Define the location of the plugin-cfg.xml configuration
file. The location varies depending on how you have
configured your system. If the Web server and the Application Server
are on separate machines, you have a remote installation.
If
the two servers are on the same machine, you have a local installation.
If the
two servers are on the same machine and the Application Server node
or the custom node is federated, you have a local distributed installation.
In
the following examples, webserver1 is the Web server definition name.
Setting the path to the
plug-in configuration fileSet the WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE environment
variable to the location of the plug-in configuration file using one
of the following paths:
If the type of installation is: |
Then use this command to set
the environment variable: |
Remote |
WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE=/opt/IBM/WebSphere/Plugins/config/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
Local standalone |
WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE=profile_root/config/cells/sa_cell/nodes/webserver1_node/servers/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
Local distributed |
WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE=profile_root/config/cells/dmgrcell/nodes/managednode/servers/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
During the installation process, the Plug-ins installation
wizard creates the
setupPluginCfg.sh file in
two places:
- The plugins_root/bin directory
- The lotus_root/notesdata directory
You can run the script from either location to set the
WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE environment variable. However, if you are reconfiguring
the Web server, you might want to set the path yourself by setting
the value of the environment variable with a path from the preceding
table.
The setupPluginCfg.sh script sets
the file path value to the file path that the wizard configured originally.
If you are reconfiguring the Web server to change the original file
path, do not use this script.
Setting the path to the plug-in configuration
fileAdd the appropriate statement to your lotus_domino_root\notes.ini file:
Do not
delimit any of the following file paths with quotation marks unless
there is a space in the file path. Otherwise, the
plugin-cfg.xml file
might not load correctly.
If the type of installation is: |
Then use this command to set
the WebSpherePluginCfg variable: |
Remote |
WebSpherePluginCfg=C:\Program Files\IBM\WebSphere\Plugins\config\webserver1\plugin-cfg.xml |
Local standalone |
WebSpherePluginCfg=profile_root\config\cells\sa_cell\nodes\webserver1_node\servers\webserver1\plugin-cfg.xml |
Local distributed |
WebSpherePluginCfg=profile_root\config\cells\dmgrcell\nodes\managednode\servers\webserver1\plugin-cfg.xml |
Setting the path to the plug-in configuration
fileEdit your notes.ini file.
- From a CL command prompt, enter the Work with Domino Servers (WRKDOMSVR)
command.
- Type 13 next to the applicable Domino
server, then press Enter.
- Add or edit the WebSphereInit property. (See the following table.)
To
add a new line, type "i" next to the desired
insertion line, then press Enter.
- Press F3 to save and exit.
If the type of installation is: |
Then use this command to set
the environment variable: |
Remote |
WebSpherePluginConfig profile_root/config/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
Local standalone |
WebSpherePluginConfig profile_root/config/cells/my_cell/nodes/webserver1_node/servers/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
Local distributed |
WebSpherePluginConfig profile_root/config/cells/my_cell/nodes/my_managednode/servers/webserver1/plugin-cfg.xml |
During the installation process, the Plug-ins installation
wizard creates the
setupPluginCfg.sh file in
two places:
- The plugins_root/bin directory
- The lotus_root/notesdata directory
You can run the script from either location to set the
WAS_PLUGIN_CONFIG_FILE environment variable. However, if you are reconfiguring
the Web server, you might want to set the path yourself by setting
the value of the environment variable with a path from the preceding
table.
The setupPluginCfg.sh script sets
the file path value to the file path that the wizard configured originally.
If you are reconfiguring the Web server to change the original file
path, do not use this script.