Windows |
- You store document files on a computer other than the application
server computer that runs the system.
- You store the document files for each Attached Documents folder
on a different computer.
- An HTTP server (such as Apache or Microsoft Internet Information Services)
is on each computer that stores the document files.
- For each folder in the system, you map a drive on the application
server to point to the drive on the corresponding Document File/ HTTP
server. The Document File/HTTP server is the computer that runs the
HTTP server and stores the documents.
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- Three HTTP server computers store document files: servers A, B,
and C.
- Server A stores the document files for the Attachments folder
in the system, and document files for which no file path is specified.
- Server B stores the document files for the Diagrams folder.
- Server C stores the document files for the Images folder.
- D is the drive on each HTTP server computer that stores the documents.
- H, I, and J are mapped drives on the application server computer
that runs the system. These drives correspond to Drive D on the HTTP
server computers A, B, and C.
- File names are case-sensitive.
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UNIX |
- You store document files on computers other than the application
server computer that runs the system.
- You store the document files for each Attached Documents folder
in the system on a different computer.
- An HTTP server (such as Apache or any other Web server) is on
each computer that stores the document files.
- You mount the network file system that contains the document files
from the document file server onto the application server computer
(UNIX only).
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- Three HTTP server computers store document files: computers A,
B, and C.
- Server A stores the document files for the Attachments folder
in the system, and the document files for which no file path is specified.
- Server B stores the document files for the Diagrams folder.
- Server C stores the document files for the Images folder.
- /d01, /d02, and /d03 are the NFS mount points on the application
server computer for the home/file system on each of the HTTP servers.
- Drive letter, file names, and directory names are case-sensitive.
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