Re: User passwords not configurable with loacl passwordfile, posted by KaterKarlo98 on Wed Feb 28 11:38:23 2018
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Hi Stefan,
thanks for the quick reply.
Yes, i've configured user-level access. Here is my cfg: |
Re: User passwords not configurable with loacl passwordfile, posted by KaterKarlo99 on Mon Mar 5 14:10:52 2018
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I'm afraid that there is something wrong because each user will be written with the same (hashed) password to the local password file,
irrespective of the given password within the "new User dialog".
So for instance, every user in my password file lokks like this: |
Re: User passwords not configurable with loacl passwordfile, posted by Stefan Ritt on Mon Mar 5 14:29:26 2018
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What happens when you don't use Kerberos authentication?
KaterKarlo99
wrote:
I'm afraid that there is something wrong because each user will be written |
Re: User passwords not configurable with loacl passwordfile, posted by KaterKarlo99 on Mon Mar 5 14:44:58 2018
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Yeah!!
That did it! I remove the line "Kerberos authentication" and now it works!
Thanks! |
Executing a shell command using elogd Windows service, posted by Frank Baptista on Sun Nov 24 20:29:24 2019
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Greetings!
We've been successfully running nearly a dozen separate logbooks on independent
laptops -- all of them are running elogd as a Windows service. This works well, since I've also set up auto recovery options in the event that the |
Re: Executing a shell command using elogd Windows service, posted by Frank Baptista on Sun Nov 24 21:10:28 2019
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Sorry -- I somehow selected the wrong OS in my original message. Asleep at the wheel again.
Frank Baptista wrote:
Greetings! |
Re: Executing a shell command using elogd Windows service, posted by Stefan Ritt on Mon Nov 25 16:32:07 2019
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Wow, having these color signal lamps really looke like a cute solution, made me laugh.
No, there is no other way than the Execute new thing. I have
given up long time ago to use Windows services, because they are very hard to debug and very limited. So at our site everything runs under Linux. |
Re: Executing a shell command using elogd Windows service, posted by Frank Baptista on Sat Nov 30 15:46:16 2019
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Well, there I was, eating Thanksgiving dinner, when suddenly, it hit me (no, not indigestion). I can write a simple program that parses out
the latest "Status" from the most recent logbook file -- a relatively easy task, since it's a text file. This solution avoids
having to execute a shell command at all. GOOOOOOAAAAAAL!!! |