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Sitecore 9.1 Initial Release was released on 28th November 2018 (also day when this post was published). In this post I will walk you through really quick installation of this version of Sitecore for your development machine.

This was the most smoothest and quickest (for preparation) installation of Sitecore 9.x version that I have done so far and I have installed couple of them throughout the year. Trust me 🙂

What you can find in this blog post:

Sitecore 9.1 Prerequisites Installation Preparation tasks The quickest Solr installation ever thanks to Jeremy Davis Sitecore 9.1 Installation

Let’s get started then!

1) Sitecore 9.1 Prerequisites

1a) OS (Same as for Sitecore 9.0)

These operating systems are supported:

Windows Server 2016 – my choice for Sitecore 9.1

Windows 10 (32/64-bit)

1b) Database

This version supports these database servers:

Microsoft SQL Server 2017 or 2016 SP2 – Only supported versions for xDB (Experience databases) – my choice was 2016 SP2

Microsoft SQL Server 2014 SP2 – Only supports XM databases. xDB databases not supported.

MongoDB Server 3.6.6 – This is required if you are going to use MongoDB for the Collection database or as a Session State Provider.

Do not forget to enable contained databases!

In order to enable contained databases on SQL Server, run this SQL script through SQL Server Management Studio:

sp_configure ‘contained database authentication’, 1;

GO RECONFIGURE;

GO

For more information see this article about contained databases.

1c) Powershell

Microsoft PowerShell® version 5.1 or later is required.

To quickly check, you can always open a powershell command prompt and run the following command:

$PSVersionTable.PSVersion

1d) IIS

Only one version of IIS is supported:

IIS 10

1e) .NET requirements

Sitecore XP 9.1 requires .NET Framework 4.7.1 or later.

Sitecore Identity server requires .NET Core Runtime 2.1.3 or later.

You must apply any available updates to the .NET Framework on every Sitecore installation.

You don’t need to install these by yourself upfront as new feature in Sitecore 9.1 installation package will check and install all prerequisites for you. See chapter 4b) of this blog post. Awesome!

2) Installation preparation

We will download all necessary installation files in this step.

2a) Download installation package

If you are planning to install Sitecore 9.1 on dev machine, click directly on this link to download installation package straight ahead or open https://dev.sitecore.net/Downloads/Sitecore_Experience_Platform/91/Sitecore_Experience_Platform_91_Initial_Release.aspx and download highlighted file with name “Packages for XP Single” (login is needed for download):

2b) Optional step – Download installation guides

If you are following this blog posts, you actually don’t need to download them but just in case 🙂 Open https://dev.sitecore.net/Downloads/Sitecore_Experience_Platform/91/Sitecore_Experience_Platform_91_Initial_Release.aspx and download highlighted files manually:

It is really great that Sitecore first time provides also “Quick installation guide” for developers to install Sitecore 9.1 on standalone developer machine. Awesome!

2c) Download low-effort Solr installation script

Jeremy Davis created really nice ps1 script to help you with Solr installation. So you don’t need to do something like this anymore.

You can download this script from his blog post or directly from his GitHub gist.

I have created this file with name “01_InstallSolr_ByJeremyDavis.ps1”.

You can find this script / file also in my GitHub Repository or directly here where I have changed all necessary values accordingly to what is needed for Sitecore 9.1 especially Solr version was changed to 7.2.1.

2d) Prepare installation files

Extract downloaded zip file:

and then also extract highlighted XP0 Configuration files zip file:

Copy all files from newly extracted folder “XP0 Configuration files” to root folder of your installation directory like this:

Copy into this folder also your license.xml file!

I have also renamed the OOTB ps1 file “XP0-SingleDeveloper.ps1” to “02_InstallSitecore_XP0-SingleDeveloper.ps1” just to have correct order of ps1 scripts to run. You can also download it from my GitHub repository with predefined values from this article.

This is how it should be before proceeding further:

3) Solr Installation

This will be quick 🙂

If you have downloaded low effort Solr file from my GitHub repository then quickly open it in Notepad++ or any other editor and check whether JREVersion corresponds to your currently installed version of JRE and just run the script as Administrator in PowerShell:

If you are using Jermey’s original file then open it for editing and make sure to change solrVersion parameter to “7.2.1” and change also JREVersion and installFolder if you wish to have it differently and run the script:

After script ends, browser should be opened automatically with Solr admin screen:

That was quick! I told you so 😉

And let’s go to final step and install Sitecore 9.1!

4) Sitecore 9.1 Installation

4a) Install SIF 2.0

Sitecore 9.1 supports new version of SIF – Sitecore Installation Framework 2.0. This version needs Powershell 5.1 to run.

Open PowerShell as Administrator and run these two commands one by one:

Register-PSRepository -Name SitecoreGallery -SourceLocation https://sitecore.myget.org/F/sc-powershell/api/v2 -InstallationPolicy Trusted

Install-Module SitecoreInstallFramework -Force

Update-Module SitecoreInstallFramework

Last one will also install latest version of SIF side by side existing version (if you have installed Sitecore 9.0 on the same machine before).

4b) Install Prerequisites

Open PowerShell Command Prompt as Administrator and navigate to “C:\ResourceFiles” folder or any other folder where you are doing installation from.

Run this command to install all prerequisites:

Install-SitecoreConfiguration -Path .\Prerequisites.json

No more manual downloads or installation. Sitecore SIF will take care of that!

4c) Install Sitecore

Open “02_InstallSitecore_XP0-SingleDeveloper.ps1” file in your installation directory and check and edit parameters if necessary (especially once I have highlighted) to suit your setup:

As you can see, I have copied the files into “C:\ResourceFiles” folder. I have also adjusted sql server credentials and variables regarding solr.

Open the script in PowerShell Command Prompt as Administrator and run it.

This is what you should get in couple of minutes:

Mind the generated admin password at the end. No more “b” as password 🙂

This was generated by SIF as I haven’t specified different parameter in ps1 script for this variable and I kept it on default “SIF-Default”:

$SitecoreAdminPassword = “SIF-Default”

And finally I saw familiar Sitecore login screen:

and also Launchpad:

It was opened amazingly fast and also the performance of each application seems to be tuned up. Good job Sitecore!

I will definitely explore this more and publish some followup blog posts from my findings!

Stay tuned!

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