Ahh, I don't know about those as I don't use them. I don't like a lot of
what frontpage 'does for me' but it's the tool we have in house.
|---------+---------------------------->
| | daniel.jarboe@cus|
| | tserv.com |
| | Sent by: Linux on|
| | 390 Port |
| | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]|
| | IST.EDU> |
| | |
| | |
| | 04/12/2002 11:20 |
| | AM |
| | Please respond to|
| | Linux on 390 Port|
| | |
|---------+---------------------------->
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
|
| To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|
| cc:
|
| Subject: Re: web publishing on Linux S/390
|
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
Thanks for mentioning a possibility like this, but does this handle
frontpage components correctly? For example, if one department *click
click* inserted a form to submit email, frontpage inserts embeded
comments that are interpreted by the server extensions. Same with
counters, and other things that frontpage provides to make things as
painless as possible for Joe User.
I thought any pages with
<!--webbot bot=" utilize various frontpage server binaries and will
malfunction without server extensions installed. Or is your experience
different? ~ Daniel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>On our company
intranet webserver, various departments maintain their >>own pages. Most
utilize front page and front page publishing >>features, >>which
unfortunately require front page server extensions which aren't >>available
on Linux S/390, so that stuff is stuck on an NT box for now. >> The server
extensions are available for linux on intel, and >>OS/390, but >>not Linux
on S/390. What substitutes are people using? >> > >One customer of ours is
using a small Linux Intel box (on an old Pentium 90) >as a staging and
testing server for the FP users, and then using rsync to >put the content
into production on the Linux/390 instances. Gives them a >two-stage commit
to production, and avoids the NT box. > >-- db >