
A Canadian government ministry partnered with Kumaran to re-engineer its legacy Clipper audit application to a modern J2EE web platform, delivering centralised data access for 4,000 staff and enabling auditors to access the system from any location across Canada. Kumaran migrated the non-relational DBF database to DB2, replaced the character-based UI with a GUI Java application on Jakarta Struts, and deployed the solution on WebSphere 4.0. The result exceeded all ministry expectations — reducing audit data staging effort and transforming a fragile, locally-loaded tool into a scalable, distributed web application.
The ministry's audit branch was responsible for reviewing retail sales tax compliance across hospitality vendors — covering alcohol, food, admission charges, cigarettes, accommodations, and miscellaneous sales. Auditors were using a Clipper application loaded locally on their laptops, with no centralised control or real-time data access. At the end of each audit, findings were manually dumped into the main database, creating staging effort and limiting visibility. With 4,000 staff and operations across Canada, a distributed, web-based solution with relational database support was the clear path forward.
Contact us today to learn more about our legacy modernisation approach and the success story behind this Clipper to Java engagement with a Canadian Government Ministry.

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