Suggested solutions are provided for the following problems:
Documents Are Not Listed in User’s Folder
User Can’t Exit GroupWise Because a Document Isn’t Closed
GroupWise Can’t Monitor a Non-Integrated Application
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
Normally, Setup detects if an application is installed and then allows the user to choose whether or not to have integrations installed for that application. If the application setup didn’t run correctly, the GroupWise client might not detect that the integration installed. If necessary, integrations can be installed manually.
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
In addition, the following DLL programs are copied to the c:\windows\system directory when Setup is run: odma32.dll, gwodm132.dll, and gwodm1xx.dll. The name of the gwodm1xx.dll depends on which language was selected when Setup was run.
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
There should also be an integration macro installed in the application’s macro startup directory.
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
User Wants to Turn Off Integrations Temporarily
Administrator Wants to Remove Integrations Permanently
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
Integrations=2: If an application has the setting Integrations=2 for an ODMA-compliant application, you can change to Integrations=0 for no integration.
Integrations=1: If an application has the setting Integrations=1, indicating it is integrated using a startup macro, you must change to Integrations=0 for no integration and delete the startup macro. For example, to remove integration for Word, you need to delete the gwnormxx.dot macro from the Word startup directory. For Excel, you need to delete the gwxl97.xla macro from the xlstart directory and reset the Excel toolbars.
Administrator Wants to Add a Custom Integration
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
Integrations=2: If the application is ODMA-compliant, specify Integrations=2.
Integrations=1: If the application has its own macro language and you want to write a startup macro, use Integrations=1, followed by AppKey=application_name. Use the application to create the startup macro and place the startup macro in the application’s startup directory.
DualExe: For some applications, the name of the file containing the actual application is different from what you type to start the application. For example, to start WordPerfect 6.1, you type wpwin, but the WordPerfect 6.1 program is actually contained in a file named wpwin61.exe. For such applications, you use the name of the program that starts the application as the section heading. For example, [WPWIN.EXE]. Then you use DualExe to specify the name of the file that actually contains the application. For example, dualexe=wpwin61.exe. You would need to consult the application documentation or its installation directory to determine the file name to use with DualExe.
For information about the gwappint.inf file, see Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf File
in Libraries and Documents
in the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
Administrator Wants to Distribute Standardized Integrations
Setting Up Integrations Using the gwappint.inf Filein
Libraries and Documentsin the GroupWise 2012 Administration Guide.
This file is not replaced when Setup is run; therefore, customizations are preserved through updates.