ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
66834
|
Wed Jun 2 18:46:32 2010 |
| Marco Rojas | marco.rojas@gocetech.com | Question | Linux | 7.2.8 | Deamon on Debian |
Hi,
I have been using ELOG for a while and I love it. It is a default installation on Debian Lenny and ELOG 2.7.8. I am having problems with the deamon script, I can stop the service by doing /etc/init.d/elog stop but I can't started. When I do /etc/init.d/elog start I get this error: "Starting ELOG daemon: elogdCannot open "elogd.cfg": No such file or directory"
Somewhere there is a bad path to the elogd.cfg which is in "/usr/local/elog"
I would appreciate any help I can get.
Thank you.
Here is the scrip:
[code]
#!/bin/sh
# Init script for ELOG.
# Recai Oktas <roktas@omu.edu.tr>
PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin
DAEMON=/usr/local/sbin/elogd
NAME=elogd
DESC="ELOG daemon"
# Always run as daemon.
ARGS="-D"
# Admin might change some command line options without touching this script.
if [ -f /etc/default/elog ]; then
. /etc/default/elog
fi
test -f $DAEMON || exit 0
set -e
case "$1" in
start)
echo -n "Starting $DESC: $NAME"
start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile /var/run/$NAME.pid \
--exec $DAEMON -- $ARGS >/dev/null
echo "."
;;
stop)
echo -n "Stopping $DESC: $NAME"
start-stop-daemon --oknodo --stop --quiet --pidfile /var/run/$NAME.pid \
--exec $DAEMON -- $ARGS >/dev/null
echo "."
;;
reload)
# Do nothing since ELOG daemon responds to
# the changes in conffile directly.
;;
restart|force-reload)
echo -n "Restarting $DESC: $NAME"
start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --pidfile \
/var/run/$NAME.pid --exec $DAEMON -- $ARGS >/dev/null
sleep 1
start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile \
/var/run/$NAME.pid --exec $DAEMON -- $ARGS >/dev/null
echo "."
;;
*)
N=/etc/init.d/$NAME
echo "Usage: $N {start|stop|restart|reload|force-reload}" >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
exit 0
[/code] |
66836
|
Sun Jun 6 22:54:55 2010 |
| Heinzmann | catman333@web.de | Question | Windows | 2.7.8 | change design part of the discussion board |
Hello Stefan,
If I would like to change the design of the attached part of the discussion board like:
deleting OS: (including blue box) Linux Windows Mac OSX All Other (including green box)
Where and how could I do this?
Thank you
|
Attachment 1: midas.psi.ch.htm
|
66841
|
Tue Jun 8 15:48:06 2010 |
| Yoshio Imai | | Request | All | 2.7.8 | inline-code |
Hi, Stefan!
Sometimes, it is annoying that the [code] -Tag creates a line break, because there are situations where verbatim text inside the regular text flow is desirable (just like here). I would like to request an additional elcode-tag [ilcode] (in-line code) which translates to <code> instead of <pre> .
Cheers
Yoshio |
66845
|
Thu Jun 10 15:10:19 2010 |
| Bill Pier | bpier@clove.org | Question | Linux | 2.7.8 | drop in replacement for FCKeditor? |
Is it possible to use a drop-in replacement for the FCKeditor? |
66850
|
Tue Jul 20 21:03:10 2010 |
| Denis Perevalov | denis@fnal.gov | Question | Linux | latest | Enable user to view only, not post/delete. |
Hi,
I have just discovered elog and I absolutely love it.
I have a question. Is there a way to enable user to view only, not post/delete in my elog. Also I would like to allow them to view only certain categories of my messages.
Regards,
Denis |
66852
|
Wed Jul 21 16:26:17 2010 |
| soren poulsen | soren.poulsen@cern.ch | Question | Linux | 2.7.8 | Subst variables and Execute |
Hi
I am trying to use this line from the documentation:
Execute new = echo "New message wiht ID $message id of type $type from $long_name on $remote_host" >> /tmp/elog.log
It does not seem to have the intended effect (of printing a line with the message id, etc in the file /tmp/elog.log
)
How can I make this line work ?
Soren
|
66854
|
Thu Jul 22 00:31:54 2010 |
| David McKee | dmckee@phys.ksu.edu | Question | All | 2.7 | What *exactly* do "clone" and "mirror" do? |
We have been hosting logbook far (geographically and in internet hops) from our experimental site. Recently we have (finally!) gotten reliable on-site internet, and would like to host the log book on-site.
I have a suspicion that some combination of the -C, -m, and -M flags will allow me to migrate the logbook automagically and with a minimum risk of trouble from concurrent operation on the logbook, and to maintain the existing version as a mirror of the new official on-site version. But documentation is not being very helpful. Can someone say a few more words about what these options do?
I've been experimenting as I compose this and have a suggestion for language that might be useful somewhere in the documentation:
In this context "to clone" means to copy the configuration file and all data files associated with a log book so that I can host an identical logbook on a new host (that is this is the command to migrate a logbook). After cloning the two installation are identical, but no effort is made to keep them so: if you continue to run both copies post made to one will not be reflected in the other.
Is this correct?
I'm still not clear on what the -m and -M options do. |
66867
|
Wed Jul 28 17:21:31 2010 |
| Bryan Moffit | moffit@jlab.org | Question | Linux | 2.7.8-2278 | Disable forward/backward navigation keystrokes? |
I wondered if there was a config line that enabled/disabled the forward and backward navigation keystrokes that were implemented in 2.7.0?
The current definitions (Control-PgUp/PgDown/Home/End) interfere with those keys I use to navigate between tabs in Firefox. It'd be nice if they could either be turned off.. or redefined. |