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Date |
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Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
67095
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Fri Jul 22 10:31:27 2011 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Info | All | 2.9.0 | Re: Elog client usage |
Alan Grant wrote: |
I have searched the Elog forum and docs at length for actual examples of how to use the Elog client and I apologize if I missed it somehwere but could someone please provide some actual examples of how the parmeters are used? I haven't had much success setting it up just going by the Elog command syntax quide.
What I intend to do is load a raw text file into an active logbook directly, either one line at at time or batched from a text file ("m" option).
Also, I saw a Perl script contribution somewhere on the site which appears to offer the same functionality as the above util. Just wondering why there would be two methods, and which might be the best for me to use? Thank you.
|
I suppose you have your demon "elogd" running and you can connect to your logbook via the web interface?
Then you can use the "elog" command to upload a text file as one entry.
If you want to split the text file to one-entry-per-line, you need to write a batch script to do that.
The usage of the "elog" command is descibed in the ELOG User's Guide: https://midas.psi.ch/elog/userguide.html#misc
The command line for "elog" has to define all "Required attributes" with "-a ..."
elog -h <host> -p <port> -l <logbook> -u <user> <password> -a <attribute>=<value> -n 1 -m <text-file>
<port> can be omitted if port 80 is used, "-u <user> <password>" can be omitted if anonymous entry creation is allowed.
Here's an example to write to the demo logbook at midas (local text file /tmp/hello.txt contains "hello world")
elog -h midas.psi.ch -l Linux+Demo -d elogs -a Author=nobody -a Type=Other -a Category=test -a "Subject=hello" -m /tmp/hello.txt
I hope this helps.
PS: please never refer to a location as "somewhere on the site". |
67096
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Tue Jul 26 21:50:05 2011 |
| Alan Grant | netman311@mts.net | Info | All | 2.9.0 | Re: Elog client usage |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Alan Grant wrote: |
I have searched the Elog forum and docs at length for actual examples of how to use the Elog client and I apologize if I missed it somehwere but could someone please provide some actual examples of how the parmeters are used? I haven't had much success setting it up just going by the Elog command syntax quide.
What I intend to do is load a raw text file into an active logbook directly, either one line at at time or batched from a text file ("m" option).
Also, I saw a Perl script contribution somewhere on the site which appears to offer the same functionality as the above util. Just wondering why there would be two methods, and which might be the best for me to use? Thank you.
|
I suppose you have your demon "elogd" running and you can connect to your logbook via the web interface?
Then you can use the "elog" command to upload a text file as one entry.
If you want to split the text file to one-entry-per-line, you need to write a batch script to do that.
The usage of the "elog" command is descibed in the ELOG User's Guide: https://midas.psi.ch/elog/userguide.html#misc
The command line for "elog" has to define all "Required attributes" with "-a ..."
elog -h <host> -p <port> -l <logbook> -u <user> <password> -a <attribute>=<value> -n 1 -m <text-file>
<port> can be omitted if port 80 is used, "-u <user> <password>" can be omitted if anonymous entry creation is allowed.
Here's an example to write to the demo logbook at midas (local text file /tmp/hello.txt contains "hello world")
elog -h midas.psi.ch -l Linux+Demo -d elogs -a Author=nobody -a Type=Other -a Category=test -a "Subject=hello" -m /tmp/hello.txt
I hope this helps.
PS: please never refer to a location as "somewhere on the site".
|
It seems straight forward enough but I must be missing something in my elog command string. I run the client utiltiy but it always hangs after pressing Enter from the cmd window. It could be the way I specifying the host or subdir but I'm not sure. I tried multiple variations.
Some more info: For the prototype I'm just running Elog locally. I installed it to my XP in "c:\program files\elog". I verified tht elogd process is running. With the Elog page already open (ref my attached cfg file) I typed the following, observing case sensitivity, then press enter and at this point it just hangs:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -a Ticket+date="Jul26/11"
Note since all attributes are optional I only included "Ticket Date" for now until I can get this cmd working.
Please bear with me as I don't have an extensive technical background but I would be very grateful for any help as it's for a project at work. Soonest response would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
Alan
|
Attachment 1: elogd.cfg
|
[global]
port = 8080
SMTP host = citygw
Display mode = summary
Self register = 1
[Tartan Tow Log]
Theme = default
Entries per page = 30
List Menu commands = New, Find, <a href=?cmd=Find>Print</a>
Menu commands = List, Edit, Duplicate, Delete, Back
Attributes = Ticket Date, Ticket Time, System Rec'd Date, System Rec'd Time, Ticket, Plate, Make, VIN, Pick Up Location, Officer, Violation, Work Type, Pick Up Date, Pick Up Time, Tow Unit, Drop Date, Drop Time, Drop Location, GOA, Cancel
List Display = ID, Ticket Date, Ticket Time, Ticket, Plate, VIN, Pick Up Location, Work Type, Pick Up Time, Drop Time, Drop Location, GOA
Summary lines = 0
Options Work Type = Rush Hour AM, Rush Hour PM, Street Work, Snow Route, ROPB, General
Options GOA = boolean
Options Cancel = boolean
Page Title = ELOG - $subject
Reverse sort = 1
Quick filter = Date, ID, Ticket Date, Ticket, Plate, VIN, Pick Up Location, Work Type, Drop Location, Subtext
|
67097
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Wed Jul 27 04:36:40 2011 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Info | All | 2.9.0 | Re: Elog client usage |
Alan Grant wrote: |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Alan Grant wrote: |
What I intend to do is load a raw text file into an active logbook directly, either one line at at time or batched from a text file ("m" option). [...]
|
[...] The usage of the "elog" command is descibed in the ELOG User's Guide: https://midas.psi.ch/elog/userguide.html#misc |
[...] I typed the following, observing case sensitivity, then press enter and at this point it just hangs:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -a Ticket+date="Jul26/11"
|
You wrote you want to upload a text file, then you need to add at the end "-m <file>". E.g. if the text-file is named "C:text.txt", then write:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -a Ticket+date="Jul26/11" -n 1 -m C:text.txt
The "-n 1" is just to tell elog to upload plain text. If you do not specify "-m <file>" then it expects input from a pipe and therefore hangs. If you don't know what "input from a pipe" means then ALWAYS use the "-m <file>" option.
PS: if "Ticket date" is of the format "date" then it is sensitive to the formatting of the date string. "Jul26/11" is likely not a legal date format. Better do not specify it for the first test. Write instead:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -n 1 -m C:text.txt
PPS: do you really use a sub-directory "elog" instead of the default location "logbooks" for your ELOG logbook files? If not, then leave out this option, too.
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -n 1 -m C:text.txt
|
67099
|
Tue Aug 2 21:36:20 2011 |
| Alan Grant | netman311@mts.net | Info | All | 2.9.0 | Re: Elog client usage |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Alan Grant wrote: |
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
Alan Grant wrote: |
What I intend to do is load a raw text file into an active logbook directly, either one line at at time or batched from a text file ("m" option). [...]
|
[...] The usage of the "elog" command is descibed in the ELOG User's Guide: https://midas.psi.ch/elog/userguide.html#misc |
[...] I typed the following, observing case sensitivity, then press enter and at this point it just hangs:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -a Ticket+date="Jul26/11"
|
You wrote you want to upload a text file, then you need to add at the end "-m <file>". E.g. if the text-file is named "C:text.txt", then write:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -a Ticket+date="Jul26/11" -n 1 -m C:text.txt
The "-n 1" is just to tell elog to upload plain text. If you do not specify "-m <file>" then it expects input from a pipe and therefore hangs. If you don't know what "input from a pipe" means then ALWAYS use the "-m <file>" option.
PS: if "Ticket date" is of the format "date" then it is sensitive to the formatting of the date string. "Jul26/11" is likely not a legal date format. Better do not specify it for the first test. Write instead:
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -d elog -n 1 -m C:text.txt
PPS: do you really use a sub-directory "elog" instead of the default location "logbooks" for your ELOG logbook files? If not, then leave out this option, too.
elog -h localhost -p 8080 -l Tartan+Tow+Log -n 1 -m C:text.txt
|
Andreas, thank you very much. I was able to get the stand alone function working fine on my site, including a number of add'l attributes and options (SSL, etc).
|
503
|
Mon Mar 8 17:24:14 2004 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | | 2.5.1 | Re: Elog as a service | > Is there any possibility to start elogd as a service under NT/2000/XP
> having local service as its user? Yes, I've read the documentation. Maybe
> things have changed.
What do you mean by "local service as its user"? If you install elogd as a
service with FireDaemon or via SRVANY.EXE, you use the "Services" section
under Computer Management ("Verwalten") to configure the elogd service.
Although the documentation says that one should use the "This account" with
the appropriate password, it is possible to use the "Local System account"
as well. But I'm not 100% sure what implications this has for the ownership
of the logbook database files, but it should be ok in most cases. |
256
|
Fri Mar 21 16:24:05 2003 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Info | | | Re: Elog and SSL | > I was wondering if you can help me understand the concept and if i am doing
> something wrong with securing Elog via 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
>
> This command runs on the server, but when I access https://172.16.24.108/ i
> get a page cannot be displayed, ive also put the URL =
> https://172.16.24.108 entry in the elogd.cfg file
>
> HELP!!!!!!!
Can you access your server locally under http://172.16.24.108:81 ??? If not,
then you maybe specified the wrong port, so check elogd.cfg and the "-p" flag
when starting elogd. If you can access it, and cannot access it under
https://, then something must be wrong with your stunnel configuration. Maybe
you run already a secure server under port 443? User "netstat -a" to check
that. |
258
|
Mon Mar 31 12:44:33 2003 |
| nick | nick@nick.com | Info | | | Re: Elog and SSL | Im not running anything on port 443, one thing I did notice is that when
stunnel is run and setup, I can run a netstat and nothing is bound to those
ports, if I do a ps -ef | grep stunnel nothing is running, yet it accepts the
command initially ?
CONFUSED ????
> > I was wondering if you can help me understand the concept and if i am
doing
> > something wrong with securing Elog via 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
> >
> > This command runs on the server, but when I access https://172.16.24.108/
i
> > get a page cannot be displayed, ive also put the URL =
> > https://172.16.24.108 entry in the elogd.cfg file
> >
> > HELP!!!!!!!
>
> Can you access your server locally under http://172.16.24.108:81 ??? If
not,
> then you maybe specified the wrong port, so check elogd.cfg and the "-p"
flag
> when starting elogd. If you can access it, and cannot access it under
> https://, then something must be wrong with your stunnel configuration.
Maybe
> you run already a secure server under port 443? User "netstat -a" to check
> that. |
67693
|
Sat Aug 2 06:59:22 2014 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Question | Windows | Elog V2.9. | Re: Elog and Certs |
Chuck Brost wrote: |
Elog V2.9.1-2435 if it matters.
It is time again to install the certs for SSL in Elog, and the standard openssl command line does not seem to produce the files that I need in order to get it working on my system.
I copied the file to my trusty linux server and ran the command "openssl pkcs12 -in cert.p12 -clcerts -out cert.pem " as I did last time, last time I got a nice little .crt and .key file.. this time.. no such luck.. I can get by with the guys just hitting the continue and go past the expired cert notice for a bit.. but if I cannot fix it reasonably soon.. well, it won't be pretty for me.. <grin>
Any ideas that anyone can give will be appreciated.. this is a bit outside my usual duties around here..
|
I'm not an expert in this field, but I think openssl is not meant to create a certificate for you, it is meant to create a certificate request form (CSR) and then you buy the certificate with that form from a vendor. Once you have the certificate then you just need to copy it to the right place for ELOG (or Apache) to use it, you don't need openssl for that.
⇄
English (auto-detected) » English
You can have a look at: http://www.rackspace.com/knowledge_center/article/generate-a-csr-with-openssl
Good luck!
PS: This is of course an openssl question: another forum could may be more helpful? |
|