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HCL Domino 12.0.2 Documentation
  • Welcome
  • What's new in Domino 12?
  • Overview
  • Installing
  • Planning
  • Configuring
  • Securing
  • Administering
  • Tuning
  • Troubleshooting
  • Notices
  1. Home
  2. Configuring

    Use this information to configure your network, users, servers (including Web servers), directory services, security, messaging, widgets and live text, and server clusters.

  3. Configuring users and servers

    Topics in this section describe how to set up users and servers.

  4. Configuring Web servers

    This section describes how to set up the HCL Domino® Web server, and the Domino Web Navigator.

  • Configuring

    Use this information to configure your network, users, servers (including Web servers), directory services, security, messaging, widgets and live text, and server clusters.

    • Configuring a network

      This section presents the planning concepts and setup procedures necessary for a successful HCL Domino® deployment over a network. It provides information on network protocols from a Domino perspective but does not attempt to provide general network information.

    • Configuring users and servers

      Topics in this section describe how to set up users and servers.

      • Understanding the Server document

        The Server document is set up when you register a server. It contains many of the settings that define how your server operates.

      • Policies

        Use Domino® policy settings to control how users work with Notes®. A policy is a document that identifies a collection of individual policy settings. Policy settings documents define a set of defaults that apply to the users and groups to which the policy is assigned. You can change policy settings and they will be automatically applied to the assigned users and groups.

      • Defining default settings for Notes® user registration

        Before you register new Notes® users, you can specify default settings that apply to all users. Default settings simplify user registration and ensure user settings consistency. You can define many default settings, such as what mail server users have or what certifier ID to use for user registration. You can also specify a default workstation execution control list (ECL) to protect data from unauthorized workstation access.

      • Using groups

        Groups are lists of users, groups, and servers that have common traits. They are useful for mailing lists and access control lists. Using groups can simplify administration tasks.

      • Replicas

        You can make a database available to users in different locations, on different networks, or in different time zones, by creating replicas of the database.

      • Calendars and scheduling

        The calendar and scheduling features allow users to check the free time of other users, schedule meetings with them, and reserve resources, such as conference rooms and equipment.

      • Editing the notes.ini file

        The Domino and Notes notes.ini files contain the settings required for the server and client to operate correctly. If you modify or add settings in a notes.ini file, do so cautiously and never edit the file directly with a text editor.

      • Configuring directory services

        This section describes how to plan, set up, and use HCL Domino® directory services.

      • Configuring messaging

        This section provides an overview of messaging and describes how to set up mail routing, how to set up and customize mail servers, and how to track mail.

      • Configuring iNotes®

        HCL iNotes® provides HCL Notes® users with browser-based access to Notes mail and to Notes calendar and scheduling features. Administrators specify mail policy and security policy settings as well as notes.ini file settings to complete the full implementation of HCL iNotes.

      • Configuring Web servers

        This section describes how to set up the HCL Domino® Web server, and the Domino Web Navigator.

        • The Domino® Web server

          Domino® provides an integrated Web application server that can host Web sites that both Internet and intranet clients can access, and that can serve up pages that are stored in the file system or in a Domino database.

        • The Web Navigator

          The Web Navigator lets Notes® workstations access the Web, without having a direct connection to the Internet. The Web Navigator server, which has a direct connection to the Internet, retrieves pages for users. The Web Navigator retrieves pages on Internet servers -- for example, servers that use Internet services such as HTTP, FTP, or Gopher.

      • Setting up a cluster

        Setting up a cluster includes the tasks of creating and verifying that it is working correctly, and then setting up user access, mail, replications, size quotas, directory assistance, roaming, web navigation, and use of a private LAN in the cluster.

      • Configuring Widgets and Live Text

        Widgets and Live Text enables end users to see and act on Live Text in supported documents, including HCL Notes® mail, using XML extensions (widgets) created specifically for their use.

      • Domain Search

        Notes® client and Web users can use Domain Search to search an entire Domino® domain for database documents, files, and attachments that match a search query.

Configuring Web servers

This section describes how to set up the HCL Domino® Web server, and the Domino® Web Navigator.

  • Setting up a Domino® Web server
  • Setting up a Web Navigator server

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