CONFIGURING
To reduce the amount of data transmitted between an HCL Notes® workstation and HCL Domino® server or between two Domino servers, enable network compression for each enabled network port. Whether you should enable compression on a network port depends on the type of network connection and the type of data being transmitted.
About this task
For compression to work, enable it on both sides of a network connection. To enable compression for a network port on a server, use the Server tab in the Domino Administrator. To enable compression on network ports on Notes workstations, from the Domino Administrator, use a setup or desktop policy settings document or from a workstation, use the User Preferences dialog box.
You benefit from using network compression only if the data being transmitted is not already compressed. In the case of a network dialup service such as Microsoft's Remote Access Service (RAS) which includes built-in compression, enabling compression on Notes network ports does not provide any additional benefit. The same is true of tasks involving data that was compressed using the Lempel-Ziv algorithm (LZ1 compression) -- such as replicating a mail file with a large number of compressed attachments.
While compression decreases bandwidth use on a LAN, you must weigh this gain against increased memory and processor use, since network compression works by buffering data before compressing it. The cost of compression might be worth it only for a heavily loaded network.
Procedure
1. From the Domino Administrator, click the server for which you want to turn on network compression.
2. Click the Configuration tab.
3. From the Domino Administrator's Tools pane, choose Server -> Setup Ports.
4. Select the port for which you want to turn on compression.
6. Click OK.
7. Click the Server -> Status tab.
8. From the Domino Administrator'sTools pane, select Restart Port. (If you can't see the Tools pane, make sure you are in the Server Tasks view.)
Related concepts Fine-tuning network port setup on a server Policies Understanding the desktop policy settings document