PostScript Files shown as text., posted by Bryan Moffit on Fri Sep 3 20:17:35 2004
|
At some point, in the last week or so, I upgraded the debian-unstable
version (r1459-1) of elog. Now, PostScript files (as attachments) are
displayed (shown in ascii text, instead of just showing the link).
Is there an option in the elog.cfg to only display certain files (like .gif
or .jpg). |
Re: text display of ascii files not a good idea, posted by T. Ribbrock on Tue Sep 7 13:05:49 2004
|
[...]
> Probably it is fine to display only files ending in '.txt' per default.
> In addition a file that has more than say 1000 lines should probably
> also not be displayed (as default, optional OK).
No, '.txt' would definitely not be enough for me. I'm using elog to log all
administration of our network. In many cases, I simply attach a configuration
file. All those files are plain ASCII and none of them end in '.txt' - and I
would most definitely like them to be displayed inline like they are now. In
fact, this change was the main reason for me to upgrade to 2.5.4
Maybe a configuration option or a "display attachment" button would be the
best solution, then?
Cheerio,
Thomas |
Re: Options Items limits, posted by Stefan Ritt on Tue Sep 7 17:49:50 2004
|
> > Hello friends,
> >
> > Exist some form to increase limits of items (100) in the Options List
> >
> >
> >
> > Thanks for any help
>
> I believe only through an edit of the C code and a recompile, as the values
> are set as constants. I think this might be the line:
>
> #define MAX_N_LIST 100
>
> So, yes, there exists a way and the ease of this way is dependent upon your
> comfort level with changing stefan's code.
Agree. The only potential problem is that if this value becomes too big, you
will get a stack overflow from time to time. So best is experiment yourself a
bit. A avlue of 150 or so should be no problem.
- Stefan |
Re: Admin rights lost after upgrade 2.5.2 to 2.5.4, posted by Stefan Ritt on Wed Sep 8 12:25:20 2004
|
> Somehow elogd 2.5.4 treat all users as normal user. When clicking on
> "config". All admin users has no "change elogd.cfg" button. Revert back to
> 2.5.2 OK.
>
> Is there anything I need to change to upgrade other than replaceing elogd?
> Clearing the cookies didn't help.
The button name has been changed from "change elogd.cfg" to "change config file"
since the file name is now variable (can be changed during compile time). But I
guess this is not your problem.
Can you try with the demo logbook (contained in the distribution). Just add
"password file = ..." and "admin user = ..." to the sample elogd.cfg. If I do that
here, everything works fine. You also can send me your elogd.cfg so I can have a look. |
Re: write access for elogd, posted by Stefan Ritt on Wed Sep 8 12:36:08 2004
|
> Newly installed elog gives this response when I try to submit a new record:
>
> New entry cannot be written to directory "./logbooks/Linux/"
> Please check that it exists and elogd has write access
>
> I started the daemon. I've not yet assigned passwords -- just checking
> things out. How can I create this access to my own directory?
First, find out under which account the daemon is running. It you account if
you start it interactively, if you installed from the RPM, an account "elog" is
created. Then make sure that the account under which elogd is running has write
access to the ./logbooks/Linux/ directory. One common problem is that people
start the daemon the first time under their account, which causes elogd to
create the logbook directory under the user name. If elogd is later started
under the account "elog" this one of course does not have access to the
directory. A
chown -R elog.elog /usr/local/elog/
issued as root could help in that case. Please replace /usr/local/elog with the
directory where elog is installed. |
Re: text display of ascii files not a good idea, posted by Stefan Ritt on Wed Sep 8 13:46:56 2004
|
> [...]
> > Probably it is fine to display only files ending in '.txt' per default.
> > In addition a file that has more than say 1000 lines should probably
> > also not be displayed (as default, optional OK).
>
> No, '.txt' would definitely not be enough for me. I'm using elog to log all
> administration of our network. In many cases, I simply attach a configuration
> file. All those files are plain ASCII and none of them end in '.txt' - and I
> would most definitely like them to be displayed inline like they are now. In
> fact, this change was the main reason for me to upgrade to 2.5.4
>
> Maybe a configuration option or a "display attachment" button would be the
> best solution, then?
>
> Cheerio,
>
> Thomas
So to make everybody happy, it would probably be enough not to display inline any
*.ps file, is that right? Is there any other ASCII format, which should not be
displayed? PDF is binary, so it won't be displayed. What about long C files? Most
people want to see them. In the recent version there is the "Hide attachment"
link which can be clicked to not display an attachment inline. Mabe there should
be a "Hide default = 0|1" config option... |
Re: PostScript Files shown as text., posted by Stefan Ritt on Wed Sep 8 15:52:00 2004
|
> At some point, in the last week or so, I upgraded the debian-unstable
> version (r1459-1) of elog. Now, PostScript files (as attachments) are
> displayed (shown in ascii text, instead of just showing the link).
>
> Is there an option in the elog.cfg to only display certain files (like .gif
> or .jpg).
See elog:691 . In the latest CVS version, postscript files are not displayed
any more inline, but the next debian release will take some time, maybe you can
compile from source... |
Re: elogd does not exit on SIGTERM, posted by Stefan Ritt on Wed Sep 8 17:38:54 2004
|
> elogd does not exit if there is an 'unprocessed' HUP. So when you do
>
> kill -HUP <pid>
> kill <pid>
>
> elogd will only exit after it was accessed.
Can you please tell me how to reproduce this problem?
Even if I do a
kill -HUP <pid>; kill <pid>
it works immediately when I start elogd manually in interactive mode (not as daemon). |