Since the web services are using HTTPS you have to use an SSL certificate on the ARR server. You can also use ARR version 3 which can be downloaded here: ĪRR is installed using the web platform installer, so click the link, click Run (or Save if you want to store on disk first) and follow the wizard.Īs you can see in the screenshot the IIS prerequisite software is automatically installed.
LYNC WEB APP NOT INSTALLING INSTALL
To install ARR you can use the Web Platform installer on. There’s no need to install prerequisite software, this will be installed during the installation of IIS/ARR. Make sure you’ve the the name resolution working correctly otherwise you’ll be presented all kinds of funky error messages. I have been using Windows Server 2012 R2 with 2 NICs of course. The server needs an FQDN as well, so besides a normal server name you have to enter the DNS suffix. Server ConfigurationĪ reverse proxy is meant to be installed in the perimeter network and as such it cannot be a member of the internal Active Directory domain. This can be configured using the Topology Builder. The internal name of the Lync Front-End pool is but the external name is. The following FQDN’s are web services internally running on port 4443 and port 8080, so they need port translation to publish them to the internet using port 443 and port 80: Lync connectivity with other Lync organizations).
![lync web app not installing lync web app not installing](http://lh4.ggpht.com/-w_7h0LWNAGQ/Uk7pZx9OQeI/AAAAAAAABnM/bSoyFNC92Q8/clip_image002_thumb.png)
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These services are used by either external Lync clients or for federation purposes (i.e. The following FQDN’s are ‘published’ via the Lync 2013 Edge Server: In my lab I have a Lync 2013 Enterprise Edition, in the perimeter network I have a Lync 2013 Edge Server, but instead of a TMG I now have an IIS/ARR server. One of the Microsoft alternatives for reverse proxy is the Application Request Routing module or ARR, a module that’s running on top of Internet Information Server (IIS). In an earlier blog post I wrote about publishing Lync services using TMG 2010.