ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
69297
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Tue Feb 2 08:17:15 2021 |
| MATT TERRON | matao11235@gmail.com | Question | Linux | Windows | 3.1.4 | Re: Different Top Groups or Groups have the same logbook name |
So both Top Group names and Logbook names should be unique inside one .cfg file, is that correct?
Stefan Ritt wrote: |
Unfortunately you have to name these top groups differently, because they are internally used for the database name.
MATT TERRON wrote: |
I have built different top groups for different departments. But occasionally these different top groups have the same logbook name, say 'Maintenance Log'. So is there a way I can have the same logbook name under different 'Top Groups', rather than rename these logbooks as 'Department1 Maintenance Log' all the way to 'Department_X Maintenance Log'?
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69296
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Tue Feb 2 07:43:49 2021 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | Windows | 3.1.4 | Re: Different Top Groups or Groups have the same logbook name |
Unfortunately you have to name these top groups differently, because they are internally used for the database name.
MATT TERRON wrote: |
I have built different top groups for different departments. But occasionally these different top groups have the same logbook name, say 'Maintenance Log'. So is there a way I can have the same logbook name under different 'Top Groups', rather than rename these logbooks as 'Department1 Maintenance Log' all the way to 'Department_X Maintenance Log'?
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69295
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Tue Feb 2 04:01:21 2021 |
| MATT TERRON | matao11235@gmail.com | Question | Linux | Windows | 3.1.4 | Different Top Groups or Groups have the same logbook name |
I have built different top groups for different departments. But occasionally these different top groups have the same logbook name, say 'Maintenance Log'. So is there a way I can have the same logbook name under different 'Top Groups', rather than rename these logbooks as 'Department1 Maintenance Log' all the way to 'Department_X Maintenance Log'? |
69294
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Thu Jan 14 14:05:19 2021 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | 3.1.3 | Re: elog slowness |
Have you tried to restart the elogd server? The CLOSE_WAIT could be dangling network connections, which were not properly closed by the browser.
Giuseppe Cucinotta wrote: |
We run elog on a server to provide a logbook for our laboratory. We noticed that elog is very slow on loading pages: browser pages spend a lot of time in charging (actually one can speed the procedure refreshing the page but it is quite annoying).
I checked the server load with top and it doesn't show any abnormal CPU or memory usage. Then I ran lsof and I noticed that there are more than 200 entries related to the same elog PID and labelled with CLOSE_WAIT.
My questions are: can the slowness of my logbook be due to the presence of all these CLOSE_WAIT entries (which seems if I understood well wait for a response)? If it's the case, how can I solve this issue?
Thanks
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69293
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Thu Jan 14 11:43:00 2021 |
| Giuseppe Cucinotta | giuseppe.cucinotta@unifi.it | Question | Linux | 3.1.3 | elog slowness |
We run elog on a server to provide a logbook for our laboratory. We noticed that elog is very slow on loading pages: browser pages spend a lot of time in charging (actually one can speed the procedure refreshing the page but it is quite annoying).
I checked the server load with top and it doesn't show any abnormal CPU or memory usage. Then I ran lsof and I noticed that there are more than 200 entries related to the same elog PID and labelled with CLOSE_WAIT.
My questions are: can the slowness of my logbook be due to the presence of all these CLOSE_WAIT entries (which seems if I understood well wait for a response)? If it's the case, how can I solve this issue?
Thanks |
69291
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Sun Jan 10 11:13:31 2021 |
| Lahreche Abdelmadjid | abdelmadjid.lahreche@yahoo.com | Question | Windows | 2006 | hidden files |
Hello;
Could I make change on program only on the " elogd.cfg" ?
Or is there onother files, because I think there is hidden files ? |
69290
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Fri Jan 8 15:35:35 2021 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Linux | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Parsing log files |
Well, you could put the old options back to the config file, do the export, then remove them again.
But have a look at the Elog database files ZZMMDDa.log in your logbook directory, they are pure ASCII files, which are relatively simple to parse.
Hi John. The problem with using the Find-->Export method is that some of the Attributes for the older data are no longer shown on that screen because the Config file has since changed. That's why I'm contemplating somehow parsing the log files directly instead.
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69289
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Fri Jan 8 15:28:06 2021 |
| Alan Grant | agrant@winnipeg.ca | Question | Linux | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Parsing log files |
John wrote: |
Hi Al; if I understand your situation correctly you want to access Elog db (logbooks) via another way. There are many ways depending on your knowledge, type of work needed, and ease of use. I have found that accessing whatever I need via Elog gui is satisfactory in many situations-- by simply exporting. THEN take the raw csv/xml file and manipulte it more easily from there. There are MANY free web sites that will take your data then, and put it in still another format that you choose (usually manipulating the rows/columns to your liking or doing mail-merge type work on your data). BTW WPS (Windows Office clone) is awesome at further 'mail-merg' techniques. THEN at that point you may have close to what you are trying to accomplish. I've also used PHP alot in this type of situation and have replicated Elog's data format for it's db (logbooks)..; so PHP is great in this maner, although of course it takes time to 'get-it-right' if you are not well versed in it. If you go into detail more of what type of format you want as the finalized product, maybe more suggestions will be made.
Happy belated New Years everyone,
John
Alan Grant wrote: |
Sometimes we change the attributes in a config file for a given tab as time goes on, which naturally can get out of sync with the older data in that tab.
I can imagine some other Elog users have encounterd this too at some point so I'm wondering if there's a utilty or some way anyone knows of that I can use to parse a log file DIRECTLY to view the older data, without using the Elog GUI?
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Hi John. The problem with using the Find-->Export method is that some of the Attributes for the older data are no longer shown on that screen because the Config file has since changed. That's why I'm contemplating somehow parsing the log files directly instead. |