Welcome to the HCL Domino® 11.0.1 documentation. Here administrators can find information about planning, installing, configuring, and administering Domino 11.0.1.
This documentation provides information about the administration tools for managing and monitoring servers and databases.
This section describes how to use the tools and features that help you monitor a Domino® system.
You can monitor database activity, replication, and document deletions.
The HCL Domino 11.0.1 documentation is currently available in the following languages.
Learn about all of the new features for administrators in HCL Domino® 11.
Welcome to HCL Domino® Administrator Help.
A trial version of HCL Domino® 11.0.1 is available free of charge.
Use this documentation to install the HCL Domino® server and subsequently deploy the HCL Notes®client.
Use this topic as an overview of planning task.
Use this information to configure your network, users, servers (including Web servers), directory services, security, messaging, widgets and live text, and server clusters.
This section describes security features, including execution control lists, IDs, and SSL.
Topics in this section describe the tools you can use to administer a Domino® server.
You can monitor system activity and platform use using one of three tools -- the Domino® Administrator, the Web Administrator, or the server console.
You can monitor and troubleshoot performance issues using a number of different tools.
Domino® domain monitoring (DDM) provides one location in the Domino Administrator client that you can use to view the overall status of multiple servers across one or more domains, and then use the information provided by DDM to quickly resolve problems.
The Domino® SNMP Agent enhances the monitoring and control features of Domino by enabling third-party management stations, which use industry standard SNMP, to manage aspects of the Domino server.
As a Domino® administrator, a major part of your job is maintaining each server that you administer.
Domino® provides three tools that you can use to monitor mail. Message tracking allows you to track specific mail messages to determine if the intended recipients received them. Mail usage reports provide the information you need to resolve mail problems and improve the efficiency of your mail network. Mail probes test and gather statistics on mail routes.
You can monitor directory assistance by using Show Xdir command to display information about all the directories a server uses for directory services. You can also view directory assistance statistics.
Monitor database activity regularly. If database activity is high and users report performance problems, you can take a number of steps to improve performance.
If there are replicas of a database, you can use any of these methods to monitor replication daily.
Run the Compact task with the -dl argument to enable logging of data about deleted documents in databases that you specify. The data is logged to entries in deletion log files that are added to the IBM_TECHNICAL_SUPPORT directory on a server. For example, you can log when documents are deleted from mail files to help troubleshoot if users report missing documents.
Domino® provides several ways to find out what is happening in a cluster and make adjustments to keep the cluster running smoothly and efficiently, so that no server is overloaded. You can monitor failover, workload balancing, and cluster replication to see how efficiently the cluster is running.
Use the Domino® Diagnostic Probe (DDP), a Java™ utility provided by Support, to monitor servers that have been intermittently slow or unresponsive. The probe is a Java process (dbopen.jar) that runs in the background. The utility probes a specific Domino server over time by invoking database open transactions. If the probe detects a slow response, it will invoke Notes® System Diagnostic (NSD) to gather diagnostic data. This data is used by Support to troubleshoot and determine the cause or causes of the performance degradation.
Quality of Service, or QoS, is designed to react to the general operation of a Domino® server in order to keep that server functioning reliably and always available. If QoS detects that a server is not responding or hung, QoS probing can be configured to email an administrator about the problem and/or automatically terminate the server and restart it. QoS log information can also be useful for analysis by Support.
This topic covers details of QoS including server and server controller behavior during kill events, failover trigger, and log file content.
Manage Domino® servers by performing any of these tasks.
Topics in this section describe how to set up and manage Domino® databases.
Use this information to improve HCL 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 HCL Domino® server and Administrator client.