October 24, 2007
Novell® Teaming is an enterprise collaboration tool that integrates with GroupWise®. Novell Teaming can increase individual productivity, team effectiveness, and organizational success by providing the right set of tools. Key teaming features include:
Team workspaces, calendars, task lists, and milestone tracking
Easy document management and document sharing
Discussion threads, wikis, blogs, and RSS feeds
Workflow automaton with customized forms
Global searches
System requirements and installation instructions are available in the Teaming 1.0 Installation and Configuration Guide on the Novell Teaming 1.0 Documentation Web site.
If you purchased a number of licenses in such a way that you received multiple license key files, you need to consolidate the licene information.
Use any one of the license key files when you install Novell Teaming.
After Novell Teaming is installed and running, copy all your license key files to the following directory:
/opt/icecore/liferay-portal-tomcat-5.5-jdk5-4.3.0/webapps/ ssf/WEB-INF/license
Log in to Novell Teaming as the Teaming Site Manager.
In the Teaming Administration portlet, click
.Your current license information is displayed.
Scroll to the bottom of the license information, then click
.The Teaming server reads all the license key files in the license subdirectory and displays your total license information.
Microsoft Vista has numerous problems with WebDAV access affecting all WebDAV interactions. There is also a Vista-specific issue with applets that prevents the edit-in-place feature from working properly. Monitor Microsoft support bulletins for updates on these issues. For the applets, refer to the following Sun bulletins:
At release time, the current version of SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) ships with an older 1.4.x version of the Java Runtime Environment (JRE). This version has a bug which prevents drag-and-drop from operating properly with the Novell Teaming file upload applet, However, copy-and-paste still works. Updating the JRE to 1.5.x on the SLED client machine resolves the problem.
If you modify a task “in place,” the summary page underneath does not update to reflect the change. You must refresh the page. A similar behavior can be seen in calendars.
If you change your interface language, the change is immediate in the Liferay portal, but requires logging out and logging in again before Novell Teaming responds to the change.
If you change your password through the Liferay portal or by other means, you might need to log out and log in again for WebDAV access to work properly.
The Liferay portal allows authentication by IDs other than screen name (e.g., e-mail address). Enabling this feature requires a number of prerequisites and has some side-effects that might not be desirable:
All e-mail addresses must be unique
Liferay’s LDAP search filter must be changed from cn=@screen_name@ to mail=@email_address@.
Unique screen names must still be defined for each user.
WebDAV and Web Services only support authentication by username (screen name), not e-mail address.
Alternatively, it is possible to use the e-mail address as the screen name (i.e., screen name and e-mail address fields are identical). This, however, is a decision that cannot be changed and must be part of the initial population of the database from LDAP.
In Internet Explorer, if you try to download the Novell Teaming system error log using the
menu item in the Teaming Administration portlet, you must have the Security setting set to or less for the download to work. Firefox works in all cases.If your session times out while viewing a folder with a table view, the Liferay pop-up box will be obscured. We hope to fix this in a future update.
Five warnings appear in the Liferay startup log file (catalina.out). These are benign and can safely be ignored:
service.impl.PortletLocalServiceImpl - "Portal with name EXT_1..."
deploy.hot.PluginPackageHotDeployListener
org.hibernate.imple.SessionFactoryObjectFactory - "Initial context...
No appenders for log4j
net.sf.ehcache.config.Configurator - "No configuration found...
When you shut down Novell Teaming, the log file contains a message about a "NullPointerException". This error is benign.
A directory tree named jackrabbit is created in the FileRepository root directory. This is the result of initialization of software components that are not yet supported in the current release.
The following sources provide information about Novell Teaming 1.0:
Installation: The following files are available after you extract the software from the .exe file and before you install the software:
readme.txt
installation-guide.pdf (the Novell Teaming 1.0 Installation and Configuration Guide)
Product documentation included in Novell Teaming:
To access the Novell Teaming Help system, log in to Novell Teaming, then click the
link.To access the Novell Teaming guides from within Novell Teaming, click the
link on the Novell Teaming Home page.Online product documentation: Novell Teaming 1.0 Documentation Web site
In this 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
Novell, Inc. makes no representations or warranties with respect to the contents or use of this documentation, and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. Further, Novell, Inc. reserves the right to revise this publication and to make changes to its content, at any time, without obligation to notify any person or entity of such revisions or changes.
Further, Novell, Inc. makes no representations or warranties with respect to any software, and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. Further, Novell, Inc. reserves the right to make changes to any and all parts of Novell software, at any time, without any obligation to notify any person or entity of such changes.
Any products or technical information provided under this Agreement may be subject to U.S. export controls and the trade laws of other countries. You agree to comply with all export control regulations and to obtain any required licenses or classification to export, re-export, or import deliverables. You agree not to export or re-export to entities on the current U.S. export exclusion lists or to any embargoed or terrorist countries as specified in the U.S. export laws. You agree to not use deliverables for prohibited nuclear, missile, or chemical biological weaponry end uses. Please refer to the Novell International Trade Services Web page for more information on exporting Novell software. Novell assumes no responsibility for your failure to obtain any necessary export approvals.
Copyright © 2007 Novell, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, photocopied, stored on a retrieval system, or transmitted without the express written consent of the publisher.
Novell, Inc. has intellectual property rights relating to technology embodied in the product that is described in this document. In particular, and without limitation, these intellectual property rights may include one or more of the U.S. patents listed on the Novell Legal Patents Web page and one or more additional patents or pending patent applications in the U.S. and in other countries.
For Novell trademarks, see the Novell Trademark and Service Mark list.
All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.