Oracle® Calendar Administrator's Guide Release 2 (9.0.4) Part Number B10892-02 |
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Oracle Calendar is scalable calendaring software, based on open standards, for efficiently scheduling people, resources and events. Among other features, it offers real-time lookups and free-time searches, multiple time zone support and UTF-8 encoding to support international deployments, e-mail and wireless alerts, multi-platform support and an extensible Authentication, Compression and Encryption (ACE) framework for enhanced security.
The Oracle Calendar server is the back end to an integrated suite of calendaring and scheduling products. Networked users can use a desktop client (Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Solaris), Web client or Microsoft Outlook to manage their calendars. Mobile users can synchronize their agendas with a variety of PDAs or, with the addition of Oracle's wireless technology, can send and receive calendar entries using a mobile phone.
Oracle Calendar is part of Oracle Collaboration Suite, offering integrated e-mail, voice mail, calendaring and wireless services. For more information on the other components of Oracle Collaboration Suite, please see Oracle's Web site or consult the relevant product documentation.
This Administrator's Guide is directed at any administrator whose task is the installation, configuration, use and maintenance of Oracle Calendar in general, or of any Oracle Calendar components. This guide documents deployment, configuration and maintenance procedures for calendar components. It is a companion volume to the Oracle Calendar Reference Manual, which provides detailed information concerning configuration parameters and command-line administration utilities.
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This manual contains 17 chapters, 4 appendices and a glossary:
This chapter is an introduction to the administration requirements of Oracle Calendar, and the management tools and utilities available to you.
This chapter examines the overall structure of the calendar server.
This chapter outlines the deployment and installation of your calendar server.
This chapter contains an overview of how the Oracle Internet Directory interacts with the Oracle Calendar server, and information on using third-party directory servers when using the calendar server in a standalone installation.
This chapter describes how to manage your calendar server using command-line utilities or the Calendar Administrator.
This chapter describes how to setup and manage a calendar node.
This chapter describes how to manage your network of calendar nodes.
This chapter describes the different tasks involved in managing users within a calendar server node.
This chapter describes the various tasks involved in creating and managing resources.
This chapter describes the various tasks involved in creating and managing event calendars.
This chapter contains an overview of the administrative rights that can be assigned to users, and the methods available for assigning those rights.
This chapter describes the different tasks involved in managing groups and group members within a calendar server node network.
This chapter describes the various tasks involved in creating and managing holidays.
This chapter contains general considerations relating to the server-side implementation of reminders and notifications.
This chapter outlines the procedures for server maintenance, server back up and restore and user back up and restore.
This chapter describes how you can monitor the Calendar Server by viewing and interpreting log files.
This chapter provides an overview of the Oracle Calendar application system, including a summary of its components, architecture information and installation considerations.
This appendix describes the disk space and memory requirements of the calendar server.
This appendix details the modifications that must be made to certain kernel parameters and operating environments in order to ensure that sufficient resources are allocated to the calendar server.
This appendix describes the structure and configuration of the authentication, compression and encryption methods, details additional security considerations for installations using a directory server, and a number of other measures that may be employed to further protect calendar data.
This appendix contains information relating to international installations of the calendar server.
For more information, see the following manuals in the Oracle Calendar documentation set:
See also the following manuals in the Oracle Collaboration Suite documentation set:
In this manual, Windows and NT are both used to refer to the Windows2000 and Windows NT operating systems.
In examples, an implied carriage return occurs at the end of each line, unless otherwise noted. You must press the Return key at the end of a line of input.
The following conventions are also used in this manual: