Search Blog
spacer
You must be logged in and have permission to create or edit a blog.

System Center Orchestrator 2012 RC: Installation Experience

Oct 28

Written by:
Friday, October 28, 2011 6:58:28 PM  RssIcon

The System Center 2012 product line is nearing its final release date. Beta and release candidate versions are publicly available and can be tested. You can download the bits from: http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=27842

There are three separate downloads available:

  1. System_Center_2012_Orchestrator_RC.exe
    this is the actual product and is around 60 MB. Pretty slick!
  2. System_Center_2012_Orchestrator_Integration_Packs_RC.exe
    this are the integration packs you need to use when you want to create runbooks involving SCOM 2007, SCSM 2010, SCVMM 2008, DPM 2010 and SCCM 2007
  3. System_Center_2012_Orchestrator_Integration_Toolkit_RC.exe
    this one is needed if you want to use the Orchestrator SDK to create custom integration packs

System Requirements

I think it’s interesting and notable that Orchestrator needs you to have Windows Server 2008 R2, SQL Server 2008 R2 and .NET 4.0 (when you install the web features) installed. If you want to use the integration toolkit, you need Windows 7 (or Windows Server 2008 R2) with .NET 3.5 installed. If memory server, MS supported older OS/SQL/Frameworks in the past so it seems there was a strategy shift. In my opinion this makes total sense. It’s easier to support, maintain and test a product in an environment like this. Hopefully we see improvements in quality as well.

Installation

Before I start with the installation I always ensure that my OS and components are up-to-date. SQL Server 2008 R2 is also installed and up-to-date. Before you proceed you might also check out the deployment guide and release notes: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh237242.aspx

After you’ve started setuporchestrator.exe the setup bootstrapper appears and we click on “Install” to start the installation:

image

One thing I forgot before I installed Orchestrator, was installing the IIS role. After I selected “Install” from the bootstrapper, skipped the license key page and agreed to the license terms, you’ll see a feature picker where you can choose what components should be installed on the machine:

image

As you can see, I’ve selected all components to be installed and the web service component even states that it needs IIS. Clicking on Next…

image

Here you see that the Prerequisites check complains about the memory but still nothing about IIS. This is only a warning and you can skip it by just clicking Next…

image

The next screen mentions that the setup is missing the IIS role and the nice thing is: setup will install the role for you. Very convenient! After clicking Next, setup will install IIS role:

image

After a while setup is happy and allows you to continue:

image

The rest of the installation is pretty painless. The following wizard pages provide good instructions on what is needed and where to read more about it. To make this blog post complete I will attach the other screenshots as well.

image   image

image   image

image   image

image   image

After the summary page, installation takes off:

image   image

Installing a single server containing all components of SCO is very easy and I’m really impressed with the simple setup experience. However, there are a couple of things you have to keep in mind:

  • An SCO deployment can only have one Management server. In the previous screenshot you’ve seen that you cannot uncheck this component. So there’s no redundancy or failover system for this component. So if your management server dies you can still execute runbooks using the Orchestration console but you cannot connect to your SCO deployment using the Runbook Designer!
  • To install additional runbook servers or web service installations you need to start the appropriate installations from the bootstrapper in the “Standalone Installations” section:

image

Tags:
Categories:

2 comment(s) so far...


Gravatar

Re: System Center Orchestrator 2012 RC: Installation Experience

Starting Runbook Designer after this gives a license warning and does not continue until a valid key is entered. How to get into the Runbook Designer?

By Shawn Pearson on   Thursday, November 17, 2011 10:57:23 PM
Gravatar

Re: System Center Orchestrator 2012 RC: Installation Experience

That's weird. I'm not seeing this in my test environment. Is this a clean installation from scratch?

By Stefan Koell on   Friday, November 18, 2011 9:02:41 AM

Your name:
Gravatar Preview
Your email:
(Optional) Email used only to show Gravatar.
Your website:
Title:
Comment:
Security Code
CAPTCHA image
Enter the code shown above in the box below
Add Comment   Cancel 
dummy