|
Description  |
|
|
CROSS-REFERENCES TO
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is related in subject matter to the following applications filed concurrently herewith and assigned to a common assignee:
Application Ser. No. 07/277,385, now abandoned filed by M. G. MacPhail entitled "Method of Filing Stapled Documents within A Context of A Folder".
Application Ser. No. 07/277,369 filed by M. G. MacPhail entitled "Method of Filing Stapled Documents Within A Context of An Application".
Application Ser. No. 07/277,387, now abandoned filed by M. G. MacPhail entitled "Method of Filing Stapled Documents" which is the parent of continuation Application Ser. No. 07/631,193, filed Dec. 20, 1990 (AT9-88-044X).
The foregoing copending applications are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Technical Field
This invention relates to methods of managing documents in an information processing system and more particularly, to methods of distributing stapled documents to at least one end user within the information processing system.
2. Background Information
In recent times, automation of offices is rapidly becoming a reality for an increasing number of organizations. Office automation helps the organizations integrate data files with text, store and retrieve correspondence and reports
electronically, distribute documents electronically and support the day-to-day activities of administrative personnel, professionals and managers.
While some of the benefits of electronic document processing can be realized from a single, stand-alone office system, a network which connects office systems in various locations in the organization increases the productivity of the
organization. Physically, a network is a combination of interconnected pieces of equipment and programs used for moving information between points where it may be generated, processed, stored and used. From the viewpoint of an user of the network, the
network is a collection of services which are useful in creating, revising, distributing, filing and retrieving documents.
In today's electronic office, documents are physically grouped or stored using one of the following techniques: partition data sets, directories and folders. Partition data sets are storage areas on a disk or other form of storage medium.
Documents stored in a partition data set only exist in that storage area and a partition data set can not be deleted until all of the documents included therein have been removed. Generally, the documents are filed in the partition data set in the order
created and there is no other relationship regarding the order to the documents.
Directories are similar to partition data sets in that they are physical storage areas for documents for files. Documents can not exist in more that one physical storage area. The documents contained in a directory are not logically organized.
In regards to both the partition data sets and the directories, if a user filed a group of documents which are related to a general topic and wanted to review the group of documents, the user would have to first locate the partition data set or
sets or the directory or directories containing the documents. In partition data sets and directories, documents have to be deleted from the bottom up. Additionally, it is very difficult to rearrange documents stored or grouped using these two
techniques. The documents must be copied and then deleted. Moreover, partition data sets, except for the contents thereof, can not be distributed. Directories can not be distributed in their entirety. Linear and hierarchical groupings can not be
distributed using directories or partition data sets because the groupings mechanism utilized therewith will be lost. This type of operation technique reduces the efficiency of the electronic office.
Folders are documents which form hierarchical and linear relationship between a group of documents. Folders can be nested to form the hierarchical relationship whereby the group of documents within a folder are ordered to form the linear
relationship. The documents within a folder are organized sequentially by a specified descriptor or by a specified position number. Access to a folder is independent from the documents contained therein. Documents within a folder can be manipulated as
a single document, as a set of documents which comprise the entire folder or as a set of documents which comprise a specified level of the folder document.
A folder can be used to form a directed or one-to-one relationship between two documents. This requires the folder to be a first document and a document contained therein to be a second document. The relationship suffers in that not all
documents are folders and if any other documents are entered into the folder, the one-to-one relationship between the first and the second document becomes unclear.
The use of partitioned data sets and directories in establishing directed relationships between two documents suffers from limitations which are similar to those as a result of using a folder. There is no way to identify which document is
coupled to another, when more than two documents are included in a partitioned data set or directory, the one-to-one relationship is lost and the forms of grouping documents requires the creation of a new folder, directory or partition to establish the
relationship.
Consequently, what is needed is a technique for distributing documents having a directed relationship without creating additional documents or groups.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to methods of distributing at least two documents stored in an information processing system whereby the documents have a directed relationship. An end user indicates the documents having the directed relationship which
are to be distributed to one or more recipient end users. The addresses of the recipient end users and the identification of at least one document which is stapled by another document are entered into the system. The system then builds the necessary
structures to transmit the indicated documents to the identified recipient end user such that the relationship of documents is maintained.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a document management system in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a model of a document showing the various objects associated with a document stored in the system of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a table of object structures which are employed in generating a folder document.
FIG. 4 is a table of object structures for an attribute parameter set.
FIG. 5 is a table of object structures for staples section parameters.
FIG. 6 is a table of object structures for staples related document subparameters.
FIG. 7 is a flow chart illustrating detailed steps of the method of distributing stapled documents by the present invention.
FIG. 8 is a flowchart representing distribution of stapled documents received from a requestor application.
FIG. 9 is a flow chart for receiving a distribution request in accordance with the present invention.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 shows a document management system 10 which controls the creation, retrieval, editing and distribution of documents within an information processing system. Moreover, the document management system 10 enables an end user (EU) to
distribute a pair of documents which are coupled together in a stapled relationship to another EU or set of EUs. In essence, a stapled pair of documents created to be distributed consists of documents copied from the EU's local storage, the server's
storage or a combination of both. Thus, the EU creates the staple relationship by interacting with a dialogue manager application 14 providing the data which is necessary to distribute the stapled pair of documents to other EUs. The necessary data
includes addressing information for all of the recipient EUs, distribution characteristics and a definition of the stapled pair of documents. The definition of the stapled pair includes an indication that a document is stapled by another document and
pointers to the physical location of all of the documents to be distributed. These documents can be directly accessible to the Requester application 16 or they can be directly accessible to the Requester's server 18. If any document to be distributed
is filed in a local storage 20, a stapled-document-option indicates whether or not all of the documents stored in the library and which are stapled to the specified document are to be distributed. After the dialogue manager application 14 has gathered
the above-identified information, it transmits the information to the requester application program 16.
The requester application program 16, in response to input from the dialogue manager application 14, builds a distribution request and transmits the request to the requester's server 18. The requester application program 16 makes a copy of each
of the locally accessible documents identified by the EU which are filed in a local storage medium 20. The copies of the documents are transmitted to the requester's server 18 along with the request. Additionally, the requester application program 16
transmits pointers to the physical location of all of the documents to be distributed which are filed in the library 12 and not otherwise identified by the folder document containing the documents.
The requester's server 18 makes a copy of all of the documents which were not received with the distribution request. The requester's server 18 will transmit all of the information received from the requester application program 16 along with
copies of any documents filed in the local storage 20 to recipient servers, such as recipient server 22, associated with an recipient EU specified in the distribution request. Additionally, the requester's server 18 will transmit pointers to the
physical location of all documents to be distributed in a distribution package.
The recipient server 22, in response to the input from the requester's server 18, then builds a stapler table-of-contents and a staplee table-of-contents and places a pointer to the resolved stapled pair in the recipient EU mail queue 24.
The document management system 10 shown in FIG. 1 utilizes a uniform structure for exchanging information within the system. This structure includes an encoding scheme which is designed to convey any document, irrespective of it content, from
one type of office system to another and to communicate the intent of the person creating or transmitting a document as to the method of processing thereof. One type of structure which meets all of these requirements is the Document Interchange
Architecture (DIA) which is a part of a DISOSS office system marketed by the International Business Machines Corporation.
DIA is a program-to-program communication architecture which defines the protocols and data structures that enable programs to interchange information such as documents and messages in a consistent and predictable manner. DIA is independent of
the type of information managed by DIA services. DIA includes document objects which contain parameters or descriptors that describe the contents of the information being transmitted. The descriptors contained in the objects include the name under
which the information is filed, the authors, the subject of the information and the date the information was filed in the document history. These descriptors enable a document to be searched in a storage medium such as the server library 12.
The server library 12 performs various services for the system 10. These services are used for storing and retrieving documents electronically. Whenever a document is filed in the server library 12, a set of descriptors called a document
profile is filed with it. The profile contains the descriptors noted above. Document profiles are used in searching for documents in the library 12. For purposes of illustration and not limitation, a EU can ask the system 10 to search for all
documents regarding a particular subject and by a certain author which was filed in the library 12 between any two dates. Upon completing the search, the system presents the EU with a list of the documents which meet the search criteria. The EU could
then ask the system 10 to retrieve a copy of a specific document on the list from the library an deliver the copy the EU for printing or viewing.
The server library 12 also provides the following services: file documents in and retrieve or delete documents from the library; update work in progress documents in the library; specify a security level to associate with the document that is
being filed; allow authorized end users other than the EU who filed the document to retrieve the document from the library and perform searches for and retrieve documents in the library for other end users. The server library 12 assigns each new
document filed in therein a unique name called a library-assigned document name (LADN). This name is returned to the requester and can be used to uniquely identify the document at some later time.
Referring to FIG. 2, each document stored in the server library 12 includes the objects shown therein. All of the objects shown in FIG. 2 are created in response to the processing a FILE command. A document model object 50 contains information
concerning ownership and attributes of a specific document. This object controls the access to the document during its life in the library.
An original owner object 52 contains or points to information used by an owner of the document to control access to the document as filed.
A document content object 54 provides for the storage of the document content and for saving information relating to the actual size of the filed document.
A document relation object 56 describes the logical relationships between the document and other documents. If the document is a folder, each of the documents contained therein has a pointer or LADN entry in this object. If this document is in
one or more folders, then each folder has a pointer or LADN entry in this object. Enter and remove history may be maintained for the document either as a folder or as a document in other folders.
An access control model object 58 is created when the document owner authorizes other users to access the document.
Other objects included in FIG. 2 are a version control object 60, profile content object 62, user profile object 64, reverse search index object 66 and search index object 68.
Structures for all of the above-identified objects except document relations object (DRO) are a part of the DISOSS office system and will not be described herein. Every document stored in system 10 has a document relations object associated
therewith. FIG. 3 shows a table 70 of the structure of the DRO which consists of the following: an attribute parameter set 71, a folder document parameter set 72, a document-within-a-folder (DIF) parameter set 73, a staplee parameter set 74 and a
stapler parameter set 75.
The attribute parameter set indicates whether or not the document associated with the DRO is a folder or whether or not the document is a `folder-only` document. Additionally, the attribute parameter set indicates whether or not in a stapled
relationship the associated document is designated as a "staplee" or as a "stapler" with respect to another document. A staplee document is a document which is stapled by another document. A stapler document is a document which is stapled to another
document. FIG. 4 illustrates a table 76 of the structure for the attribute parameter set. A folder attribute 77 indicates whether or not the document associated with the document relation object is a folder. If the document is a folder, then a folder
section parameter set is required. A DIF (document in folder) attribute 78 indicates whether or not the document is contained within any folders. A folder-only attribute 79 indicates whether or not the document can be viewed as existing on its own when
it is included within a folder. Documents are viewed as folder-only when both the DIF and Folder-only attributes are positively set.
A physical document in a physical folder is a folder-only document. In essence, the physical document exists in the folder and can not stand on its own. However, electronic documents can logically exist in multiple places at the same time.
Therefore, a document can appear to be in more than one folder and standing on its own all at the same time. Whether or not the document can stand on its own when it is also in a folder is indicated by the folder-only attribute. Folder-only documents
are viewed as stand-alone when they are not contained by any folders.
The staplee attribute 80 indicates whether or not the document associated with the DRO is a stapled by another document. The stapler attribute 81 indicates whether or not the document associated with the DRO is stapled to another document.
FIG. 5 illustrates a table 82 of the structure for the staplee section parameters. The staplee parameters associated with the DRO is defined as a repository for information specific to a document stapled by another document. The staplee
parameters are created when the associated with the DRO is stapled by another document. The staplee parameters are preserved with the document until the document is deleted from a document library or the document is unstapled by its last document. The
attributes parameter 83 allows for the specification of a history option when the document is stapled and unstapled by another document. The history option includes a related document parameter set associated with the document is deleted when the
document is unstapled by another document and created when the document is stapled by another document. Alternatively, the related document parameter 84 set is maintained when the document is unstapled by another document. The request date, time and
requester's identification are added to the related document parameter set. When the document is restapled by the same document, the new staple date, time and the requester's identification are added to the related document parameter set.
The related document parameter set includes the following: a related document parameter introducer, the LADN of the document by which the document is stapled, an user-assigned document name of the other document, the context in which this
document was stapled by the other document, the date and time this document was stapled by the other document, the identification of the staple requester, and the date and time the document was unstapled and the identification of the unstaple requester
if the history option is specified.
FIG. 6 illustrates a table 85 of the structure for the staplee related document subparameters. The stapler LADN 86 is a unique name assigned to the other document by the server library when the other document was filed in the library. The
document name 87 parameter identifies the other document by its user-assigned name. The context parameter 88 set specifies the context in which this document is stapled by the other document: the context can be all folders, a set of folders, an
application, or a set of applications. The other document can appear in more than one folder. The context parameter can be used to specify in which folders this document appears to be stapled by the other document. Similarly, the context parameter can
be used to specify that this document is stapled by the other document in the context of an application. For purposes of illustration and not limitation, an application used to highlight data in a document could create an overlay template and staple it
to another document. When the application is used, the template highlights the data without disturbing the original document. Moreover, the template may not have any meaning outside of the context of the application.
The add data subparameter 89 specifies the date the document was stapled by the other document, the address of the requester. The remove data subparameter 90 specifies the date the document was unstapled by the other document and the address of
the requester.
The stapler section of the DRO is defined as a repository for information specific to a document stapled to another document. The structures (not shown) associated with the stapler parameter set are identical those set forth above and in FIGS. 3
through 6 for the staplee parameter set except reference is made to the document stapled to another document.
Set out below is an illustration of an application program useable by the requester application 16 in distributing stapled documents within the information processing system. The program is in program design language from which source code and
machine code are derivable.
______________________________________ BEGIN REQUESTER PROC INPUT ADDRESSING AND DISTRIBUTION CHARACTERISTICS. DO FOR EACH DOCUMENT EXPLICITLY IDENTIFIED IN THIS DISTRIBUTION REQUEST: A POINTER TO THE PHYSICAL DOCUMENT (PPTR) WHICH WILL
BE EITHER A LOCAL POINTER OR A LIBRARY IDENTIFIER THE PHYSICAL DOCUMENT CONTAINS RELATED DATA OBJECTS WHICH DEFINE THE STAPLER AND STAPLEE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DOCUMENT. THESE CHARACTERISTICS INCLUDE WHETHER OR NOT HISTORY IS TO BE MAINTAINED.
A UNIQUE IDENTIFIER FOR THIS DOCUMENT WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE REQUEST. A REFERENCE IDENTIFIER FOR THE STAPLER DOCUMENT ATTACHED TO THE STAPLEE DOCUMENT. A STAPLED-DOCUMENT-OPTION FOR DOCUMENTS THAT ARE ATTACHED TO THE SPECIFIED DOCUMENT IN THE
LIBRARY. ENDDO PROCESS SET THE STAPLED-DOCUMENT OPTION. DO FOR EACH DOCUMENT INDIVIDUALLY SPECIFIED BY USER REQUEST TO BE SENT IN THE DISTRIBUTION (BUILD AN IDD): IF THE DOCUMENT RESIDES ON THE LIBRARY, THEN SET THE DOCUMENT POINTER (PPTR) TO
ITS LIBRARY IDENTIFIER. ELSE COPY THE DOCUMENT AND ITS RELATED OBJECT DATA. SET THE DOCUMENT ADDRESS (PPTR) TO POINT TO THE POSITION OF THE DOCUMENT IN THE REQUEST UNIT. ENDIF SET THE DOCUMENT IDENTIFIER (DID) TO THE SPECIFIED VALUE. IF THE
DOCUMENT TO BE DISTRIBUTED IS TO BE STAPLED BY ANOTHER, THEN SET THE REFERENCED DOCUMENT IDENTIFIER (RID) AS SPECIFIED (RID=DID OF THE STAPLER) ENDIF ENDDO OUTPUT SEND COMPLETED DISTRIBUTION COMMAND TO REQUESTER SERVER. END REQUESTER PROC
______________________________________
Referring to FIG. 7, there is shown a flow chart for the requester application program in distributing stapled documents in the information processing system. First, the requester application program 16 interfaces with the dialogue manager
application 14 in step 100 to get the distribution request which includes setting the stapled-document-option as specified by the EU. The stapled-document-option indicates whether or not library documents, which are to be distributed as a result of this
request, will be distributed with any documents stapled thereto. The library documents or staplers which are stapled to the specified document or staplee will be found by the library server 12. Steps 102 and 104 determine for each document explicitly
identified in the request whether the document is filed in the library 12. Thereafter the requester application 16 builds an identified data (IDD) operand for each document to be distributed which includes a pointer to the physical location of the
document (PPTR); a unique document identifier within the scope of the command (DID); and references to any staplers attached to this document. If the document is filed in the library 12, step 106 sets the document pointer (PPTR) to an address which is
accessible to the requester's server 18. If the document is not filed in the library 12, the document and its related objects are copied in step 108 and the document pointer (PPTR) is set equal to the address of the document unit within this request
that contains a physical copy of the document and its related data areas in step 110.
In step 111, each IDD operand is associated with a unique identifier (DID) entered by the EU. Step 112 determines whether the document is a staplee document. Step 114 sets the reference identifiers (RIDs) associated with any documents stapled
to the document equal to the identifier DID of the stapler document attached to the document associated with the IDD operand being built. This step is repeated for each stapler document attached to the document associated with the IDD operand. Step 116
determines whether the document is the last document specified by the EU. Steps 102 through 116 are repeated until all of specified documents have been processed. When all of the document have been processed, the requester application 16, in step 118,
transmits a completed distribution request to the requester's server 18. The completed distribution request includes the addressing and distribution characteristics, the stapled-document-option, an IDD operand for each explicitly identified document and
a document unit for each document passed with this request.
Set out below is an illustration of an application program useable by the requester's server 18 in distributing stapled documents within the information processing system. The program is in program design language from which source code and
machine code are derivable.
______________________________________ BEGIN REQUESTER SERVER PROC INPUT A DISTRIBUTION REQUEST INCLUDING: ADDRESSING AND DISTRIBUTION CHARACTERISTICS. STAPLED-DOCUMENT-OPTION. AN IDD OPERAND FOR EACH DOCUMENT EXPLICITLY IDENTIFIED
INCLUDING: A POINTER TO THE PHYSICAL COPY (PPTR); A UNIQUE IDENTIFIER (DID) FOR THIS IDD WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE REQUEST; AND REFERENCE(S) (RIDS) FOR ANY DOCUMENTS STAPLED TO THIS DOCUMENT. A DOCUMENT UNIT FOR EACH DOCUMENT PASSED WITH THIS
REQUEST INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING: STAPLER DATA AREA WHICH INCLUDES THE STAPLER HISTORY ATTRIBUTE AND OTHER STAPLER CHARACTERISTICS AND THE LIST OF DOCUMENTS TO WHICH THIS DOCUMENT IS ATTACHED. STAPLEE DATA AREA WHICH INCLUDES THE STAPLEE HISTORY
ATTRIBUTE AND OTHER STAPLEE CHARACTERISTICS AND THE LIST OF DOCUMENTS BY WHICH THIS DOCUMENT IS ATTACHED. FOLDER DATA. DOCUMENT-IN-FOLDER DATA. DOCUMENT DESCRIPTORS. DOCUMENT CONTENT. PROCESS SET NDID = TO HIGHEST DID VALUE PASSED WITH THE
REQUEST. DO FOR EVERY IDD PASSED IN THE COMMAND, IF THE DOCUMENT IS IN THE LIBRARY, THEN COPY THE DOCUMENT AND ITS RELATED OBJECT DATA. SET THE DOCUMENT ADDRESS (PPTR) TO POINT TO THE POSITION OF THE DOCUMENT IN THE NEW REQUEST UNIT. IF THE
DOCUMENT IS STAPLED AND THE STAPLED-DOCUMENT-OPTION IS SET TO DISTRIBUTE THE ATTACHED DOCUMENTS (STAPLERS), THEN DO FOR EACH DOCUMENT STAPLED TO THE REFERENCED DOCUMENT IF THE DOCUMENT HAS NOT BEEN COPIED IN THIS REQUEST BEFORE, THEN COPY THE
DOCUMENT AND ITS RELATED OBJECT DATA. SET THE DOCUMENT ADDRESS (PPTR) TO POINT TO THE POSITION OF THE DOCUMENT IN THE NEW REQUEST UNIT. SET THE DOCUMENT IDENTIFIER TO A UNIQUE VALUE WITHIN THE COMMAND (DID=NDID+1). SET NDID=NDID+1 ENDIF
SET THE REFERENCED DOCUMENT IDENTIFIER TO CORRESPOND TO THE STAPLER DOCUMENT IDENTIFIER FOR THE STAPLEE (STAPLEE RID=STAPLER DID). ENDDO ENDIF ENDIF ENDDO PASS THE NEW TOTALLY RESOLVED REQUEST UNIT TO THE TRANSPORT FOR DELIVERY TO THE
ADDRESS DESTINATION. END REQUESTER SERVER PROC ______________________________________
The requester's server 18, in response to the distribution request generated by the requester application program 16, builds a new operand (IDD) for each document that it copies from its addressable library 12. The new IDD is necessary because
the document will have a pointer to the document unit within the request instead of a unique library pointer. Stapler documents which are copied from the server library 12 were not transmitted with an IDD from the requester application program 16.
Thus, these documents require a new IDD as well. Each additional IDD must have an unique identifier within the command to be sent to the requester's server 18. A NDID value is a temporary counter to show the highest DID value currently assigned.
Referring to FIG. 8, there is shown a flow chart for the requester's server 18 in distributing stapled documents received from the requester application program 16. Step 120 sets the value of NDID equal to the highest DID value transmitted with
the distribution request. The requester's server 18 examines each IDD passed with the distribution request, the requester's server 18, in steps 122 and 124, determines whether the document associated with the IDD is filed in the library 12. If the
document is filed in the library, the document and its related objects are copied in step 126. All documents copied from the library 12 will be assigned new IDDs. Step 128 sets the address PPTR of the copied document to point to the position of the
document in a request unit. Step 130 determines whether the document is a staples document and whether the stapled-document-option is set to distribute the attached documents or staplers. If the library document is a staplee and the
stapled-document-option indicates that staplers are to be distributed, then step 132 and 134 determines whether each of the stapler documents have been previously copied. The document in question may have appeared in another staple relationship to be
distributed with this request. If the document in question has been previously copied, control is transferred to step 142 for the assignment of an additional RID for the new staple relationship. Otherwise, the document must be copied and each must have
an IDD generated therefor as set forth in steps 136 and 138. Since each IDD is associated with a unique identifier (DID), step 140 set document DID equal to the next available identifier (NDID+1) and then increment the value of the next available
identifier (NDID) by a value of one to correspond to the next available unique identifier.
Step 142 sets the reference document identifier RID to correspond to the stapler document identifier for the staples document (staplee RID=stapler DID). Step 144 determines whether the last stapler document has been processed and transfer
control to step 132 to process any remaining stapler documents. Otherwise, step 146 determines whether all IDDs have been processed. If there are other IDDs to be processed, control is transferred to step 122. If every IDD has been processed, a
completed distribution request is transmitted from the requester's server 18 to the recipient server 22 in step 148.
Set out below is an illustration of an application program useable by the recipient server 22 in receiving stapled documents within the information processing system. The program is in program design language from which source code and machine
code are derivable.
______________________________________ BEGIN RECIPIENT SERVER PROC INPUT A COMPLETED DISTRIBUTION REQUEST INCLUDING: ADDRESSING AND DISTRIBUTION CHARACTERISTICS. A COPY OF EVERY DOCUMENT TO BE DISTRIBUTED. AN IDD OPERAND FOR EACH DOCUMENT
TO BE DISTRIBUTED TO THE RECIPIENT(S) INCLUDING: A POINTER TO THE PHYSICAL COPY (PPTR). A UNIQUE IDENTIFIER (DID) FOR THIS IDD WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THE REQUEST. REFERENCE(S) (RIDs) FOR ANY STAPLERS ATTACHED TO THIS DOCUMENT. A DOCUMENT UNIT FOR
EACH DOCUMENT PASSED WITH THIS REQUEST INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING: STAPLER DATA AREA WHICH INCLUDES THE STAPLER HISTORY ATTRIBUTE AND OTHER STAPLER CHARACTERISTICS AND THE LIST OF DOCUMENTS TO WHICH THIS DOCUMENT IS ATTACHED. STAPLEE DATA AREA WHICH
INCLUDES THE STAPLEE HISTORY ATTRIBUTE AND OTHER STAPLEE CHARACTERISTICS AND THE LIST OF DOCUMENTS BY WHICH THIS DOCUMENT IS ATTACHED. FOLDER DATA. DOCUMENT-IN-FOLDER DATA. DOCUMENT DESCRIPTORS. DOCUMENT CONTENT. PROCESS DO FOR EVERY DID IN THE
COMMAND, IF THE DOCUMENT REFERENCES A STAPLER, THEN COPY THE STAPLER'S DID INTO THE DOCUMENT'S STAPLEE TABLE-OF- CONTENTS. COPY THE STAPLEE'S DID INTO THE STAPLER'S STAPLER TABLE-OF- CONTENTS. ENDIF ENDDO PLACE A POINTER TO THE RESOLVED
DISTRIBUTION INTO THE RECIPIENT'S DOCUMENT QUEUE. END RECIPIENT SERVER PROC ______________________________________
Referring to FIG. 9, there is shown a flow chart for the recipient server 22 in receiving the distribution request from the requester's server 18. In steps 150 and 152, the recipient server 22 examines each document passed in the distribution
request to determine whether each of the respective documents in the request is a staplee. The recipient server 22 will generate a stapler table-of-contents for each stapler document and a staplee table-of-contents for each staplee document attached by
a stapler. In steps 154 and 156, an entry in a first document's staplee table-of-contents is generated for each stapler (RID) which is attached to the first document and an entry in each stapler's stapler table-of-contents is generated for each stapler
(RID) which is attached to the first document. Step 158 determines whether there are documents to be processed and repeats steps 150 through 156 until all of the documents passed in the request have been processed. Step 160 places a pointer to the
distribution in the recipient EU's document queue 24. The distribution now includes a copy of each document set forth in the request, the stapler table-of-contents for each stapler in the distribution and a staplee table-of-contents for every document
which is attached by one or more staplers.
In summary, the invention relates to a unique method of distributing stapled documents within an information processing system. A first end user indicates to the system that, at least, one document is to be stapled to another and then
transmitted to, at least, a second end user. The first end user enters data which identifies the documents to be stapled together, which of the documents is the staplee document and the stapler document, indicate whether the stapled-document-option is
to be utilized and the addresses of one or more recipient end users. The system then builds the necessary structures to transmit the stapled documents to the identified end users.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and
scope of the invention.
* * * * *
|
| |