From Lan Times Jan 19,1998 issue
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Netscape's NetWare port delivers
Novonyx package fills the gap between NetWare and the Web with NLM-based groupware
By Mario Apicella
here is an air of tense anticipation surrounding Novonyx Inc., which was formed by Novell Inc. and Netscape Communications Corp. last June with the mission of bringing the best of Netscape World Wide Web software to the NetWare platform.
With an installed base of an estimated 5 million servers, NetWare is still the most popular NOS. And Netscape's Internet software is by all measures a market leader in that segment. Both companies, however, are rapidly losing share in key markets to common rival Microsoft Corp., and both need as many technological edges as possible to keep their customers happy.
Our evaluation of a late beta version of the Novonyx software, due this month, revealed that it could open a new market for Netscape's software, make Novell's servers more competitive, and give users more groupware choices.
This first release includes the Netscape Enterprise, FastTrack, and Messaging Servers running as NLMs. The company plans to add the Collabra and Calendar Servers, but no date has been set for the release of the NLM versions of those groupware products.
Our tests show that the Novonyx suite of products should be considered by NetWare administrators because it brings together the best features of the two families of products without sacrificing one for the other.
To port the Netscape software--strictly based on open Internet standards--to the proprietary NetWare environment was no trivial task, but Novonyx managed to wrap NetWare in a layer of Internet standards without changing its basic architecture. After we installed the Enterprise Server and the Messaging Server, our NetWare 4.11 server became a good Web citizen, able to manage HTTP (HyperText Transport Protocol) commands and Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) and security certificates. It could accept Common Gateway Interface (CGI) or Sun Microsystems Inc. Java script and provide Post Office Protocol 3 (POP3) or Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) mail services. It could even provide search directory services using Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP).
We installed Enterprise Server 3.5 for NetWare on a Compaq Computer Corp. ProLiant 1500 equipped with an Intel Corp. Pentium 133MHz CPU with 2GB of disk space and 90MB of RAM. Novonyx suggests a machine with 64MB of RAM and 200MB of disk space. NetWare 4.11 and TCP/IP protocol were also installed, both obvious prerequisites for the Novonyx suite. Our test intranet was on a dedicated LAN with several PCs loaded with Microsoft Windows 95 or Windows NT 4.0 and a collection of Netscape and Microsoft Web browsers.
We installed the software from a workstation logged in with Administrator rights for the target server. The installation process verified that the server had the latest version of NetWare and updated the TCP/IP modules and the CLIB automatically.
After the software is loaded you may forget that you're on a NetWare server because the server administration GUI has the familiar Netscape look and feel, giving you full control over your Web server. For example, you can start or stop the server, create additional servers, activate encryption, set rules to limit access to documents, activate agents to notify when page content changes, let users publish their own documents, or perform document search and indexing.
The features of the product are easy to implement, even for administrators with limited Web experience because Novonyx has surrounded its uncompromising Web server with comprehensive online help. You can get a clear explanation of the concepts and step-by-step instructions to guide your implementation from any page.
One of the best Enterprise Server features is document indexing. You can select user directories and prepare them for the search engine included with the software. Working from the Server Administration GUI, we defined a new "collection," which is a directory you select to manage; chose to include all the files in the search; and then assigned a nickname. We then accessed the Enterprise Server search engine from our browser and could search for any file containing a specific word. The search engine supports a variety of file formats, including the major word processors, HTML (HyperText Markup Language) files, and spreadsheet documents in Microsoft Excel format. In our opinion, this feature alone could justify installing Enterprise Server: If your users access their files through the OS or the application interface, they will love a search engine that can be tailored to their set of documents.
The Messaging Server is another Novonyx software product that can simplify the network administrator's life. Off the shelf, it supports IMAP, POP3, and SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) and will work with most E-mail clients. It integrates well with NDS (Novell Directory Services), to the point that you don't need to define E-mail users because the Messaging Server will accept and deliver E-mail for any user contained in the NDS definitions. This feature saves the administrator from keeping a separate directory for E-mail, a considerable simplification of his or her job.
Furthermore, if your E-mail client is LDAP-capable, such as Netscape Messenger or Microsoft Outlook, it is possible to search the NDS database to find the E-mail addresses of your correspondents. For LDAP searches of the NDS database you will need an additional product, LDAP Services for NetWare, which you can download for free from Novell's Web site. Again, it's simple and efficient because you catalog your users only once, in NDS, and that definition applies to all the servers in your NDS tree. Thus, from the NetWare Administrator you can manage the configuration of the E-mail server.
Conflicting directory services? What we found confusing is that the Enterprise Server does not seem to integrate as well with NDS as does the Messaging Server. In fact, the only choice when installing the Enterprise Server is to use a "local" directory, and we did not find any instructions on how to make the Enterprise Server use the NDS database. The online help makes reference to another product that could be used instead of the local database, Netscape Directory Server, but to our knowledge, this product is not available for the NetWare platform.
Eventually, with the help of Novonyx, we made the Enterprise Server use NDS, but we would like to see better integration in future releases. The fact that the Enterprise Server does not use NDS straight from the installation is, in our opinion, a big flaw in a product designed for NetWare, and it will make many users as confused as we were.
Installing the Enterprise Server and the Messaging Server from Novonyx will transform your NetWare file and print server into a full-fledged Web and E-mail server. If you plan to use Microsoft ActiveX controls in your Web pages, you should look elsewhere. But companies that have invested in the NetWare platform and want to move to Web-based document management should take a good look at the new suite from Novonyx.
Novonyx Inc. 764 E. Timpanogos Parkway Orem, UT 84097 (801) 802-6600 Fax (801) 802-6609 novonyx.com
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