Berrantolatu dut nire bizitza pixka bat eta denbora bat aurkitu artikulu bat bidaltzeko www.endusersharepoint.com. My latest article is up here: Erabili pertsonalizatua zerrendak eraginkorragoa Workflow Ikuskaritza egiteko (http://www.endusersharepoint.com/?p=1658).
Honen inaugurazio 'grafikoa da:
SharePoint Designer workflow doesn’t give us a lot of visibility into what’s happening with our workflow solutions. Eta, ikuspena egin hori iritsi da nahiko pobrea interfazearen arabera eragotzi eta 60 day time window. Hau 60 day window can be a major disappointment to new SharePoint Designer users because it’s not advertised by the tool itself. It’s not at all uncommon for someone to fire up SharePoint Designer, sortu workflow konponbide "saioa historia zerrenda" baliatzen ekintza ...
Arazoa da, ondoren 60 egun, mezurik sortu beharko duzu, modu honetan daude historia workflow zerrendatik ezabatu! After a bit of teeth gnashing and “what were they thinking?"Argumentu, beheko lerroa hau: it happens and it needs to happen. Galdera da, Nola inguruan dugun?
The official answer is to rely upon SharePoint’s built-in auditing feature. From an end user’s point of view, Hala ere,, that’s very weak in WSS and not much better in MOSS. Zorionez, we can still leverage the familiar SharePoint Designer tool to create a durable workflow history and audit trail which is an order of magnitude more useful to boot. Here’s how.
I describe how to create a more friendly and useful audit solution for declarative workflow created in SPD.
I was inspired to write this article from a recent project for a client that had developed nine technical SPD workflows in support of one logical business process. Assuming for now that nine is a reasonable number, it was certainly a challenge to debug it or view the overall status of the process in one simple view. Each of these separate technical workflows has its own independent workflow history list and that’s just not manageable. I was able to combine all of them into a single audit list using the technique I describe on the site.
Ezazu.
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where’s the full article?
Looks like EUSP got significantly updated and the old link from my blog is no longer good. Sorry.