This Novell® GroupWise® Server Migration Utility Installation and Migration Guide explains how to use the GroupWise Server Migration Utility to migrate a GroupWise 7 or GroupWise 8 system from NetWare® or Windows* to Linux*. The guide is divided into the following sections:
Section 10.0, Transitioning Windows Users to Linux or Macintosh
Section 11.0, Transitioning GroupWise Administration to Linux
Section 12.0, Manually Migrating a Post Office and Its POA to Linux
Section 13.0, Manually Migrating a Domain and Its MTA to Linux
Section 14.0, Manually Migrating the Internet Agent to Linux
This guide is intended for network administrators who want to move their GroupWise systems from NetWare or Windows to Linux.
We want to hear your comments and suggestions about this manual and the other documentation included with this product. Please use the User Comment feature at the bottom of each page of the online documentation, or go to www.novell.com/documentation/feedback.html and enter your comments there.
For the most recent version of the GroupWise Server Migration Utility Installation and Migration Guide, visit the GroupWise Utilities Documentation Web site.
For additional GroupWise documentation, see the following guides at the GroupWise 7 Documentation Web site or the GroupWise 8 Documentation Web site:
Installation Guide
Administration Guide
Multi-System Administration Guide
Interoperability Guide
Troubleshooting Guides
GroupWise Client User Guides
GroupWise Client Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
In Novell documentation, a greater-than symbol (>) is used to separate actions within a step and items in a cross-reference path.
A trademark symbol (®, ™, etc.) denotes a Novell trademark. An asterisk (*) denotes a third-party trademark.
When a single pathname can be written with a backslash for some platforms or a forward slash for other platforms, the pathname is presented with a backslash. Users of platforms that require a forward slash, such as Linux, should use forward slashes as required by your software.
When a startup switch can be written with a forward slash for some platforms or a double hyphen for other platforms, the startup switch is presented with a forward slash. Users of platforms that require a double hyphen, such as Linux, should use double hyphens as required by your software.