When a Lotus Notes application is developed, it is a quite common requirement that it must be "signed" by an appropriate Lotus Notes user ID or Lotus Domino server ID before it will operate correctly in a production environment.
The developer (or developers) who over time created the various design elements in the database (forms, views, agents, etc) will have placed their own "signature" against each design element every time that they save it.
The situation commonly arises that the developer(s) who coded the database have signatures that do not provide sufficient or appropriate authority for agents that are to run on a Domino server, for formulae to be executed in a form, etc).
This is especially the case for “alien” Notes applications that come to you from outside organizations such IBM Business Partners and Independent Software Vendors, but can be true even internally in your organization when there are multiple developers over time or for a specific release of the application..
Therefore a given version of a database application is put into production, its design elements need to be signed by a Notes ID with the appropriate authority. (Refer to the IBM Lotus Notes documentation for full details about the concept of signing Notes databases.)
Although signing is not all that difficult to do, it can be a somewhat circumspect process for the uninitiated!
Hence a few years ago I released the “Simple Signer” for IBM Lotus notes. This is a single-purpose database that was developed to make life a little easier for everybody (including myself) who at some time or other, frequently or only occasionally, has to sign Lotus Notes databases.
Its one an only design goal is to make it extremely quick and easy to sign each and every design element in a given database.
Just switch the Notes ID (if necessary), select the database to be signed, and click on the big pink button.
Note that it works only in Notes 6.0 and later versions (because it relies on the LotusScript "Sign" method introduced in Release 6.0), but this is not much of nowadays.
Also note that the database’s design is not hidden, so by modifying a few lines of LotusScript you can alter the way that signing is carried out, to sign only agents for example.
Version 1.1 has no functional changes, it’s still as easy to use as always, but the “Help Using This Database” built-in documentation has been enhanced to show you how add a toolbar button to make it faster to launch Simple Signer.
Download version 1.1 of the Simple Signer from either of our mirrors at notestracker.com or asiapac.com.au.
Golly, gosh, it’s nearly quarter past 1 AM here Down Under so I’m heading off to the cot right away after submitting this post.
Would be nice to add this app to openntf. So the tool could evolve a litle bit more ! I for sure have lots of idea's whcih could be added to the tool
ReplyDeleteExactly what I was thinking but, please, only as long as it remains simple! Maybe some energetic younger Notes aficionados such as yourself would be willing to take it on? (Would you?)
ReplyDeleteIf extra features are added, it should default to "Simple Mode" (meaning ultra-simple), with the option to switch into "Advanced Mode" and only in the latter mode should the extra features be surfaced. (I've done something like this in SDMS, for example: Simple Mode versus Publishing Mode.)