tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6740338341177826314.post6578201411166811132..comments2024-03-20T08:49:57.135+00:00Comments on A Portal to a Portal: Using WebSphere Portal documentation offlineDave Hayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10444759805764485699noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6740338341177826314.post-82180661559074317502010-02-01T20:30:42.025+00:002010-02-01T20:30:42.025+00:00Well, that was MUCH easier than expected - I did t...Well, that was MUCH easier than expected - I did the following: -<br /><br />a) Created a subdirectory for the new documentation: -<br /><br />mkdir /Users/davehay/Desktop/Docs/SWG/Lotus/WebSphere Portal/Documentation<br /><br />b) Extracted the contents of the IBM_Help_301_Linux_Intel.zip file into this subdirectory, giving me this: -<br /><br />/Users/davehay/Desktop/Docs/SWG/Lotus/WebSphere Portal/Documentation/ibm_help<br /><br />c) Extracted the contents of com.ibm.wp.ent.doc_v615.zip into the ibm_help/eclipse/plugins subdirectory: -<br /><br />/Users/davehay/Desktop/Docs/SWG/Lotus/WebSphere Portal/Documentation/ibm_help/eclipse/plugins<br /><br />d) Started the IBM Help web application ( it's actually a Tomcat webapp ): -<br /><br />cd /Users/davehay/Desktop/Docs/SWG/Lotus/WebSphere Portal/Documentation/ibm_help<br />./IC_start.sh<br /><br />e) Opened Firefox and navigated to http://localhost:8888<br /><br />f) Used the Information Centre ...<br /><br />*AND* I didn't need to use standalone Eclipse in the endDave Hayhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10444759805764485699noreply@blogger.com