How-To: Install Lotus Domino Designer on Debian
by jcf. Average Reading Time: about 2 minutes.
I have bought and installed Crossover Office to run IE 6 and Lotus Notes on Linux. There is an installation option for Lotus Notes by default, but it failed me when I tried to install the Domino Designer and Adminstration clients. This is what I did to get it to work and to have a shared Windows / Linux Installation of Notes: I assume that you have a working Notes installation under Windows. Also you must be able to mount the filesystem that this installaiton resides on Install the Lotus Notes client only in CrossOver Office. Run it, and be sure that it comes up. You can try to configure the client but we will kill that installation in a minute. Exit Lotus Notes Drop to a shell and go to
cd ~/.cxoffice/dotwine/fake_windows/Lotus mv Notes Notes.back cp -r /mnt/windows/Lotus/Notes/* .If your data directory is beneath Lotus/Notes then it will be copied also (which is not what we want ultimately) Check the ownership of all the files. Chown, chgrp and chmod until a normal user has rw access on the normal files and execute access on the *.exe files check to see that the .NSF files are read/wreitable as well Start Windows Application / Lotus Application / Lotus Notes in X Notes should come up with all the clients you had under windows Open a few databases to make sure that everything runs. Exit Notes This set up has the drawback, that your data directories are going to go out of sync when you work in both Windows and Linux environments. Here’s what I did: I moved my data directory to a FAT partiion that can be accessed from both operating systems. In Windows, I moved the Notes Data path (in Notes.ini) to i:\lotus\notes\data. In Linux, the drive is mounted on /mnt/shared so the path to the directory is /mnt/shared/lotus/notes/data In a shell do the following in your linux Notes directory
mv Data Data.back ln -s /mnt/shared/lotus/notes/data
Start Notes again – now you should have access to the Notes data directory on your shared partition. I had problems at first, because the ownership of the data directory was all wrong. Also the /mnt/shared mount-point was set to only allow root to access the drive – which is not really what you want. But now I have the Notes Designer running happily under Linux

Thanks for the details, Jens-Christian, I’d be very curious to hear how you fare with Java in Designer. Notes installs and runs like a dream with Gentoo, except for editing & running Java agents, where it dies a painful death. In fact, it’s the only thing keeping me from spending a lot more time in Linux these days :-( I’m hoping that my problems are config-related and that other people aren’t having the same troubles, meaning at least there’ll be a solution worth chasing!
I haven’t tried Java yet – my current project doesn’t need me to use that particular technology.
My findings on the whole thing are mixed (I’m back in Windows at moment):
+ it’s cool to run Notes in Linux
- The fonts run too wide – Default Sans maps to a TTF Arial font (I guess) that runs wider, than the font used in Windows. Reminds me of the good old times when I used Notes for OS/2
- The whole app is a slower than in Windows.
- ALT-Keypresses are flakey. I used ALT D-F-D ENTER (to quickly freshed a design of a database) a lot and I can’t use that in Linux
So I guess for heavy duty developing Notes I’ll be back in Windows for some time
Urgh, I hadn’t tried using keyboard shortcuts – you’re right, without Alt-D-F-D there’s just no point! Also, I had some odd fonts, but I hadn’t loaded up the Windows TTF fonts and I’d assumed once I’d done that it’d work smoothly. Pity…
If you can open a Java agent, or even create one and save the default class Designer creates, then you’re safe from the problem I had. For me, Java didn’t work at all.
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