Demo Discussion
Forum Config Examples Contributions Vulnerabilities
  Discussion forum about ELOG, Page 289 of 806  Not logged in ELOG logo
New entries since:Thu Jan 1 01:00:00 1970
ID Date Icon Author Author Email Category OS ELOG Version Subject
  67499   Fri May 10 17:24:55 2013 Reply Garret Delarondegarret.delaronde@gmail.comQuestionLinux2.9.2Re: some menu commands formed with broken links
> On many of my logbooks when I specify the menu commands to appear i will get one, usually 'List', which has a
> link not back to the logbook itself but to the root of the elog web server i.e. http:/hostname.domain:8080 
> But nothing will respond without the logbook name after the port number.  This also seems to be happening to the
> "back" submit button.  I can't seem to figure out how to address it.  Suggestions?

Can you show us your config? I had this issue when i was initially trying to integrate elog with apache.
  67498   Fri May 10 17:21:50 2013 Reply Garret Delarondegarret.delaronde@gmail.comInfoWindows292-2Re: Blockying user access

Gian Henriques wrote:

Gian Henriques wrote:

Garret Delaronde wrote:

Gian Henriques wrote:

 How can I block access to some tools (like edit, erase, config...) for each user? I want only admin users can edit, erase , etc. 

 

I want know too, how can I erase configuration of SMTP?  I make a test with the "elogd -t" command and now every time I create a new entry in my log book I receve the mensage of error to send email, cause I don't configure a SMTP host. 

 Hello, you can use the "Deny" flag in the config file for each logbook.

 

Deny <function> = <user>

Example: Deny Edit = Gian

simply add as many deny functions as you would like. Its a bit of work if you have a lot of logbooks but its the easiest solution.

Hope that helps.

 

Elog Syntax guide is helpful for this stuff too.

 Thanks for help. It work's. 

 But I want to know if I can block a logbook from a user. For example I have a logbook named "Store". I want only users of the vendors have access to this log. How can I do it? 

I didn't find this in manual.

 The only way I find for this trouble is using the "Login user". But we have something best?

 I haven't found a specific way to block viewing a log book. 

I use the top groups settings to keep users in the logbooks they only need access to.

Example

Top Group = Logbook Group1, Logbook Group 2

Group Logbook Group 1 = Logbook1, Logbook2

Group Logbook Group 2 = Logbook3, Logbook4

Then only assign users for logbook1 and logbook2 that you wish to view those logbooks only. They would have to go to the specific top group url in order to view the logbooks.

Then you can go to http://elogurl/(top group)/

And essentially just have the users view the only logbooks they are assigned to.

  67497   Wed May 8 23:15:34 2013 Reply Gian Henriquesgianlhsdm@gmail.comInfoWindows292-2Re: Blockying user access

Gian Henriques wrote:

Garret Delaronde wrote:

Gian Henriques wrote:

 How can I block access to some tools (like edit, erase, config...) for each user? I want only admin users can edit, erase , etc. 

 

I want know too, how can I erase configuration of SMTP?  I make a test with the "elogd -t" command and now every time I create a new entry in my log book I receve the mensage of error to send email, cause I don't configure a SMTP host. 

 Hello, you can use the "Deny" flag in the config file for each logbook.

 

Deny <function> = <user>

Example: Deny Edit = Gian

simply add as many deny functions as you would like. Its a bit of work if you have a lot of logbooks but its the easiest solution.

Hope that helps.

 

Elog Syntax guide is helpful for this stuff too.

 Thanks for help. It work's. 

 But I want to know if I can block a logbook from a user. For example I have a logbook named "Store". I want only users of the vendors have access to this log. How can I do it? 

I didn't find this in manual.

 The only way I find for this trouble is using the "Login user". But we have something best?

  67496   Wed May 8 19:17:09 2013 Reply Gian Henriquesgianlhsdm@gmail.comInfoWindows292-2Re: Blockying user access

Garret Delaronde wrote:

Gian Henriques wrote:

 How can I block access to some tools (like edit, erase, config...) for each user? I want only admin users can edit, erase , etc. 

 

I want know too, how can I erase configuration of SMTP?  I make a test with the "elogd -t" command and now every time I create a new entry in my log book I receve the mensage of error to send email, cause I don't configure a SMTP host. 

 Hello, you can use the "Deny" flag in the config file for each logbook.

 

Deny <function> = <user>

Example: Deny Edit = Gian

simply add as many deny functions as you would like. Its a bit of work if you have a lot of logbooks but its the easiest solution.

Hope that helps.

 

Elog Syntax guide is helpful for this stuff too.

 Thanks for help. It work's. 

 But I want to know if I can block a logbook from a user. For example I have a logbook named "Store". I want only users of the vendors have access to this log. How can I do it? 

I didn't find this in manual.

  67495   Tue May 7 22:15:37 2013 Question Ken Ludingtonkludingt@gmail.comQuestionLinux2.9.2some menu commands formed with broken links
On many of my logbooks when I specify the menu commands to appear i will get one, usually 'List', which has a
link not back to the logbook itself but to the root of the elog web server i.e. http:/hostname.domain:8080 
But nothing will respond without the logbook name after the port number.  This also seems to be happening to the
"back" submit button.  I can't seem to figure out how to address it.  Suggestions?
  67494   Tue May 7 11:54:23 2013 Reply David PilgramDavid.Pilgram@epost.org.ukQuestionLinux2.5.2Re: Auto-Generate new logbook daily

Ryan Blakeslee wrote:

Andreas Luedeke wrote:

David Pilgram wrote:

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Ryan Blakeslee wrote:

Hello,

I am currently using ELOG as a daily logbook for work performed for customers.  This is a critical tool and process for 1. Showing customers work history 2. having a searchable knowledge base for future reference.  

Currently, I will create a new log entry, assign the customer using a custom ROPTION in my elog.conf.  This process all works fine, mostly, except I run into the following obstacles (that are all human related.)

1. Many days, there are no log entries to be created for a PARTICULAR customer, and other days there are no long entries to be created for ANY customer.

2. Many days when there is a log entry to be created, it's created by me much later then when the work was performed.  For example, I do a bunch of work Tuesday and Wednesday, but I don't have time to enter all my entries until Thursday.  

2A. In this case, I have to manually go back and edit the log entries with text-editor to adjust the times, dates, and such.

2B. In this case, I have log files with a file-name of THURSDAY (042513a.log) for work entries done on Tues and Wed, so I have to go back and rename the log files for consistency sake (mv 042513a.log 042313a.log).  ** I know this is not a requirement of the program, but I like to have the log filenames consistent with the dates contained in them.

 

All these I admit are human error -- but as a small business owner, I just can't always get to the log entries every day.

 

To overcome this, the manual solution would: at the beginning of each day, create a new log entry -- regardless of work to be performed and updated later.  This would serve as sort of a place holder.

However, I can't commit myself to always create a log entry for every day either.  Again, human error.

 

Is what I would like to be able to do is create a new log entry, every single day, automatically.  I would then have a growing log dir of daily log entries (files) for ever day of the week, most blank but some would then contain data that I enter later-- either at the end- of-day or on a day I have downtime and can commit to administrative work.

My thought is I could probably schedule a cron job do to this, but i'm not completely sure how I would go about auto-populating the incremental ID's, dates, etc.  Second, I don't know if there is a way to do this within ELOG itself, or if there is a built-in mechanism that already covers this.

 

Has anyone run into this, or solved this problem, or can someone kindly point me in the right direction or how I can implement the daily auto creation of logs?

 

Thank you very much in advance!

Actually I would not worry with the 042313a.log files. In a future version of elog they might be replaced by a database or so. I see two options:

  1. Add an attribute of date/time type. You do that with "Type <attribute> = datetime". Then you can assign a certain date or time to each entry you do. That means you can tag an entry with the date of yesterday or so. If you make that date then the main database key (via "List display") it basically replaces your "internal" date.
  2. You can do automatic entries with the "elog" utility coming with the distribution and described here. This you can even run from a cron job. If you submit a new entry from elog, you get automatically the incremented IDs etc. You can use some default values for the attributes, which you can change later.

 Purists look away now.

I have the same issues regarding "catching up" of entries.  So what I do is use the date command to reset the computer's time back to the time that the entry [i]should[/i] have been made.  Say I need to put an entry for last Thursday (today is Saturday 27th),

Firstly I set the clock back by

date 04252200

(I use a time of 22:00 or later as code for a retro-made entry, the date being the important point for me).

Then any entry will have the correct time (sic) and date entry within the file, and the file the expected format of 130425a.log

After Thursday's batch of entries, I then simply reset the clock for the next entry/ies or indeed back to real time.

Mind you, my log files have the format yymmdda.log, whereas you state yours are mmddyya.log, which strikes me as a very high degree of flexibility!

 

---

Nice to meet someone else who gets down to the bare ascii and knows how to edit the xxxxxxa.log files!

Just my two cent:
I would strongly recomment NOT to go back and forth with the system time.
In some cases this can cause you severe problems with your control system.
 
Stefans suggestion works fine for our operations logbook: I've just introduced an attribute "When" and sort my entries according to this attribute.
The line in the config:
Start page = ?rsort=When
takes care that this sorting is the default.
 
The advantage of this approach is in addition, that you keep track of both dates:
the date when the work had been performed and
the date when you've actually entered the information.
Sometimes that turns out to be useful to me to figure out what I did and when ;-)
 
As to editing the bare ascii: I do this a lot, even with sed scripts.
But there is a disclaimer: you can crash elogd with corrupted entries and you may have a hard time figuring out why it crashes.
For example accidentally deleting a digit in a cross reference can create a loop that causes elogd to get non-responsive without error: try to find that!
I would strongly advise not to build any user application build on editing the ascii files. Just use it for system administration.
 
Andreas
--
He who knows others is wise.
He who knows himself is enlightened.
                -- Lao Tsu
 
 
Detect language » English
 

 

Hello Andreas, Stephan and David,

 

Thank you so much for the very insightful feedback -- it's very much appreciated!

 

I took all of the tips and created a solution that encompasses most of the feedback, and I think it solves my problem nicely while adhering  to my desire to keep log filenames in order as well as limiting the risk with moving/renaming, etc.

 

1. First, I have created a cron job that runs daily at 12:01AM, which runs the following command (This will create a new entry as a place-holder at 12:01AM every day) 

 

CODE:

elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Daily -a Customer=CRON -a Subject="Daily Log - System Generated" -a Hours=New -a TravelHrs="0" -a Author=CRON -a Type="System Generated" -a Status="New" -a "Locale=localhost" -v "Auto-generated log entry."  

 

2. Second, I added the "When" attribute, per Andreas' suggestion.

 

3. Last, I added the recommended sort command to my .cfg which will exclude the auto-generated logs from showing up and cluttering my view; essentially making them invisible.  I sort by type to exclude the system generated types.

 

Now, -- to go back in time and enter my "catch-up" data, I'll use the 'Find' in my menu, and find by type = system generated.  That will pull up all the auto-generated entries.  I'll then open whatever day(s) log(s) and edit them, chose the "when" to be the actual day the log entry is for, and enter the data.

 

I think this is a perfect solution - thanks so much!  PS - Nice to meet you too David -glad to know someone else out there thinks like I do!  :-)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hi Ryan,

Glad you've got your solution.   Sadly, won't work for me, as my 'catching up' is often as replies to some existing threads, rather than just the need to have the day's work under the day's date.  But useful to know for the future.

As for the computer time switching, I am aware of the issues, it's a stand-alone linux box, I've found elog to be surprisingly tolerant, everything's backed up.  The introduction of a 'When' attribute had better be on new logbooks or introduced at end of year (esp during quiet time) so that existing books don't fail to find what I'm looking for in searches.

As for ascii coding the yymmdda.log file, and the infinate loops, been there, got the tee-shirt.  In all bar one case I've found and corrected the problem, although in one case I became convinced it had to be a 'hidden' character because deleteing and retyping the entry letter by letter cured the issue.

  67493   Tue May 7 04:57:37 2013 Reply Ryan Blakesleerb@blakesys.netQuestionLinux2.5.2Re: Auto-Generate new logbook daily

Andreas Luedeke wrote:

David Pilgram wrote:

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Ryan Blakeslee wrote:

Hello,

I am currently using ELOG as a daily logbook for work performed for customers.  This is a critical tool and process for 1. Showing customers work history 2. having a searchable knowledge base for future reference.  

Currently, I will create a new log entry, assign the customer using a custom ROPTION in my elog.conf.  This process all works fine, mostly, except I run into the following obstacles (that are all human related.)

1. Many days, there are no log entries to be created for a PARTICULAR customer, and other days there are no long entries to be created for ANY customer.

2. Many days when there is a log entry to be created, it's created by me much later then when the work was performed.  For example, I do a bunch of work Tuesday and Wednesday, but I don't have time to enter all my entries until Thursday.  

2A. In this case, I have to manually go back and edit the log entries with text-editor to adjust the times, dates, and such.

2B. In this case, I have log files with a file-name of THURSDAY (042513a.log) for work entries done on Tues and Wed, so I have to go back and rename the log files for consistency sake (mv 042513a.log 042313a.log).  ** I know this is not a requirement of the program, but I like to have the log filenames consistent with the dates contained in them.

 

All these I admit are human error -- but as a small business owner, I just can't always get to the log entries every day.

 

To overcome this, the manual solution would: at the beginning of each day, create a new log entry -- regardless of work to be performed and updated later.  This would serve as sort of a place holder.

However, I can't commit myself to always create a log entry for every day either.  Again, human error.

 

Is what I would like to be able to do is create a new log entry, every single day, automatically.  I would then have a growing log dir of daily log entries (files) for ever day of the week, most blank but some would then contain data that I enter later-- either at the end- of-day or on a day I have downtime and can commit to administrative work.

My thought is I could probably schedule a cron job do to this, but i'm not completely sure how I would go about auto-populating the incremental ID's, dates, etc.  Second, I don't know if there is a way to do this within ELOG itself, or if there is a built-in mechanism that already covers this.

 

Has anyone run into this, or solved this problem, or can someone kindly point me in the right direction or how I can implement the daily auto creation of logs?

 

Thank you very much in advance!

Actually I would not worry with the 042313a.log files. In a future version of elog they might be replaced by a database or so. I see two options:

  1. Add an attribute of date/time type. You do that with "Type <attribute> = datetime". Then you can assign a certain date or time to each entry you do. That means you can tag an entry with the date of yesterday or so. If you make that date then the main database key (via "List display") it basically replaces your "internal" date.
  2. You can do automatic entries with the "elog" utility coming with the distribution and described here. This you can even run from a cron job. If you submit a new entry from elog, you get automatically the incremented IDs etc. You can use some default values for the attributes, which you can change later.

 Purists look away now.

I have the same issues regarding "catching up" of entries.  So what I do is use the date command to reset the computer's time back to the time that the entry [i]should[/i] have been made.  Say I need to put an entry for last Thursday (today is Saturday 27th),

Firstly I set the clock back by

date 04252200

(I use a time of 22:00 or later as code for a retro-made entry, the date being the important point for me).

Then any entry will have the correct time (sic) and date entry within the file, and the file the expected format of 130425a.log

After Thursday's batch of entries, I then simply reset the clock for the next entry/ies or indeed back to real time.

Mind you, my log files have the format yymmdda.log, whereas you state yours are mmddyya.log, which strikes me as a very high degree of flexibility!

 

---

Nice to meet someone else who gets down to the bare ascii and knows how to edit the xxxxxxa.log files!

Just my two cent:
I would strongly recomment NOT to go back and forth with the system time.
In some cases this can cause you severe problems with your control system.
 
Stefans suggestion works fine for our operations logbook: I've just introduced an attribute "When" and sort my entries according to this attribute.
The line in the config:
Start page = ?rsort=When
takes care that this sorting is the default.
 
The advantage of this approach is in addition, that you keep track of both dates:
the date when the work had been performed and
the date when you've actually entered the information.
Sometimes that turns out to be useful to me to figure out what I did and when ;-)
 
As to editing the bare ascii: I do this a lot, even with sed scripts.
But there is a disclaimer: you can crash elogd with corrupted entries and you may have a hard time figuring out why it crashes.
For example accidentally deleting a digit in a cross reference can create a loop that causes elogd to get non-responsive without error: try to find that!
I would strongly advise not to build any user application build on editing the ascii files. Just use it for system administration.
 
Andreas
--
He who knows others is wise.
He who knows himself is enlightened.
                -- Lao Tsu
 
 
Detect language » English
 

Hello Andreas, Stephan and David,

 

Thank you so much for the very insightful feedback -- it's very much appreciated!

 

I took all of the tips and created a solution that encompasses most of the feedback, and I think it solves my problem nicely while adhering  to my desire to keep log filenames in order as well as limiting the risk with moving/renaming, etc.

 

1. First, I have created a cron job that runs daily at 12:01AM, which runs the following command (This will create a new entry as a place-holder at 12:01AM every day) 

 

CODE:

elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Daily -a Customer=CRON -a Subject="Daily Log - System Generated" -a Hours=New -a TravelHrs="0" -a Author=CRON -a Type="System Generated" -a Status="New" -a "Locale=localhost" -v "Auto-generated log entry."  

 

2. Second, I added the "When" attribute, per Andreas' suggestion.

 

3. Last, I added the recommended sort command to my .cfg which will exclude the auto-generated logs from showing up and cluttering my view; essentially making them invisible.  I sort by type to exclude the system generated types.

 

Now, -- to go back in time and enter my "catch-up" data, I'll use the 'Find' in my menu, and find by type = system generated.  That will pull up all the auto-generated entries.  I'll then open whatever day(s) log(s) and edit them, chose the "when" to be the actual day the log entry is for, and enter the data.

 

I think this is a perfect solution - thanks so much!  PS - Nice to meet you too David -glad to know someone else out there thinks like I do!  :-)

 

 

 

 

 

  67492   Fri May 3 19:27:53 2013 Reply Hal Proctorhproctor2@gmail.comInfoWindows2.9.2Re: Kerberos on VM server 64bit

Hal Proctor wrote:

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Hal Proctor wrote:

 I have a logbook installed on a Windows 64 bit VM server 2008 R2 and can access it fine using the password file.  However when using Kerberos it does not authenticate correctly.  I installed Kerberos and pointed it to the realm an domain controller.  Using KINIT command line it appears to accept my password.  Any help is appriciated.  Perhaps some other diagnostics i could try against the kerberos install

Here is global settings:

port = 49212

ssl = 1 

url = https://my-elog.domain.com:49212/

Authentication = Kerberos, file

Kerberos Realm = DOMAIN.COM

Admin User = me

Max content length = 10485760

Password file = pw.txt

Allow password change = 1  (perhaps this is an issue???)

 

Also...when adding users to the logbook, do you leave the password blank if using Kerberos?

You can leave the password just blank.

The "Allow password change = 1" does not make any difference. It works here even with this option.

So I have no idea why you have that problem. Does it work on another computer, i.e. is it related to the 64 bit VM machine?

Best regards,
Stefan 

 

The kerberos install, installed the Network Identity Manager and placed krb5 config in my windows directory.  Can a server run lsass.exe only?   or does the krb5 config file and Network Identity Manager need to be on the server?

 

 Installed both on a Windows 2003 R2 server (32bit) and Kerberos not authenticating, yet gievs me a ticket thru kinit.

ELOG V3.1.5-3fb85fa6