The return code ranges for Office Communicator availability and the activity ranges, based on presence status, are detailed in Appendix B, "Numeric Ranges for Availablity and Activity Levels in Office Communicator." This appendix is on the companion CD in the Appendixes,Scripts,ResourcesAppendix B folder. For product documentation, community tools, frequently asked questions (FAQs), discussion groups, and pointers to up-to-date information on the product and community events, see the Office Communications Server Home Page at http://www.microsoft.com/livecomm. Pointers that are mentioned in the chapter are listed here:
Winerror.exe is part of the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit Tools, and Lcserror.exe is part of the Office Communications Server 2007 Resource Kit Tools. Both of these can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/downloads with a search for either one of the Resource Kit Tools.
More information on the credentials manager can be found in the Microsoft TechNet article "Windows XP Resource Kit: Understanding Logon and Authentication" at http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb457114.aspx, in the "Stored User Names and Passwords" section.
A technical reference for Transport Layer Security (TLS) can be found by searching for the Microsoft TechNet article "TLS/SSL Technical Reference" at http://technet.microsoft.com.
For more detailed information on Kerberos and NTLM, search for the Microsoft TechNet article "Kerberos Authentication Technical Reference" at http://technet.microsoft.com or the Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) article "NTLM Authentication" at http://msdn.microsoft.com.
For information about NTLM, Kerberos, and TLS/SSL, see the Windows Security Collection of the Windows Server 2003 Technical Reference at http://technet2.microsoft.com/windowsserver/en/library/7cb7e9f7-2090-4c88-8d14-270c749fddb51033.mspx?mfr=true.
For information about SIP, see "Session Initiation Protocol [RFC 3261]" at http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3261.txt?number=3261. In addition, two useful books about SIP are the following:
SIP: Understanding the Session Initiation Protocol, Second Edition by Alan B. Johnston (Artech House Publishers, 2003)
SIP Demystified by Gonzalo Camarillo (McGraw-Hill Professional, 2001)
There are many useful community-driven Web sites that support Office Communications Server. One that stands out is the LCS Guides site at http://www.lcs-guides.com.
A full collection of protocol logs is on the companion CD, in the Appendixes,Scripts,Resources Chapter 04CD Protocol Logs folder, for reference. These are useful for seeing example protocol messages and complete message flow. Many of the messages are not discussed here in the book to avoid repeating content and to skip some of the less interesting transactions, but these are all available in a complete form in the sample logs on the CD. You might also find these useful when troubleshooting, for comparison purposes.
In addition, the text file dbanalyze-jeremy.txt on the companion CD, in the Appendixes,Scripts,ResourcesChapter 04 folder, shows full sample output from the dbanalyze command, as explained in the Real World: Troubleshooting Client Connections sidebar in this chapter.
3.146.152.135