ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
67568
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Thu Oct 3 10:23:31 2013 |
| Paraic Fahey | paraic.fahey@pfizer.com | Question | Windows | 2.7.6 | cannot add new logbooks to any of my logbook groups |
Each time a attempt to CREATE A LOGBOOK on any of my logbook groups, I get an ELOG ERROR page presenting saying FORBIDDEN ATTRIBUTE DATE.
I have, up until recently been able to add new logbooks.
Can anybody help me on this.
Paraic Fahey |
67567
|
Tue Sep 24 17:38:33 2013 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | 2.9.2 | Re: Packaging ELOG for Debian |
Nicolas FRANCOIS wrote: |
Hi.
I'd like to package ELOG for the new Debian. I'm a complete beginner in
this matter, but I spent some time configuring it for my desktop.
Could you help me do this (links to package maintainance, Elog tips,
security, former package maintainer...) ?
Thanks for any help.
--
Nicolas FRANCOIS | /\
http://nicolas.francois.free.fr | |__|
X--/\\
We are the Micro$oft. _\_V
Resistance is futile.
You will be assimilated. darthvader penguin
|
I'm also not familiar with Debian, all I know is that the former maintainer was Recai Oktas. See here for example:
elog:1002 |
67566
|
Thu Sep 12 22:23:43 2013 |
| David Pilgram | David.Pilgram@epost.org.uk | Bug report | All | latest | Re: Find by date/time |
Hal Proctor wrote: |
David Pilgram wrote: |
Hal Proctor wrote: |
Is it a time zone issue or a setting issue related to the FIND by date / time issue?
It seems to add an hour to each of the time selections once you select SEARCH. see attached pics
|
One hour adrift at this time of the year sounds like daylight saving. Or compensation thereof. What is your computer clock set to (not what time the clock reads)?
Personally I think it rather naughty that [at least older] Windoze automatically sets the clock one hour forward the first reboot after the spring switch forward, and the same in the autumn back. What if you'd already done it, like all the rest of the clocks in the house?
|
But it shouldn't use a calculation of any means when the search criteria is entered. I did not choose "LAST DAY", I specifically entered a time, and THAT time should be used for the search. |
Some computer programs/OS work with the computer clock as is. Some make adjustment for Daylight Saving. Some - Windows comes to mind, actually adjust the computer clock back and forth as Daylight saving ends and begins respectively. I know this because I have a dual boot computer (I use windoze for AutoCAD and one other Windows-only Java based utility[!]), and when British Summer Time starts, my Linux automatically moves the screen clock forward. But when I subseqently boot into Windoze, it sets the computer clock forward one hour, so when I then boot back into Linux, the clock is one hour fast.
I therefore suggest again you check what your computer clock *really* is, not what the OS reports it as being, as often they think they're being clever and automatically put in Daylight Saving.
Another test - Stefan and Andreas will be shuddering hard tonight - will be to set your computer clock to December, and see if the effect is still there or has disappeared. |
67565
|
Thu Sep 12 22:15:12 2013 |
| David Pilgram | David.Pilgram@epost.org.uk | Question | Linux | 2.9.2-1 | Re: posting future logbook entries |
todd wrote: |
Is there a way to post a logbook entry to a future dated logbook file? I've searched through the user manual for forward dating but can't seem to find anything. As an example at my office, a user wants to add a personal entry stating they will be absent from work on October 5th and I would like that entry information written to the 131005a.log file instead of the current days log.
|
I know two ways to do this. Either way you do need some kind of sysadmin status.
Stefan, Andreas, close your eyes for the next sentence.
1. Set the computer/server clock to 5th October, make the entry, set the clock back again.
2. Make the entry as normal, then go into the logbook directory and find today's 130912a.log entry - now create a new 131005a.log file, and paste in the relivant entry into this - not forgetting to change the day and date at the top. Save the file. Ensure that 131005a.log has the correct permissions and ownership (compare with all the other files) - you do mean you're using linux, didn't you. Cannot answer for what to do/happen with Windows.
Now I too have this issue - there is one entry I want to keep at the very top of the list until a certain date has passed. The way that Stefan/Andreas may offer probably will work, but I've never tried it - which is that the entry goes into today's log file, but has a "entry date" category. I don't know if that would keep the entry at the top of the list until the 5th October has passed. As I don't want to have an "Entry date" category, I resort to one of the two methods above.
The fact that the ID numbers become out of sequence doesn't seem to affect the performance of ELOG at all in my perhaps rather more extensive experience than the developers would have wanted me to try.
|
67564
|
Thu Sep 12 18:01:34 2013 |
| todd | todd.holsten@noaa.gov | Question | Linux | 2.9.2-1 | posting future logbook entries |
Is there a way to post a logbook entry to a future dated logbook file? I've searched through the user manual for forward dating but can't seem to find anything. As an example at my office, a user wants to add a personal entry stating they will be absent from work on October 5th and I would like that entry information written to the 131005a.log file instead of the current days log. |
67563
|
Wed Sep 11 17:12:52 2013 |
| Hal Proctor | hproctor2@gmail.com | Bug report | All | latest | Re: Find by date/time |
David Pilgram wrote: |
Hal Proctor wrote: |
Is it a time zone issue or a setting issue related to the FIND by date / time issue?
It seems to add an hour to each of the time selections once you select SEARCH. see attached pics
|
One hour adrift at this time of the year sounds like daylight saving. Or compensation thereof. What is your computer clock set to (not what time the clock reads)?
Personally I think it rather naughty that [at least older] Windoze automatically sets the clock one hour forward the first reboot after the spring switch forward, and the same in the autumn back. What if you'd already done it, like all the rest of the clocks in the house?
|
But it shouldn't use a calculation of any means when the search criteria is entered. I did not choose "LAST DAY", I specifically entered a time, and THAT time should be used for the search. |
67562
|
Thu Sep 5 12:56:37 2013 |
| Mark Campbell | CAMP2MAR@police.nsw.gov.au | Question | Windows | 2.9-2475 | Re: How to remove "Remove user" button ? |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Mark Campbell wrote: |
Is there a way to remove the "Remove user" button from non-Amin users config page?
BTW Stefan ELOG is a Great Solution!
Thanks Mark.
|
Hi Mark,
I've had a quick look in the code: currently it is not possible to remove the "Remove user" button.
But a non-admin user would only be able to remove his own user account. Shouldn't a user have the ability to remove his own account?
⇄
Detect language » English
Andreas
Andreas
|
Hi Andreas,
we would prefer only admin users to be able to remove user accounts.
I have just tested the Remove user command with a regular user account and get this error " Error: Command "Remove user" not allowed" so it looks like users can't remove their own account, so that is OK.
Thanks
Mark. |
67561
|
Thu Sep 5 11:20:41 2013 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Question | Windows | 2.9-2475 | Re: How to remove "Remove user" button ? |
Mark Campbell wrote: |
Is there a way to remove the "Remove user" button from non-Amin users config page?
BTW Stefan ELOG is a Great Solution!
Thanks Mark.
|
Hi Mark,
I've had a quick look in the code: currently it is not possible to remove the "Remove user" button.
But a non-admin user would only be able to remove his own user account. Shouldn't a user have the ability to remove his own account?
⇄
Detect language » English
Andreas
Andreas |