In Novell Teaming, file viewing capabilities are provided by Oracle Outside In viewer technology. See Oracle Outside In Technology 8.3 Supported Formats for a list of the supported file formats. See Oracle Outside In Technology for background information about the Oracle viewer technology included in Teaming.
The file viewers also support data indexing by the Lucene Index Server.
Novell Teaming supports the IPV6 protocol when it is available on the server. If it is available, Teaming detects it and supports IPV6 by default, along with IPV4.
You can set up your Novell Teaming site in any of the following clustering environments:
Novell Cluster Services™ on Linux.
For information about Novell Cluster Services on Linux, see the Clustering (High Availability) section of the Open Enterprise Server 2 SP1 Documentation Web site.
Microsoft Clustering Services in Windows
For more information, see Windows 2003 Server Cluster or Windows Server 2008 High Availability.
In addition, you can install Teaming components on multiple servers to provide failover support, as described in Section III, Multi-Server Configurations and Clustering.
You can install Novell Teaming in virtual environments where a software program enables one physical server to function as if it were two or more physical servers. Xen* virtualization technology in Novell Open Enterprise Server (Linux version) and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server is supported. For more information, see:
Novell Teaming is supported on the following versions of VMware*:
VMware Server (formally GSX Server), an enterprise-class virtual infrastructure for x86-based servers
VMware ESX Server, a data-center-class virtual infrastructure for mission-critical environments
For more information, see the VMWare Web site.
Novell Access Manager can be used to provide single sign-on capabilities for your Teaming site. For setup instructions, see Section 9.8, Configuring Single Sign-On with Novell Access Manager.
For best Novell Teaming performance on Linux, the ext3 file system is recommended. If you are running OES Linux and need the feature-rich environment of the NSS file system, Teaming is also supported there. The reiser3 file system is also supported.