I've put in a few of these. 3/4" plywood as a platform, five 2x4 cripples for support, 2 on each side, 1 at the rear, a standard shelf support at the front attached to the door post; I also put a layer of ice/water shield or schluter onto the plywood to avoid any condensation issues from the porcelain to the cdx. I always just cut out a nice round hole for the drain basket, never had an issue.
As Johnny mentioned these things are heavy so I wouldn't get creative with support, just strong.
Two other important finishing factors with these:
Top level of the sink rim in relation to the countertop - most people put them in so the sink rim is under the CT and the CT overlaps the sink edge; this creates a permanent drip edge and makes water floor into the sink very easy; the down side is that the extra couple lost inches noticeably kills the cabinet usability, makes the doors look overly short and stupid and can lead to plumbing retrofits you may not have been anticipating. With any farm sink install I suggest you measure the drain inlet height prior to getting too deep into the install. If this is a typical deep farm sink it could be an issue. You may need to pull the cabinet, lower the drain inlet and then finish install
I've also put these in with the sink rim slight above the CT edge; granted it doesn't allow water to just flow into the sink but I think it actually looks better. Nice tight scribed seam and a good silicone caulk seam and I've never had a call back. Makes the cabinet underneath a bit more usable and the doors look better.
It really depends on what look the client wants and whether or not they are willing to pay for plumbing modifications.
The other factor is scribing a clean edge along the front sides of the sink. I have yet to find one of these sinks where the sides are a straight line up and down. You have to take your time to scribe a nice consistent joint. I think someone posted a pic on here a while ago showing a bad joint along the sides of a farm sink.
A bad joint is never a good thing, on the front sides of a farm sink in a kitchen it looks horrible.
Hope that helps