Architecture of Office Server Extensions
Microsoft Office 2000 client computers include Microsoft Office Server Extensions (OSE) client components as part of the Web Publishing feature. With these components, users have Web-based functionality even when they are not connected to an OSE-extended web.
The Web Publishing feature includes the following OSE client components:
- Namespace Extension
- Internet Publishing Provider
These additional components are included when Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 is installed:
- Synchronization Manager
- Internet Explorer 5 cache
The following diagram shows how the OSE components interact on a client computer to provide extended Web functionality in Office 2000.
Namespace Extension
The Namespace Extension adds the Web Folders object to the Windows environment. The Web Folders object is a container for shortcuts to your Web sites, and it appears immediately below My Computer in the Windows Explorer hierarchical structure.
Through the Web Folders object, users have access to Web sites from within My Computer, Windows Explorer, or the Open and Save As dialog boxes in Office 2000 applications. The Namespace Extension allows users to browse, open, and save documents on a Web site as easily as they work with files on a local hard disk.
Internet Publishing Provider
The Internet Publishing Provider provides access to files and folders on Web servers. The Namespace Extension and Office 2000 applications use the Internet Publishing Provider interface to upload, download, move, copy, or delete files and folders.
The Internet Publishing Provider supports two types of client/server communication:
- FrontPage Server Extensions — a subset of OSE.
- Distributed Authoring and Versioning (DAV) — an emerging standard Web server protocol.