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Overview of MinRole Server Roles in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition

APPLIES TO: no-img-132013 yes-img-162016 yes-img-192019 yes-img-seSubscription Edition no-img-sopSharePoint in Microsoft 365

Learn about the new MinRole farm topology and its benefits in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition.

What is MinRole?

MinRole is a new farm topology based on a set of predefined server roles introduced in SharePoint Server 2016. When configuring your SharePoint farm, you now select the role of a server when you create a new farm or join a server to an existing farm. SharePoint will automatically configure the services on each server based on the server's role. SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition are optimized for the MinRole farm topology.

The following video gives a general overview what MinRole is and can do for your organization.

 

Benefits of using the MinRole farm topology

Some of the primary benefits to using MinRole are:

  • Simplified deployment: Now you no longer need to worry about which services should be started on which servers. By deploying your farm in a recommended MinRole topology, you can focus on what functionality to enable in your farm and let SharePoint take care of the rest.

  • Improved performance and reliability: Microsoft has been operating SharePoint in Microsoft 365 for years and has analyzed the performance characteristics of SharePoint under various conditions, including CPU, memory, disk I/O, and network latency. SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition have been optimized for the MinRole farm topology based on that analysis. By deploying your farm in a recommended MinRole topology, you'll be able to reduce network latency and increase reliability.

  • Simplified capacity planning and farm scalability: Microsoft bases capacity planning on the MinRole topology. By deploying your farm in a recommended MinRole topology, you'll be able to leverage more predictable and prescriptive capacity-planning guidance. Plus, it's now easier to add servers into your farm as your needs grow because SharePoint automatically configures the additional servers for you.

How does MinRole simplify deployment?

MinRole automatically starts and stops service instances on each MinRole-managed server in your farm based on the server role. When you create a new farm or join a machine to an existing farm, SharePoint starts the base set of service instances that are required for the server's role. It also detects which additional services have been enabled in the farm and starts the matching service instances as appropriate for the server's role. Finally, it detects which service applications have been created in the farm and which services are necessary to support those service applications. Those service instances will be started as appropriate for the server's role, as well.

MinRole management of service instances doesn't happen only when you join a server to a farm. As you enable or disable services in the farm, or as you create and delete service applications in the farm, MinRole starts and stops service instances on the existing servers in the farm. This ensures that each server in your SharePoint farm is running exactly the services it needs.

The result is that SharePoint farm administrators can now focus on what services you want to run in your farm and not worry about where they're running. As long as you've deployed a supported MinRole farm topology, SharePoint will handle those details.

How does MinRole improve performance and reliability?

SharePoint often needs to communicate with service instances when serving requests. In previous releases, many service instances were typically hosted on separate servers, requiring cross-server connections from the front-end servers, which added latency. In addition, if one of the servers hosting those service instances was unhealthy, it could affect requests from multiple front-end servers, making it difficult to troubleshoot the issue and limit the impact on the rest of the farm.

MinRole improves this experience by hosting service instances appropriate for each server role on the local server. For example, service instances that are appropriate for user requests are hosted on the Front-end server role, while service instances appropriate for background tasks are hosted on the Application server role. When SharePoint needs to communicate with a service instance to serve a request, it detects if the service instance is hosted on the local server. If it is, it will always use that local service instance instead of a service instance hosted on a remote server.

This design reduces latency by keeping traffic on the local server whenever possible. It also improves reliability by limiting the impact of unhealthy servers on the overall farm. Once an administrator determines that a server is unhealthy and removes it from the load balancer rotation, the remaining healthy servers can continue to serve requests and not be affected by the unhealthy server.

MinRole is also self-healing. MinRole scans each server in your farm once a day to confirm that it's running the service instances that it's supposed to be running. If it detects a server that's not compliant with its server role, it will automatically start or stop the necessary service instances to return it to compliance. The SharePoint farm administrator has full control over this health scan and can change how often the scan is performed, whether MinRole automatically fixes non-compliant servers or simply reports them to the farm administrator, and can disable the scan entirely.

How does MinRole simplify capacity planning and farm scalability?

Microsoft provides various recommended MinRole farm topologies for our customers, including small, medium, and large-sized farms. To review the recommended MinRole farm topologies, see Planning for a MinRole server deployment in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition.

MinRole is also adaptable with built-in server role conversion. You can easily convert a server from one server role to another without having to disconnect a server from a farm and then rejoining it to the farm. Server role conversion can be performed through the Central Administration web site or Windows PowerShell.

MinRole enhancements

Starting with the November 2016 Public Update for SharePoint Server 2016, Microsoft has introduced the following enhancements to MinRole:

Microsoft recommends installing the November 2016 Public Update (or newer) to SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, or Subscription Edition to take full advantage of these MinRole enhancements.

See also

Concepts

Technical diagrams for SharePoint Server

Description of MinRole and associated services in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition

Other Resources

Planning for a MinRole server deployment in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition

Managing a MinRole Server Farm in SharePoint Servers 2016, 2019, and Subscription Edition