dmR Toolkit

The Quince Solutions dmR Toolkit provides businesses with the ability to build responsive Documentum applications. Whether implementing new content management business solutions or modernizing legacy WebTop, WDK, or custom applications. The dmR Toolkit enables rapid implementation of content management business logic while optimizing end user interaction with content regardless of device and web browser.

The Quince Solutions dmR Toolkit is a Spring Boot JPA based tool that is used to build Rest Documentum applications. The dmR Toolkit enables stateless content management with Documentum repositories through Rest APIs. The APIs are consumed by UIs built with popular frameworks including Angular and ReactJS. The dmR Toolkit also adds Documentum based content services to an organization’s Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), delivering information into an enterprise’s application ecosystem for seamless integration.

The dmR Toolkit makes it possible to quickly develop feature rich, Documentum applications that interact with content and contentless objects and registered table data enabling custom Documentum applications to:

  • Create, view, update, and delete content and contentless objects, registered table data

  • Execute content management functions such as check-in, checkout, versioning, etc.

  • Full-text content search queries and enable facets in the UI

  • Lifecycle management and workflow processing

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Accessing content and registered table data in applications built with the dmR Toolkit is controlled by all docbase configurations including Permission Set Templates and ACLs. The dmR Toolkit is implemented with Spring Security so end users are authenticated by the content server including existing LDAP or Active Directory configurations. The dmR Toolkit Rest APIs use JSON Web Token (JWT) authentication to ensure all Rest API calls to Documentum are authenticated and secure.

The dmR Toolkit can be deployed as a Spring application or WAR file running on applications servers including Apache Tomcat, Oracle Weblogic, JBoss (including WildFly) and more.