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August 27, 2008 12:00 AM

Using SharePoint for Extranets

An easier way to share information outside your network
Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #99650
Rating: (4)
Executive Summary: An extranet is a network that companies use to exchange information with clients, customers, or business partners.Because of its ease of use, document management capabilities, security, search, and change notification, Microsoft SharePoint has emerged as one of the top platforms on which to build an extranet.

I recently finished an extranet system implementation using Windows SharePoint Services (WSS) 3.0. In this overview of my experiences and guidance, I outline the benefits of using SharePoint for your extranet solution, describe extranet topology and taxonomy, explain the available authentication methods, and offer recommendations for extranets that span several disciplines.

Extranets
An extranet is a network typically used to exchange information between someone in your company and a client, customer, or business partner. It’s an extension of a company’s intranet, but not as public as its public website. Because of this, a company most likely has multiple extranets—one for each client, customer, or partner.

When designing an extranet solution, you usually desire a similar set of requirements. An example of a prioritized list of requirements might include the following:

  • Security
  • Ease of use
  • Document management
  • Searching
  • Change notification
  • Lists (calendar of events, contacts, tasks or other custom data)

Ten years ago, a company that wanted an extranet solution would need to build one from scratch or hire a consultant to customize a product that did something similar to what the company required. Since then, extranets have become so popular that hosted extranet solutions have emerged to satisfy the demand.

During the past few years, SharePoint has emerged as one of the top extranet solutions that companies are considering. SharePoint is not only a collaboration website, but a framework that developers can use to build entire applications. Out of the box, SharePoint includes document management, search, change notification, and list functionality while maintaining a high ease of use through its UI customization options. To finish out our requirements list, all SharePoint content is stored within a SQL Server database, so security can be well-controlled.

Although I used WSS 3.0 for my extranet, you could also use Microsoft Office Share- Point Server (MOSS) 2007. For a discussion about which platform is best suited for your situation, see the sidebar “SharePoint Extranets: WSS or MOSS?”.

Extranet Topology
Because SharePoint is an ASP.NET 2.0 web application, it supports any external-facing topology that web applications support. The best practice is to host SharePoint within the demilitarized zone (DMZ) and use Microsoft ISA Server as an applicationlevel firewall. For more details about the different topologies and architectures, read Microsoft’s extranet topology guidance at technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc263513.aspx.

Extranet Taxonomy
At the highest level, SharePoint organizes itself as a collection of web applications. A web application can have multiple site collections that each contain multiple sites. Because of the time it takes for configuration, you don’t create a new web application in SharePoint each time you need to provision an extranet. Therefore, the SharePoint object that best maps to an extranet is a site collection. A single web application can contain as many as 50,000 site collections before performance begins to degrade. Figure 1 shows an example of a basic taxonomy.

SharePoint organizes information in site collections into a set of content databases. See the web-exclusive sidebar “Content Databases for Extranets” (www.windowsitpro.com, InstantDoc ID 99654) for more information and recommendations regarding content databases.

Authentication
When determining how to authenticate users in SharePoint, you have more options in WSS 3.0 than ever before, thanks mostly to ASP.NET 2.0’s membership provider API. Each web application supports as many as five different authentication methods (or providers) through the use of a feature called zones. Each time a new authentication provider is added to a web application, a new website is created for that zone in Microsoft IIS. Table 1 lists the zones for an extranet web application. Even though the site address is different between zones, SharePoint will resolve both requests to the same web application.

SharePoint also allows port numbers for zone identification, as Table 2 shows, but this is not typically recommended for extranets since firewalls usually only allow web traffic ports such as 80 and 443. Also, some features of SharePoint might not behave as intended on a custom port over the internet.

Web Figure 1 shows the Zone name options displayed on the Extend an Existing Web Application page. Zone names suggest a specific usage, but it’s only for administrative convenience. When extending an existing web application to a new zone, the name you choose doesn’t matter.

You have three options for web authentication: Windows, ASP.NET Forms, or web single sign-on (SSO). The following discussion outlines these authentication types to help you determine which one is best for your specific requirements.

Windows authentication. In WSS 2.0, Windows authentication was the only authentication option. Even though the authentication system has been drastically improved in WSS 3.0, Windows authentication is still the only choice that offers all SharePoint features and enhanced client integration out of the box. Although features such as support for WWW Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) and Microsoft Office integration might not be your highest priority, they’re very convenient in some circumstances.

Continue to page 2

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Comments
  • Aaron
    4 years ago
    Nov 05, 2008

    We specialize in providing an enterprise extranet solution for SharePoint 2007. Please go to epok.net to view our 33 minute webinar.

  • charro
    4 years ago
    Oct 28, 2008

    In my opinion, the article doesn't clarify a lot the possibilities of having a extranet with SharePoint

  • Frank
    4 years ago
    Oct 01, 2008

    Totally agree, additional good to know that there are lots of Web Parts, add ons and extensions out there from ISVs worldwide. For example to add Knowledge Management to your WSS/MOSS intranet / extranet portal and enhance search experience you can use the taxonomy extension found at:

    http://www.sharepartxxl.com/products/taxonomy

    Check it out, Frank

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