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ID Date Icon Author Author Email Category OS ELOG Version Subjectdown
  67133   Thu Sep 29 10:12:40 2011 Reply Stefan Rittstefan.ritt@psi.chQuestionLinux2.9.0-2411Re: Digest page or email?

Graham Medlin wrote:

We have about 10 logbooks running on the same Elog that all get fair use. Many people have turned off new entry emails because they were filling up inboxes, but are still interested in what's new. I saw the option to add "?last=1" to the start page, although I'm afraid using it might cause confusion over how to get to the older posts.

I was trying to figure out a way of creating a "digest" of sorts, a list of entry subjects posted in the past day or week, something similar to what's generated by "?last=1?mode=threaded", but for every logbook (similar layout to the selection page with nested logbooks). This could either be a page, or a regular email.

Is there way to generate such a cross-logbook page? What about a scheduled email formatted based on a given filter?

PS: The elog has been invaluable to us, a big thanks to all involved!

What we do is use the RSS feed of elog. This gives you nice summaries without going through your email inbox. Most browsers have RSS readers, there are also tons of stand-alone programs for that. Attached is a screenshot from the Google Reader subscribed to this logbook and to the "contributions' logbook. You see nice one-line summaries, you can expand them, and you can go directly to the logbook if you click on the arrow. The second image is from the Firefox using what they call "live bookmarks", but it's basically a RSS reader.

To make this work, I installed the RSS extension of Google Chrome (Firefox has this under "Bookmarks"/"Subscribe to this page"), then go to the elog page, then click on the RSS icon, then clicked on "Subscribe to this" via Google Reader. Just a few clicks.

 

Hope this is what you want.

 

- Stefan

Attachment 1: Screen_Shot_2011-09-29_at_9.58.02_.png
Screen_Shot_2011-09-29_at_9.58.02_.png
Attachment 2: Screen_Shot_2011-09-29_at_10.06.52_.png
Screen_Shot_2011-09-29_at_10.06.52_.png
  67134   Thu Sep 29 16:55:25 2011 Reply Graham Medlinglmedlin@ncsu.eduQuestionLinux2.9.0-2411Re: Digest page or email?

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Graham Medlin wrote:

We have about 10 logbooks running on the same Elog that all get fair use. Many people have turned off new entry emails because they were filling up inboxes, but are still interested in what's new. I saw the option to add "?last=1" to the start page, although I'm afraid using it might cause confusion over how to get to the older posts.

I was trying to figure out a way of creating a "digest" of sorts, a list of entry subjects posted in the past day or week, something similar to what's generated by "?last=1?mode=threaded", but for every logbook (similar layout to the selection page with nested logbooks). This could either be a page, or a regular email.

Is there way to generate such a cross-logbook page? What about a scheduled email formatted based on a given filter?

PS: The elog has been invaluable to us, a big thanks to all involved!

What we do is use the RSS feed of elog. This gives you nice summaries without going through your email inbox. Most browsers have RSS readers, there are also tons of stand-alone programs for that. Attached is a screenshot from the Google Reader subscribed to this logbook and to the "contributions' logbook. You see nice one-line summaries, you can expand them, and you can go directly to the logbook if you click on the arrow. The second image is from the Firefox using what they call "live bookmarks", but it's basically a RSS reader.

To make this work, I installed the RSS extension of Google Chrome (Firefox has this under "Bookmarks"/"Subscribe to this page"), then go to the elog page, then click on the RSS icon, then clicked on "Subscribe to this" via Google Reader. Just a few clicks.

 

Hope this is what you want.

 

- Stefan

 Perfect! I didn't not know there was RSS support. I will probably use something like rss2email, but this is exactly what I needed. Thanks!

  67960   Fri Jun 5 19:01:05 2015 Reply Andreas Luedekeandreas.luedeke@psi.chInfoAll3.1.0+Re: Different way CSS files are handled

Hi Stefan,

there is a little problem with the Makefile (on SL5 and SL6): the following line:

        @$(INSTALL) -m 0644 themes/default/* $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/

/usr/bin/install: omitting directory `themes/default/icons'
make: *** [install] Error 1

When I go back to the old Makefile construct:

        @$(INSTALL) -m 0644 themes/default/icons/* $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/icons/
        @for file in `find themes/default -type f` ;\
          do \
            if [ ! -f $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/`basename $$file` ]; then  \
              $(INSTALL) -m 0644 $$file $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/`basename $$file` ; \
           fi; \
          done

then it seems to work again.

Cheers

Andreas

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Hi,

I just implemented a different way CSS files are handled in ELOG. Previously, we had the default.css, which could be adjusted for specific needs. Some people did that (like myself). So I changed a few colors etc. When I now implement a new feature in elog, it might need a new CSS class which I put in default.css. But this means that people who have modified this file get it either overwritten, or do not get the new styles.

In order to fix this, the default.css is now called elog.css and is always inluded in any ELOG page. If one specifies a CSS file with "CSS = <file.css>", then this CSS file is loaded in addition to elog.css. So one can put only the modifications into that file and inherits all the rest from elog.css. If new features come in elog.css, the installation with the personalized CSS file will then get the new features from the new elog.css automatically, and just overwrite a few settings in the personalized file. Here is an example:

elog.css:

td {
  color:black;
  font-size:12px;

}

Personalized file special.css, activated with "CSS = special.css" in the elogd.cfg file:

td {
  font-size:18px;
}

This personalized file now overwrites the font size from elog.css to 18 pixel, while maintaining all the rest from elogd.css.

The modification is committed to GIT and will be contained in the next release of elog.

/Stefan

 

  67968   Tue Jun 9 09:39:14 2015 Reply Stefan Rittstefan.ritt@psi.chInfoAll3.1.0+Re: Different way CSS files are handled

Ok, fixed again.

Andreas Luedeke wrote:

Hi Stefan,

there is a little problem with the Makefile (on SL5 and SL6): the following line:

        @$(INSTALL) -m 0644 themes/default/* $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/

/usr/bin/install: omitting directory `themes/default/icons'
make: *** [install] Error 1

When I go back to the old Makefile construct:

        @$(INSTALL) -m 0644 themes/default/icons/* $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/icons/
        @for file in `find themes/default -type f` ;\
          do \
            if [ ! -f $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/`basename $$file` ]; then  \
              $(INSTALL) -m 0644 $$file $(ELOGDIR)/themes/default/`basename $$file` ; \
           fi; \
          done

then it seems to work again.

Cheers

Andreas

Stefan Ritt wrote:

Hi,

I just implemented a different way CSS files are handled in ELOG. Previously, we had the default.css, which could be adjusted for specific needs. Some people did that (like myself). So I changed a few colors etc. When I now implement a new feature in elog, it might need a new CSS class which I put in default.css. But this means that people who have modified this file get it either overwritten, or do not get the new styles.

In order to fix this, the default.css is now called elog.css and is always inluded in any ELOG page. If one specifies a CSS file with "CSS = <file.css>", then this CSS file is loaded in addition to elog.css. So one can put only the modifications into that file and inherits all the rest from elog.css. If new features come in elog.css, the installation with the personalized CSS file will then get the new features from the new elog.css automatically, and just overwrite a few settings in the personalized file. Here is an example:

elog.css:

td {
  color:black;
  font-size:12px;

}

Personalized file special.css, activated with "CSS = special.css" in the elogd.cfg file:

td {
  font-size:18px;
}

This personalized file now overwrites the font size from elog.css to 18 pixel, while maintaining all the rest from elogd.css.

The modification is committed to GIT and will be contained in the next release of elog.

/Stefan

 

 

  68008   Wed Jun 10 18:13:50 2015 Reply Stefan Rittstefan.ritt@psi.chQuestionLinuxV2.9.1-244Re: Different timezone settings for each elog

The elog server grabs the local timezone from the underlying OS. Under Linux, you can change the timezone using the TZ environment variable. See here: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-set-time-zone-per-user-basis/

If you need different time zones on the same server, you have to create two accounts and run two instances of elogd on these accounts.

 

gary holman wrote:

I have multiple elogs running on a server.  Is it possible to set one elog to a different timezone?  For example, I run an elog for a group in Washington state, and another elog for a collaboration group in Germany.  I would like to set each elog to their respective timezone. 

thanks,

 

Gary

 

  Draft   Wed Jun 10 20:18:06 2015 Reply gary holmanholman@uw.eduQuestionLinuxV2.9.1-244Re: Different timezone settings for each elog
<p>&nbsp;</p>

<table align="center" cellspacing="1" style="border:1px solid #486090; width:98%">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="background-color:#486090">Stefan Ritt wrote:</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td style="background-color:#FFFFB0">
<p>The elog server grabs the local timezone from the underlying OS. Under Linux, you can change the timezone using the TZ environment variable. See here:&nbsp;<a href="http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-set-time-zone-per-user-basis/">http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-set-time-zone-per-user-basis/</a></p>

<p>If you need different time zones on the same server, you have to create two accounts and run two instances of elogd on these accounts.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<table align="center" cellspacing="1" style="border:1px solid #486090; width:98%">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="background-color:#486090">gary holman wrote:</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td style="background-color:#FFFFB0">
<p>I have multiple elogs running on a server.&nbsp; Is it possible to set one elog to a different timezone?&nbsp; For example, I run an elog for a group in Washington state, and another elog for a collaboration group in Germany.&nbsp; I would like to set each elog to their respective timezone.&nbsp;</p>

<p>thanks,</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Gary</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
  68010   Wed Jun 10 20:37:48 2015 Reply gary holmanholman@uw.eduQuestionLinuxV2.9.1-244Re: Different timezone settings for each elog

Thanks Stefan,  It looks like the group had actually contacted you directly as well (sorry for the redundant work!).  Thanks for the help, the great application and your time.

 

Stefan Ritt wrote:

The elog server grabs the local timezone from the underlying OS. Under Linux, you can change the timezone using the TZ environment variable. See here: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-set-time-zone-per-user-basis/

If you need different time zones on the same server, you have to create two accounts and run two instances of elogd on these accounts.

 

gary holman wrote:

I have multiple elogs running on a server.  Is it possible to set one elog to a different timezone?  For example, I run an elog for a group in Washington state, and another elog for a collaboration group in Germany.  I would like to set each elog to their respective timezone. 

thanks,

 

Gary

 

 

  68011   Wed Jun 10 22:02:33 2015 Reply gary holmanholman@uw.eduQuestionLinuxV2.9.1-244Re: Different timezone settings for each elog

Still no luck changing the TZ for a single elog service.  I completed the following:

* I added a new user/group - central-tz-user (id 1010)
* changed user TZ to central, su as user and confirmed CDT via 'date'
* changed elogd.cfg usr and grp to central-tz-user
* changed elog directory recursively to central-tz-user ownership
* restarted the elog instance and confirmed via 'ps aux' that 1010 is running elog process
* When I go to elog and add new entry, server time (PDT) is shown. 

Am I missing a step here possibly?

 

gary holman wrote:

Thanks Stefan,  It looks like the group had actually contacted you directly as well (sorry for the redundant work!).  Thanks for the help, the great application and your time.

 

Stefan Ritt wrote:

The elog server grabs the local timezone from the underlying OS. Under Linux, you can change the timezone using the TZ environment variable. See here: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-set-time-zone-per-user-basis/

If you need different time zones on the same server, you have to create two accounts and run two instances of elogd on these accounts.

 

gary holman wrote:

I have multiple elogs running on a server.  Is it possible to set one elog to a different timezone?  For example, I run an elog for a group in Washington state, and another elog for a collaboration group in Germany.  I would like to set each elog to their respective timezone. 

thanks,

 

Gary

 

 

 

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