ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
67361
|
Mon Oct 29 09:13:54 2012 |
| Philippe Rousselot | rousselot@rousselot.org | Info | Windows | latest | Re: Comment avoir elog en français II |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Philippe Rousselot wrote: |
Bonjour,
tout est dans le titre.
Merci
For those who speak strange languages, I asked how to get a french version of elog.
By the way, this is my second mail because I forgot to give an icon to the first mail, and when I hit Back to do so, my text was erased. Bug or normal obnoxious attitude of my browser ?
Thanks in advance
Philippe
|
ELOG comes "internationalised": you just need to set your desired language in the configuration files.
Language = french
in the configuration file elogd.cfg does the trick.
If you are capable to read the English language (which I suppose  ), then I would recommend reading the manual, e.g. https://midas.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
 ⇄
Detect language » English
PS: I happened to have the same problem (text erased after "back") when I had javascript disabled in the browser. If you have it enabled, you'll get a popup window that tells you what mandatory fields are missing in your post. Then you'll not need to use the back button.
|
Hi,
Thanks for the answer. I tried this (directly from de setting menu in the demo account as well as from the onfig file) :
I modified of course the text that could be modified directly from there such as menus and submenus.
I added Language = french, I restarted the server, clear the cache of firefox (IE as well), but list, new and so on appear in english even they are in the locale file...
Indeed, the manual is very interesting
concerning javascript, it is activated ...
Thanks again
Philippe |
67362
|
Mon Oct 29 09:20:50 2012 |
| Philippe Rousselot | rousselot@rousselot.org | Info | Windows | latest | Re: Comment avoir elog en français II [solved almost] |
Philippe Rousselot wrote: |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Philippe Rousselot wrote: |
Bonjour,
tout est dans le titre.
Merci
For those who speak strange languages, I asked how to get a french version of elog.
By the way, this is my second mail because I forgot to give an icon to the first mail, and when I hit Back to do so, my text was erased. Bug or normal obnoxious attitude of my browser ?
Thanks in advance
Philippe
|
ELOG comes "internationalised": you just need to set your desired language in the configuration files.
Language = french
in the configuration file elogd.cfg does the trick.
If you are capable to read the English language (which I suppose  ), then I would recommend reading the manual, e.g. https://midas.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
 ⇄
Detect language » English
PS: I happened to have the same problem (text erased after "back") when I had javascript disabled in the browser. If you have it enabled, you'll get a popup window that tells you what mandatory fields are missing in your post. Then you'll not need to use the back button.
|
Hi,
Thanks for the answer. I tried this (directly from de setting menu in the demo account as well as from the onfig file) :
I modified of course the text that could be modified directly from there such as menus and submenus.
I added Language = french, I restarted the server, clear the cache of firefox (IE as well), but list, new and so on appear in english even they are in the locale file...
Indeed, the manual is very interesting
concerning javascript, it is activated ...
Thanks again
Philippe
|
Found it !
I wanted to have locale set in the folder demo (so I could have one in french and one in english).
Once language set in globals everything went fine. Almost...
Philippe |
67264
|
Mon May 7 13:41:38 2012 |
| Roland Gsell | roland.gsell@oeaw.ac.at | Info | Linux | 2.9.1-2435 | Access rights | Hi,
the manual says:
"
There are four ways through which access to a logbook may be controlled:
it may be open for all to read ;
it may require a common "read" password for all users ;
it may require each user to have an individual user account (login name) and password ;
finally, access may be granted or not depending on the address of the workstation you are using.
"
But it doesn't say how to do so or at least I didn't find it.
If I have each user have to log in with an individual accout, can I define which logbooks he can read and/or modify?
If yes, how to do that?
Also, please accept my vote for user groups. We can use that, too.
TIA,
Roland. |
249
|
Sun Mar 16 19:15:16 2003 |
| Recai Oktas | roktas@omu.edu.tr | Info | | | Elog and SSL | > Basically im running elog on a redhat 8 box with stunnel already installed
> as part of OpenSSL, on the server i ran the command specified in the
> instructions
>
> stunnel -d 443 -r 172.16.24.108:81
I haven't tried `stunnel` with elog, but as far as I read from various
sources, stunnel requires you to create an SSL certificate. In attachment,
you'll find a sample case for stunnel and smtp (port 25) + pop3 (port 110).
Hope this helps.
Reference: http://www.tldp.org/linuxfocus/common/sart/index.html |
Attachment 1: stunnel_with_smtp_pop3.txt
|
EZ Email Security With Stunnel
by Pat Parsons
This is a little crash course in how to setup email over SSL painlessly using
Stunnel. First you need to have installed a mail transfer agent to handle the
SMTP portion of the mail. Then you need to have installed either an IMAP server
or a POP3 server. Many distributions come with Stunnel, if yours does not you
can get it from http://www.stunnel.org. Stunnel requires that you have OpenSSL
or SSLeay installed first. This should come with your distribution. Generally
if you have SSH installed you also have a SSL library.
Get and install Stunnel. I am not going into detail on that because if you are
at this point you probably already know how to do so. Make a SSL certificate
for use with Stunnel. OpenSSL provides a makefile to do just that. In my
distribution it is located in /usr/share/ssl/certs . CD to that directory and
type make stunnel.pem to create the certificate that is named stunnel.pem. Now
you need to a few lines to your rc.local file to start Stunnel at bootup
(assuming you ever reboot that is) these lines are:
/usr/sbin/stunnel -d 995 -r 110
/usr/sbin/stunnel -d 465 -r 25
This will start stunnel listening on port 995 for POP3 and 465 for SMTP. Now
all you need to do is edit the options for your mail client and there you go.
No need to worry about cleartext email passwords. If you are too impatient to
wait for the next reboot you can type the commands given previously to start
Stunnel right away. There may be some problems with certificate validation for
some email clients. Make sure when asked by the makefile you get the server
name correct. If your email client will not let you add certificates you may
need to change or obtain a certificate from a certification authority. If you
cannot get the certificate vaidation worked out there is no way to ensure that
you are connecting to the correct machine. Have a nice day.
|
257
|
Fri Mar 21 16:52:12 2003 |
| Recai Oktas | roktas@omu.edu.tr | Info | | | Re: Re: Elog and SSL | Ooops, I destroyed the original post, now how can we fix this :) |
943
|
Mon Feb 14 18:49:44 2005 |
| Recai Oktas | roktas@omu.edu.tr | Info | Linux | 2.5.7 | Re: ELOG security vulnerability fixed, IMPORTANT!!!! | Attention to Debian users;
I've prepared the fixed package and also contacted to Debian Security Team for
an urgent security upload. Since then you may wish to update your package from
the following URL:
http://l10n-turkish.alioth.debian.org/debian/elog_2.5.7+r1558-1_i386.deb
Or you can also make an update via apt-get by adding the below line to your
'/etc/apt/sources.list' file:
deb http://l10n-turkish.alioth.debian.org/debian/ ./
> The second vulnerability had to do with write passwords. If you put a "write
> password = xxx" statement into your config file, it was still possible to
> download the config file with a special hand-written URL, and decode the
> write password, which is usually only base-64 encoded unless you haven't
> compiled elog with the -DHAVE_CRYPT flag.
FYI, Debian package has already been compiled with this flag.
-- Recai Oktas, Maintainer of Debian package |
1002
|
Wed Mar 23 05:56:35 2005 |
| Recai Oktas | roktas@omu.edu.tr | Info | Linux | | New Debian package (2.5.8+r1592) -- needs testing | Hi to all,
I've prepared a new Debian package. This version will probably be the one
which you'll find in Sarge/stable.
There are some invasive changes in this version which call for a serious
test. In accordance with a suggestion, I've changed the configuration
mechanism. For details, please read the NEWS.Debian file attached.
Could the Debian users who follow this forum test it and give some feedback?
You can download the package from the following link:
http://l10n-turkish.alioth.debian.org/debian/elog_2.5.8+r1592-1_i386.deb
Thanks in advance for your participation, |
Attachment 1: NEWS.Debian
|
elog (2.5.7+r1589-1) unstable; urgency=low
* Starting from this version, /etc/default/elog is installed as part
of the package. Following variables (with default values) can
be used in /etc/default/elog:
# Host where elogd will run.
# HOST=localhost
# Be verbose.
# VERBOSE=yes
# Port where elogd will run.
PORT=8080
# Logbook root directory.
LOGBOOKDIR=/var/lib/elog
# Resource directory (i.e. themes, icons).
RESOURCEDIR=/usr/share/elog
These variables will become the command line options of elogd.
Since command line options always supersede the corresponding
options in config file, the existence of such a file provides a
way to discriminate two roles: System admin (root) and Elog admin.
Elog config file (/etc/elog.conf) now represents the Elog admin's
settings, while /etc/default/elog corresponds to the system admin's
settings. For example, if system admin defines the following line,
the Elog admin's port setting in config file will be ignored and
ELOG will always listen port '80' (note that the compiled-in
default port is '8080'):
PORT=80
One can also change the logbook repository location by using the
same mechanism, e.g. to set the data directory as '/srv/elog' (as
suggested in FHS v2.3) use the following line:
LOGBOOKDIR=/srv/elog
Maintainer scripts should gracefully handle this transition. But
please note that those system admin's settings listed above should
not be used in elog.conf, even though Elog allows it.
-- Recai OktaÅŸ <roktas@omu.edu.tr> Sun, 20 Mar 2005 05:09:57 +0200
|
1006
|
Wed Mar 23 16:44:32 2005 |
| Recai Oktas | roktas@omu.edu.tr | Info | Linux | | Re: New Debian package (2.5.8+r1592) -- needs testing | > It seems to work nice to me.
> Just another suggestion: I think it would be better to insert a commented out
> example for all allowed parameters in the distributed /etc/default/elog
Thanks for the test. Please note that, /etc/default/elog is partially auto
created during the installation. All options except PIDFILE and CONFFILE are
currently listed (as configured or commented out). If you didn't see these
options (after the update), there must be a problem. Did you mean the lack of
PIDFILE and CONFFILE in the default file? |
|