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  69143   Tue Apr 21 09:13:45 2020 Reply Daniel Pfuhldaniel.pfuhl@medizin.uni-leipzig.deRequestLinux | Windows | Mac OSX | All | Other3.1.4Re: CSS for HTML Mails

Hi Stefan,

I pulled the code from the repository but was not able to build it.

Sorry, I'm not a developer. Is there a good documentation you can recommend on how to do this for a Windows installation incl. how to setup a build environment?

No chance to get a more recent Windows version already precompiled? ^^

Regards,

daniel

 

Stefan Ritt wrote:

a04faf9f is pretty old: https://bitbucket.org/ritt/elog/commits/a04faf9fa9ca74657240cdc827bd2d0ae48a9df1

It's from September 2018, where the change with the CSS has been made on Decemb er 2018. You have to pull the current version from the git repository and recompile the program yourself.

/Stefan

Daniel Pfuhl wrote:

Hmm, I'm pretty sure that we are on the latest version already.

We use ELOG V3.1.4-a04faf9f

I downloaded a fresh install binary for Windows and compared the checksums:

SHA256: 0A98485134E0D43959CB6734F977B02DC9FA884D6994CE3BA141664451FDA5E5
SHA256: 0A98485134E0D43959CB6734F977B02DC9FA884D6994CE3BA141664451FDA5E5

same same.

Or do I have to change to config in order to include the CSS in the HTML?

regards,

 

daniel

 

Stefan Ritt wrote:

The CSS has been embedded in the email end of 2018, so just upgrade your server.

https://bitbucket.org/ritt/elog/commits/5165daf35cc1fb066071827719079fe0c9aa5ffb

/Stefan

Daniel Pfuhl wrote:

Hi there,

we extensively use Logbuch as a change documentation platform.

E-Mail notifications for new entries are very important for us.

Since we store sensible data in our logbooks the server is protected by a firewall.

After the firewall was activated the HTML mails are not rendered by the Outlook Mail clients we use - when they are located in an "external" net behind the firewall. I assume that's because of the css stylesheet which is linked in the source code of the HTML mail.

Is there any chance to include the CSS information in the HTML code? Otherwise we would need to make the CSS accessable from anywhere which requires in turn that the path of the CSS file can be customized.

Any idea how to solved this issue?

Best regards,

daniel

 

 

 

 

  69145   Sun May 3 15:58:24 2020 Question Frank Baptistacaffeinejazz@gmail.comQuestionWindowsV3.1.4-80633baRecord ID corruption

Hi all,

I've encountered an occasional problem that seems to be exacerbated by having a message with many replies.

In our use of ELOG, we run lengthy environmental tests (often several days) in multiple temperature chambers (one logbook for each chamber).  We document the start of the test with a log entry, and then periodically create replies -- first to the original log entry, and then to each successive reply (no branching allowed), in order to document how far along the test is.

What I'm seeing is an occasional "hiccup" in the order of records -- in the snapshot below, you can see that the record ID(s) go (in chronological order) ....5654, 5655, 5656, 5659, 5657, 5658, 5660, 5661....

Additionally, in this example, record ID# 5659 and record ID# 5657 are duplicates -- duplicate time stamp and duplicate text.

Has anyone else encountered this? 

Thanks,
Frank
 

  69146   Sun May 3 18:05:32 2020 Reply David PilgramDavid.Pilgram@epost.org.ukQuestionWindowsV3.1.4-80633baRe: Record ID corruption

Hi,

I've had problems in the past due to a dodgy pointer creating branches despite a "No branches" in the configuration file.  It would be very interesting to see what the 200428a.log file looks like with these entries: in the screenshot they appear to be shown in time order, but do the "Reply to" and "In reply to" liknes in each entry (in the .log file) show a linear progression through the entires, a branch or indeed this same order as the screenshot.  If the duplicated entry sequential to 5657 (i.e 5658) then I would suspect something akin to my pointer's double click when I only made a single click, so fast that then second entry were created before the "No branches" checking part of the program had been reached.  Not so sure about such an event here unless entry 5658 were already open but not closed?

 

Regards,

David.

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi all,

I've encountered an occasional problem that seems to be exacerbated by having a message with many replies.

In our use of ELOG, we run lengthy environmental tests (often several days) in multiple temperature chambers (one logbook for each chamber).  We document the start of the test with a log entry, and then periodically create replies -- first to the original log entry, and then to each successive reply (no branching allowed), in order to document how far along the test is.

What I'm seeing is an occasional "hiccup" in the order of records -- in the snapshot below, you can see that the record ID(s) go (in chronological order) ....5654, 5655, 5656, 5659, 5657, 5658, 5660, 5661....

Additionally, in this example, record ID# 5659 and record ID# 5657 are duplicates -- duplicate time stamp and duplicate text.

Has anyone else encountered this? 

Thanks,
Frank
 

 

  69147   Sun May 3 22:43:12 2020 Reply Frank Baptistacaffeinejazz@gmail.comQuestionWindowsV3.1.4-80633baRe: Record ID corruption

Hi David,

Thanks for the quick response!  Well, I'd have to say that the sequence is as tangled as it looks in the logbook -- I've attached a copy of the log file for your reading pleasure. 

This one is definitely a "head-scratcher" for me...it definitely seems like it is more prevalent on log entries with many replies.

Thanks,
Frank

David Pilgram wrote:

Hi,

I've had problems in the past due to a dodgy pointer creating branches despite a "No branches" in the configuration file.  It would be very interesting to see what the 200428a.log file looks li looks like with these entries: in the screenshot they appear to be shown in time order, but do the "Reply to" and "In reply to" liknes in each entry (in the .log file) show a linear progression through the entires, a branch a branch or indeed this same order as the screenshot.  If the duplicated entry sequential to 5657 (i.e 5658) then I would suspect something akin to my pointer's double click when I only made a single click, so fast that then second e second entry were created before the "No branches" checking part of the program had been reached.  Not so sure about such an event here unless entry 5658 were already open but not closed?

 

Regards,

David.

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi all,

I've encountered an occasional problem that seems to be exacerbated by having a message with many replies.

In our use of ELOG, we run lengthy environmental tests (often several days) in multiple temperature chambers (one logbook for each chamber).  We document the start of the test with a log entry, and then periodically create replies -- first to the original log entry, and then to each successive reply (no branching allowed), in order to document how far along the test is.

What I'm seeing is an occasional "hiccup" in the order of records -- in the snapshot below, you can see that the record ID(s) go (in chronological order) ....5654, 5655, 56 5656, 5659, 5657, 5658, 5660, 5661....

Additionally, in this example, record ID# 5659 and record ID# 5657 are duplicates -- duplicate time stamp and duplicate text.

Has anyone else encountered this? 

Thanks,
Frank
 

 

 

 

  69148   Mon May 4 14:55:53 2020 Reply David PilgramDavid.Pilgram@epost.org.ukQuestionWindowsV3.1.4-80633baRe: Record ID corruption

Hi Frank,

There are two interesting points about the log file. 

1.  Entry 5658 is timestamped later than 5659, but is earlier in the entry list.  It also is "In Reply to" 5659. despite 5659 having not been written (or at least timestamped) at the time that 5658 is.  Might this be a feature of the draft function?  I've not upgraded my elog for a long time now so my version doesn't have the feature - so I cannot test the idea of more than one entry being worked upon at the same time.

2.  Entry 5657 says it is "In Reply to" 5656, but entry 5656 does not reference 5657 in the "Reply to" line, as it should   Again, this might be a feature of the draft function

Could someone be confusing a draft entry with a real one?  Or two attempts to make an entry?

On the idea of large number of entries, elog doesn't handle deleting of a thread of more than 40 replies well - it crashes after deleting the 40th.  This leaves an orphan thread that causes other issues.  Do you have enough information to decided that this event always happens after x replies?

 

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi David,

Thanks for the quick response!  Well, I'd have to say that the sequence is as tangled as it looks in the logbook -- I've attached a copy of the log file for your reading pleasure. 

This one is definitely a "head-scratcher" for me...it definitely seems like it is more prevalent on log entries with many replies.

Thanks,
Frank

David Pilgram wrote:

Hi,

I've had problems in the past due to a dodgy pointer creating branches despite a "No branches" in the configuration file.  It would be very interesting to see what the 200428a.log file looks li looks like with these entries: in the screenshot they appear to be shown in time order, but do the "Reply to" and "In reply to" liknes in each entry (in the .log file) show a linear progression through the entires, a branch a branch or indeed this same order as the screenshot.  If the duplicated entry sequential to 5657 (i.e 5658) then I would suspect something akin to my pointer's double click when I only made a single click, so fast that then second e second entry were created before the "No branches" checking part of the program had been reached.  Not so sure about such an event here unless entry 5658 were already open but not closed?

 

Regards,

David.

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi all,

I've encountered an occasional problem that seems to be exacerbated by having a message with many replies.

In our use of ELOG, we run lengthy environmental tests (often several days) in multiple temperature chambers (one logbook for each chamber).  We document the start of the test with a log entry, and then periodically create replies -- first to the original log entry, and then to each successive reply (no branching allowed), in order to document how far along the test is.

What I'm seeing is an occasional "hiccup" in the order of records -- in the snapshot below, you can see that the record ID(s) go (in chronological order) ....5654, 5655, 56 5656, 5659, 5657, 5658, 5660, 5661....

Additionally, in this example, record ID# 5659 and record ID# 5657 are duplicates -- duplicate time stamp and duplicate text.

Has anyone else encountered this? 

Thanks,
Frank
 

 

 

 

 

  69149   Tue May 12 15:47:33 2020 Reply Rich Loringrloring@bnl.govQuestionLinux3.1.4How to prevent file path leaks on a 404 page

Hello,

We used the Elog RPM binary installation method to install Elog. Our security scanners are complaining that Elog discloses the version information when you hit a missing page (404 error).  How can I hide this version info? Is there a snippet of code somewhere that I can comment out?

Any help is appreciated.

-Rich

  69150   Tue May 12 15:53:17 2020 Question Rich Loringrloring@bnl.govQuestionLinux3.1.4How to prevent file path leaks on a 404 page

Hello,

We used the Elog RPM binary installation method to install Elog. Our security scanners are complaining that Elog discloses the version information when you hit a missing page (404 error).  How can I hide this version info? Is there a snippet of code somewhere that I can comment out?

Any help is appreciated.

-Rich

  69151   Fri May 22 21:03:05 2020 Reply Frank Baptistacaffeinejazz@gmail.comQuestionWindowsV3.1.4-80633baRe: Record ID corruption

Hi David,

Well, you've made some very interesting observations, and raised some excellent questions.  So, I went back and did some homework, reviewing a number of logbooks to find instances where this strange 'record twist' occurs.  You had asked, "Do you have enough information to decided that this event always happens after x replies?" -- and to my surprise, indeed there was a magic number that I didn't expect to see.  The 57th reply to the original posting was always where the corruption began.  Mind you, we don't always get a corruption on the 57th reply -- most of the time, it works as expected. However, in all the cases where I saw this record twist, it was the 57th reply after the original posting. Go figure.

I also reviewed my elogd.cfg file to see how I handled drafts.  Currently, it does have the flag Save drafts = 0.  What I plan to try next, if only to satisfy my curiosity, is to also add Autosave=0.

I can't thank you enough for your time and feedback...very much appreciated!

Best regards,
Frank

 

David Pilgram wrote:

Hi Frank,

There are two interesting points about the log file. 

1.  Entry 5658 is timestamped later than 5659, but is earlier in the entry list.  It also is "In Reply to" 5659. despite 5659 having not been written (or at least timestamped) at the time that 5658 is.  Might this be a feature of the draft function?  I've not upgraded my elog for a long time now so my version doesn't have the feature - so I cannot test the idea of more than one entry being worked upon at the same time.

2.  Entry 5657 says it is "In Reply to" 5656, but entry 5656 does not reference 5657 in the "Reply to" line, as it should   Again, this might be a feature of the draft function

Could someone be confusing a draft entry with a real one?  Or two attempts to make an entry?

On the idea of large number of entries, elog doesn't handle deleting of a thread of more than 40 replies well - it crashes after deleting the 40th.  This leaves an orphan thread that causes other issues.  Do you have enough information to decided that this event always happens after x replies?

 

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi David,

Thanks for the quick response!  Well, I'd have to say that the sequence is as tangled as it looks in the logbook -- I've attached a copy of the log file for your reading pleasure. 

This one is definitely a "head-scratcher" for me...it definitely seems like it is more prevalent on log entries with many replies.

Thanks,
Frank

David Pilgram wrote:

Hi,

I've had problems in the past due to a dodgy pointer creating branches despite a "No branches" in the configuration file.  It would be very interesting to see what the 200428a.log file looks li looks like with these entries: in the screenshot they appear to be shown in time order, but do the "Reply to" and "In reply to" liknes in each entry (in the .log file) show a linear progression through the entires, a branch a branch or indeed this same order as the screenshot.  If the duplicated entry sequential to 5657 (i.e 5658) then I would suspect something akin to my pointer's double click when I only made a single click, so fast that then second e second entry were created before the "No branches" checking part of the program had been reached.  Not so sure about such an event here unless entry 5658 were already open but not closed?

 

Regards,

David.

Frank Baptista wrote:

Hi all,

I've encountered an occasional problem that seems to be exacerbated by having a message with many replies.

In our use of ELOG, we run lengthy environmental tests (often several days) in multiple temperature chambers (one logbook for each chamber).  We document the start of the test with a log entry, and then periodically create replies -- first to the original log entry, and then to each successive reply (no branching allowed), in order to document how far along the test is.

What I'm seeing is an occasional "hiccup" in the order of records -- in the snapshot below, you can see that the record ID(s) go (in chronological order) ....5654, 5655, 56 5656, 5659, 5657, 5658, 5660, 5661....

Additionally, in this example, record ID# 5659 and record ID# 5657 are duplicates -- duplicate time stamp and duplicate text.

Has anyone else encountered this? 

Thanks,
Frank
 

 

 

 

 

 

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