FileNet Image Services to P8 Migration
Software & Professional Services


With the new IBM direction for Enterprise Content Management moving from FileNet Image Services to the FileNet P8 suite, experienced consultants are needed to assist companies with this significant move forward. With proper assessment, planning and execution, CMMC experts can provide a data migration solution to help overcome these obstacles without excessive time, costs and downtime.

Software Product


CMMC offers a specialized image relocation service coupled with IBM's Content Federation Service (CFS) for metadata which offers the best of breed migration solution.

CMMC Content Relocation Service (CRS)

  • Highly scalable service used to move content in bulk from IS to P8.
  • 5 to 11 million documents per day
  • Average depended on page count and file size
  • Peak Observed: 508 docs per sec / 34 MB per sec
  • Throughput bounded by Image Services

IBM Content Federation Services (CFS)

  • Out-of-the-box IBM service used to copy metadata from IS to P8.
  • 2.1 million document's metadata per hour

Professional Services


CMMC is experienced in large scale and high performance IS to P8 migrations, with focus on:

  • Migration Planning
  • Architecture Design
  • Out-of-the-Box Migration Software
  • Performance Tuning
  • Migration Support

Migration Services – Process View





Migration Services – Optional Solution


Document Reclassification Service

  • A high performance and scalable service that reclassifies documents.
  • Provides the ability to transform a document type choice list into a P8 document class.

Merge Page Service

  • A high performance and scalable service that merges single page documents into a multi-page document.


Why CMMC Services?

>Assists companies to minimize costs

> Offers expertise in business continuity

> Manages large-scale projects

> Knolwedge transfer for company members

> Faster implementation with less downtime


 

For a Fortune 500 client, CMMC migrated over 450 million documents (35 terabytes) at a rate of 11 millions documents per day