pspl4B A LOqa=Z6e''@tʼn4$VwK-.Wj` nBzGOJ>oc9>;.9HrЃxLk82@$ĀOZY6IENDB`Ddl ' HA?Picture 70&b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DXsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ( HA?Picture 69'b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D\sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ) HA?Picture 68(b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D!asn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZk#$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l4  t0    65 /  / /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytvs$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l4  t0    65N55/  /  / /  /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l t0    65N554 Vytv$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l t0    65N554 Vytv$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l t0    65N554 Vytv$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l t0    65N554 Vytv$$If!vh5 57 5 #v #v7 #v :V l t0    65N554 Vytv$$If!vh55 55 #v#v #v#v :V l4  t(0    655555/  /  / /  /  / / / 04 Vp(ytv$$If!vh55 55 #v#v #v#v :V l t0    6555554 Vytv$$If!vh55 55 #v#v #v#v :V l t0    6555554 VytvtDdhl * HA?Picture 11)b/3x@ qsn/3x@ PNG  IHDR;O`PLTE333ff3ff̙3f*tRNS}bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(S]A N)-leHN.2&8 WL o(C^Lb5S#:O/![2.* rOL/|UͰgj`'}^9 })IENDB`Ddl + HA?Picture 67*b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D6tsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl , HA?Picture 66+b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Drxsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh5o5x#vo#vx:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh5o5x#vo#vx:V l t0    65L4 VahytZk$IfK$L$!vh5o5x#vo#vx:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl - HA?Picture 65,b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl . HA?Picture 64-b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DJsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh5e5#ve#v:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh5e5#ve#v:V l t0    65L4 VahytZk$IfK$L$!vh5e5#ve#v:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZktDdhl / HA?Picture 10.b/3x@ sn/3x@ PNG  IHDR;O`PLTE333ff3ff̙3f*tRNS}bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(S]A N)-leHN.2&8 WL o(C^Lb5S#:O/![2.* rOL/|UͰgj`'}^9 })IENDB`rDdhj 0 FA?Picture 9/b/3x@ Zsn/3x@ PNG  IHDR;O`PLTE333ff3ff̙3f*tRNS}bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(S]A N)-leHN.2&8 WL o(C^Lb5S#:O/![2.* rOL/|UͰgj`'}^9 })IENDB`e$$If!vh5 5 5e #v #ve :V l4  t0    655/  /  / /  /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh5 5 5e #v #ve :V l t0    6554 VytvDdhj 1 FA?Picture 80b/`Ӎ%PSVٰ ܐsn`Ӎ%PSVٰ PNG  IHDRv2PLTEnnnMBA'4vww;% 1g*((fcby%V @ B3J M? >W*WB#ZQQPa90u#: GJJw%>1:566,)\\\}i^aa\ .TAtRNS0UbKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Su0 Cq j+P8,zگ&7 Pspl4B A LOqa=Z6e''@tʼn4$VwK-.Wj` nBzGOJ>oc9>;.9HrЃxLk82@$ĀOZY6IENDB`Ddl 2 HA?Picture 631b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dɔsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZks$$If!vh55U 5 #v#vU #v :V l4  t0    6555&/  /  / /  /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh55U 5 #v#vU #v :V l t0    6555&4 Vytv$$If!vh55U 5 #v#vU #v :V l t0    6555&4 VytvDdhj 3 FA?Picture 72b/`Ӎ%PSVٰ sn`Ӎ%PSVٰ PNG  IHDRv2PLTEnnnMBA'4vww;% 1g*((fcby%V @ B3J M? >W*WB#ZQQPa90u#: GJJw%>1:566,)\\\}i^aa\ .TAtRNS0UbKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Su0 Cq j+P8,zگ&7 Pspl4B A LOqa=Z6e''@tʼn4$VwK-.Wj` nBzGOJ>oc9>;.9HrЃxLk82@$ĀOZY6IENDB`Ddl 4 HA?Picture 623b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D՟sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl 5 HA?Picture 614b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl 6 HA?Picture 605b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DMsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZk#$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l4  t0    65 /  / /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 VytvrDdhj 7 FA?Picture 66b/3x@ Dsn/3x@ PNG  IHDR;O`PLTE333ff3ff̙3f*tRNS}bKGDH cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(S]A N)-leHN.2&8 WL o(C^Lb5S#:O/![2.* rOL/|UͰgj`'}^9 })IENDB`Ddl 8 HA?Picture 597b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl 9 HA?Picture 588b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl : HA?Picture 579b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D.sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ; HA?Picture 56:b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D.sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`&$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l4  t0    65L/  / /  / / / 04 VahpytZk$IfK$L$!vh55g#v#vg:V l t0    65L4 VahytZkV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZk#$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l4  t0    65 /  / /  / / / 04 Vpytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 Vytv$$If!vh5@5A#v@#vA:V l t0    65 4 VytvDdl < HA?Picture 55;b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`3$IfK$L$!vh55?#v#v?:V l4  t0    655?/  / /  / / / 04 Vahpyt'\$IfK$L$!vh55?#v#v?:V l t0    655?4 Vahyt'\$IfK$L$!vh55?#v#v?:V l t0    655?4 Vahyt'\V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl = HA?Picture 54<b$ rݣ/s񇖅2DHsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`3$IfK$L$!vh55b#v#vb:V l4  t0    655b/  / /  / / / 04 Vahpytv$IfK$L$!vh55b#v#vb:V l t0    655b4 Vahytv$IfK$L$!vh55b#v#vb:V l t0    655b4 Vahytv$IfK$L$!vh55b#v#vb:V l t0    655b4 VahytvV$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdhj > FA?Picture 5=b/`Ӎ%PSVٰ sn`Ӎ%PSVٰ PNG  IHDRv2PLTEnnnMBA'4vww;% 1g*((fcby%V @ B3J M? 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ahytZkDdl N HA?Picture 42Mb$ rݣ/s񇖅2Df9sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl O HA?Picture 41Nb$ rݣ/s񇖅2D=sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl P HA?Picture 40Ob$ rݣ/s񇖅2DAsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl Q HA?Picture 39Pb$ rݣ/s񇖅2DFsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl R HA?Picture 38Qb$ rݣ/s񇖅2DVJsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl S HA?Picture 37Rb$ rݣ/s񇖅2DNsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl T HA?Picture 36Sb$ rݣ/s񇖅2DRsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl U HA?Picture 35Tb$ rݣ/s񇖅2D Wsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl V HA?Picture 34Ub$ rݣ/s񇖅2DF[sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`[$$If!vh5 "#v ":V l t65 "4 ahyt'\Ddl W HA?Picture 33Vb$ rݣ/s񇖅2D_sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl X HA?Picture 32Wb$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dcsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl Y HA?Picture 31Xb$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dgsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl Z HA?Picture 30Yb$ rݣ/s񇖅2D;lsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl [ HA?Picture 29Zb$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dwpsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl \ HA?Picture 28[b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dtsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ] HA?Picture 27\b$ rݣ/s񇖅2Dxsn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkDdl ^ HA?Picture 26]b$ rݣ/s񇖅2D+}sn rݣ/s񇖅2PNG  IHDR(-SPLTE)ۯP7 + -$ߥ Пzo!0=,<0S?놓z eIJ2M69%}tD5I1#i`& J2':&MAMA/ynrV. ]HL?O6܋)wbyI8cJ7rYtRNSObKGDXĎ cmPPJCmp0712HsIDAT(Sc@ "@T!]O~d!FGFAP@Q?@̝[jP LޜW%[',`%a$*,)gb` vf6Ss`)$ghi Rab#.5Ϙ@DӐ nvh vL.uA o:EX%IENDB`V$$If!vh5m"#vm":V l t65"4 ahytZkFppppppppp00d@d _ Normal,Text,td<< KHOJPJQJ_HmH sH tH h@h |! 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