Welcome to the IBM® Domino 10.0.1 Administrator Help.
Learn about all of the new features for administrators in IBM® Domino® 10.
The following features are new in IBM Domino 10.0.
In Domino 10.0.1 Fix Pack 2, you can configure cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) to allow a web application from another origin to access resources on a Domino web server.
The following features are new in IBM® Domino® 10.0.1.
You can set up IBM® Domino® to publish Domino statistics to an external monitoring service. The service must be able to accept time series data via HTTP POST requests. A Domino server is preconfigured to publish Domino statistics to the New Relic service using the New Relic Plugin API; all you need to do in this case, is create a New Relic account and then add a setting to the server notes.ini file to enable the server to report its statistics. You can also configure Domino yourself to publish to Domino statistics to another service, for example, Hosted Graphite.
The following new Domino features are designed to save you time and make you more productive.
Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) 4.0 and the industry-standard SAML 2.0 AuthnRequest are now supported. In addition, the IdP Catalog (idpcat.nsf) design has been improved to simplify the steps to configure Domino® to use a SAML federated identity provider. To take advantage of these enhancements, replace the design of your IdP Catalog with the Domino 10 idpcat.ntf template.
When passwords on Notes® client IDs become different from the passwords on the IDs in the ID vault, synchronization of ID information between clients and the ID vault stops. In this release, you can enable automatic restarting of synchronization when the passwords get out of sync. You can also use the Query Vault console command or the Domino Administrator to monitor and manage ID synchronization.
Query Vault
You can enable a whitelist filter as the Active Content Filter (ACF) in Domino®. The ACF is used to remove potentially harmful active content from HTML messages such as JavaScript™, Java™, and ActiveX. A whitelist filter removes all entities except those in the whitelist. A blacklist filter (used in previous releases and still the default in this release) retains all entities except those in the blacklist.
The Domino® server and Notes® standard client use Apache Tika 1.18 open source conversion filters to extract text for full-text searches of attachments. Tika replaces the KeyView conversion filter used in previous releases.
The maximum size of databases allowed in IBM Domino 10 has increased to 256 GB; previously it was 64 GB. In addition, the maximum size of folders has increased significantly. Although the precise maximum size is difficult to quantify, users can expect at least a 10-fold increase in folder size capacity.
The default On-Disk Structure (ODS) for databases is now ODS 52, the ODS for IBM Domino and Notes 9.0.1. Unless there is a Create_Rx_Databases=1 notes.ini setting on server or client that specifies another ODS (for example, Create_R10_Databases=1), ODS 52 is automatically used with new databases or databases that are compacted using copy-style compacting.
When you create a Web Site rule document for HTTP response headers, you can now include up to 20 custom headers; previously you were restricted to three. In addition, you can designate each for HTTP, HTTPS, or both HTTP and HTTPS requests.
The following new features can be pushed down to IBM® Notes® clients.
The following component versions are upgraded in this release:
The following components are no long part of Notes® and Domino® 10.
Welcome to IBM® Domino® Administrator Help.
Use this documentation to install the IBM® Domino® server and subsequently deploy the IBM Notes® client.
Use this topic as an overview of planning task.
Use this information to configure an IBM® Domino® network, users, servers (including Web servers), directory services, security, messaging, widgets and live text, and server clusters. Also use this information to set up IBM iNotes® on a server using Domino Off-Line Services (DOLS).
This section describes IBM® Domino® security features, including execution control lists, IDs, and SSL.
This documentation provides information about the administration tools for managing and monitoring IBM Domino® servers and databases.
Use this information to improve IBM® Domino® server, Domino Web server, and messaging performance through the use of resource balancing and activity trends, Server.Load commands, advanced database properties, cluster statistics, and the Server Health Monitor.
This section describes how to find and solve problems with IBM® Domino® server and Administrator client.