ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
66490
|
Tue Aug 4 10:48:26 2009 |
| Ricardo Goncalo | jgoncalo@mail.cern.ch | Question | Mac OSX | 2.7.6 | Re: Problems when trying to set up mirror elog |
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Ricardo Goncalo wrote: |
Retrieving entries from "https://www.pp.rhul.ac.uk:8080/ATLAS Trigger"...
Remote server is not an ELOG server
...so I'm running out of options. Any ideas would be welcome!
Cheers,
Ricardo
|
Your problem is here. I wrote that synchronization is not possible through SSL, but you try to access https://www.pp.rhul.ac.uk:8080 which is SSL (because you have https:// not http://).
|
Ah, I see. Hmm, ok it doesn't work without the s either. I can't access the server in that case. Ok, I think I'll just wait for this feature to be available. Thanks for your help! |
66794
|
Thu Apr 22 20:02:46 2010 |
| Rex Tayloe | rtayloe@indiana.edu | Question | Linux | V2.7.8-227 | How to control table width in listing |
Greetings,
In table list mode, I would like to control how much width is given to "subject" column (my attribute). Can't find any method to control in config file. Problem is that the subject is often quite long and jammed into a small width, when the text is often empty and has more width than needed.
Thanks,
RT
|
67222
|
Thu Mar 29 17:30:28 2012 |
| Rex Tayloe | rtayloe@indiana.edu | Question | Linux | V2.9.0-243 | create "front page" for a logbook |
Is there a way to create a "front page" or "table of contents" for a logbook?
While chronological entries are good and what elog was designed for, I find myself wanting a page to summarize important things
and/or link to important files that are somewhere in that logbook. And, I would like to use the features of the elog editor to do (not just point
to another www page that points to the various elog entries). For example, in an analysis logbook, you would like to have one page that
may summarize latest on analysis and point to best/latest plot/drawing of something and not have to re-search for it every time.
I think that start page with cmd to go to entry 1 (how do I do that?) may work. Then I just keep editing entry 1 to point to latest info or
entries. Will this work? Will I run into a size limitiation if I attach too many files to that? Is there a better way?
One could imaging using a wiki to do this, however, I never seem to get to updating our wikis... maybe I should just figure how to
get elog to do it.
Thanks. |
67251
|
Tue Apr 17 21:59:43 2012 |
| Rex Tayloe | rtayloe@indiana.edu | Question | Linux | V2.9.0-243 | Re: create "front page" for a logbook |
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Rex Tayloe wrote: |
Is there a way to create a "front page" or "table of contents" for a logbook?
While chronological entries are good and what elog was designed for, I find myself wanting a page to summarize important things
and/or link to important files that are somewhere in that logbook. And, I would like to use the features of the elog editor to do (not just point
to another www page that points to the various elog entries). For example, in an analysis logbook, you would like to have one page that
may summarize latest on analysis and point to best/latest plot/drawing of something and not have to re-search for it every time.
I think that start page with cmd to go to entry 1 (how do I do that?) may work. Then I just keep editing entry 1 to point to latest info or
entries. Will this work? Will I run into a size limitiation if I attach too many files to that? Is there a better way?
One could imaging using a wiki to do this, however, I never seem to get to updating our wikis... maybe I should just figure how to
get elog to do it.
Thanks.
|
Well, if you never get to update your wiki, you will you get to update your summary page? As you know there is no free lunch.
For my analysis logbooks, I do it such that I create an arbitrary entry in the logbook, where I put references to other entries. Using the syntax "elog:<id>" this is very simple like here: elog:67222. Then I put a link to that special page in my browser bookmarks. This puts me one mouse click away from accessing this page. You can link to other elog pages but also to page attachments this way, so no need to put too many attachments into a single page, although there is no limit on that.
Best regards,
Stefan
|
Thanks for suggestion... it gave me idea for slightly different way to do it. The method you suggest doesnt work that well to share in group (everyone would have to add that link in their bookmarks).. So I added this in config file:
Title image = <img border=0 height=25 src="bulb.png" alt="Summary/TOC entry">
Title image URL = <http:link to my specific elog page/entry num>
That replaces elog help icon with a link to TOC entry which can be any entry number. One could make a custom icon and perhaps play around with adding more than one link (?).
Another thing that could do same thing and maybe more consistent with elog philiosophy would be to add a command that goes to a specific link or entry.... but this current solution works... |
66891
|
Fri Sep 3 19:04:46 2010 |
| Renee Poutissou | renee@triumf.ca | Comment | Linux | Mac OSX | 2.8.0 | Re: Synchronizing mirror causes corruption of logbook entries with multiple logbooks defined? |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Glenn Horton-Smith wrote: |
We have been experiencing corruption of logbook entries by elogd mirror synchronization. Has anyone else encountered this? Is there a known cause and/or workaround for it? [...]
I made copies of both servers' files and ran two elogd servers on my Mac on different ports, compiled from a fresh checkout of 2.8.0, and the same behavior was observed as I repeatedly made test entries and synchronized. This suggests it isn't specific to Linux architecture, 64-bit or otherwise.
|
We plan to use ELOG with mirror servers in a larger scale here, so I'm interested to know more about your problem.
Could you boil down your configuration to a minimum that still allows a reproduction of the problem and post those configurations as attachments?
Then I would try to reproduce it here. Best case I'll find a bug fix, worst case I'll reconsider the use of mirror servers ;-)
|
I have been using the mirror mechanism for one year for the online T2K /ND280 (neutrino oscillation experiment at J-PARC, Japan). It has been a savior to allow access to all collaborators to the Elog. The experiment online computers are all behind a double firewall that allow only communication through ssh and http in one direction: from the inside to the outside. The master Elog is located in Canada and accessible remotely to all collaborators. The mirror Elog is located inside the firewall on one of the online machines in Japan and synchronization is setup to run automatically every 5 minutes. There are 10 logbooks defined for each of the sub-detector groups.
At first I encountered a big problem when messages were added on both sides. It turned out that Elog mirroring does not work when the two instances are running on different time zones. After I set the machine in Canada to run on Japan time (JST), no further problems have happened. Postings are routinely entered on either of the Elogs and synchronization works well. This feature is essential to having a workable Elog for the T2K experiment.
I had reported the problem of timezones to Stefan last year. He was going to put it on his wish list.
|
67514
|
Tue May 28 19:01:42 2013 |
| Remington Tyler Thornton | rtthornt@indiana.edu | Info | Linux | 2.8-2350 | hyperlink other elog posts |
I am on an experiment that used ELOG for all documentation and meeting notes. In our meeting notes we link to elog posts that had been discussed during the meeting. We had done this by hyperlinking the URL to the entry. Recently we had to move our logbook to another machine and so none of our hyperlinks work since the URLs have changed. I noticed that when one creates a new entry in the subject they can reference another post. Is there a way to link another elog in the body of the elog by using its logbook name and id number without having to use a URL?
Thanks in advance |
67686
|
Thu May 22 21:39:55 2014 |
| Remington Tyler Thornton | rtthornt@indiana.edu | Question | Linux | 2.8.1-2350 | Passing html code for table using elog command |
Hey,
I am testing out automated entries using elog on the command line. The file I pass has html code for a table; the resulting entry shows the html code for the table instead of generating the table. Is there a way to make elog parse the code to show a formatted table?
Thanks in advance. |
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.
|