ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
67708
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Wed Oct 22 19:55:53 2014 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Windows | 2.9 | Re: Network Questions |
Hal Proctor wrote: |
Our network team is doing some upgrades and would like the following questions answered if possible. 1: Is the application able to communicate with a Domain controller running Windows Server 2012 R2? And.... 2: Is the application able to function in a Windows 2008 R2 domain and forest functional level? Thanks for your help, Hal |
ELOG contains Kerberos authentication at a basic level. If I'm not mistaken, the Windows Domain controller is based on Kerberos. I do not have any 2008 or 2012 domain controller, so I cannot test, but it's worth giving it a try.
/Stefan |
69674
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Sat Jun 17 22:13:01 2023 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Question | All | 3.1.3 | Re: Nested commands in logbook |
Atrributes can only be defined once in a logbook.
But you can select which attributes are shown with the commands:
Show Attributes = <list>
Attributes present in this list are shown in the single entry page. Omitting attributes can make sense for attributes which are automatically derived from other attributes via the Change <attribute> command.
Show Attributes Edit = <list>
The same as Show Attributes , but for the entry form.
Those can be redifined in conditional attribute clauses.
(See https://elog.psi.ch/elog/config.html)
Leonardo Tacconi wrote: |
Hi everybody,
I am trying to setup my personal ELog, defining attributes and stuff like that. I just tried to make some nested commands but I really could not achieve that.
The idea is something like this:
Attributes = Author
Options Author = Tizio{1}, Caio{2}, Sempronio{3}
{1} Attributes = Author, Project
{1} Options Project = Proj1{a}, Proj2{b}, Proj3{c}
{a} Attributes = Author, Project, Year
{a} Options Year = 2017, 2019
Anyway, when I select Proj1 nothing really happens. So, is there any way to set up nested commands like in the reported example?
Many thanks in advance!
P.S. Is there any documentation in which are reported all the possible commands that can be used?
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68032
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Thu Jun 25 12:32:48 2015 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Windows | latest | Re: Need to move ELOG to other host |
Simply copy over your elogd.cfg file and all files under "logbooks". If you only see former logbooks, you grabbed probably the wrong elogd.cfg file.
Mario Gaertner wrote: |
Hi there,
our host running ELOG crashed. I installed ELOG at another host with copying backup files / folders to new installation. New installation looks fine and seems to be working. But one big problem occurs I only can see some of former existing logbooks. Are there any suggestions how to build an new ELOG with old data?
Many thanks Mario
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68859
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Tue Nov 27 08:19:11 2018 |
| Andreas Luedeke | andreas.luedeke@psi.ch | Request | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Need to change port 25 |
This is nicely explained in the documentation: https://elog.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
The following options are specific to the [global] section:
Port = <port>
Specifies the TCP port under which the server is listening. Default is 80. Can be superseeded via the '-p' command line flag.
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
Hi,
We've made changes in our network and now we have to use port 587 instead of port 25, how can i edit that parameter?
Thanks
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68860
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Tue Nov 27 08:59:45 2018 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Request | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Need to change port 25 |
I believe Yanick means the SMTP port, not the port under which elogd is listening. The SMPT port is hard wired to 25, because port 587 was not yet defiend when I wrote that code. I can make this a variable, but only if it works. So Yanick can you test if port 587 accepts normal SMTP commands? We don't have such a new server at our lab and I cannot test it. Under Windows you can open a command prompt and telnet to the mail server:
telnet <server> 587
HELO test
MAIL FROM: test
your server should then reply with "220 ..." and "250 ..." messages. Once this works, I will implement the variable SMTP port.
Stefan
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
This is nicely explained in the documentation: https://elog.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
The following options are specific to the [global] section:
Port = <port>
Specifies the TCP port under which the server is listening. Default is 80. Can be superseeded via the '-p' command line flag.
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
Hi,
We've made changes in our network and now we have to use port 587 instead of port 25, how can i edit that parameter?
Thanks
|
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68861
|
Tue Nov 27 15:21:31 2018 |
| Yanick Vachon | yvachon@materiauxblanchet.ca | Request | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Need to change port 25 |
I Stefan, it works with the 587 port.

Stefan Ritt wrote: |
I believe Yanick means the SMTP port, not the port under which elogd is listening. The SMPT port is hard wired to 25, because port 587 was not yet defiend when I wrote that code. I can make this a variable, but only if it works. So Yanick can you test if port 587 accepts normal SMTP commands? We don't have such a new server at our lab and I cannot test it. Under Windows you can open a command prompt and telnet to the mail server:
telnet <server> 587
HELO test
MAIL FROM: test
your server should then reply with "220 ..." and "250 ..." messages. Once this works, I will implement the variable SMTP port.
Stefan
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
This is nicely explained in the documentation: https://elog.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
The following options are specific to the [global] section:
Port = <port>
Specifies the TCP port under which the server is listening. Default is 80. Can be superseeded via the '-p' command line flag.
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
Hi,
We've made changes in our network and now we have to use port 587 instead of port 25, how can i edit that parameter?
Thanks
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Attachment 1: Port_587.png
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68864
|
Wed Nov 28 16:24:43 2018 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Request | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Need to change port 25 |
Ok, so I added the option
STMP port = xxx
where you can specify 587 to override the default port 25. I committed the changes to bitbucket. Can you compile from sources, or do I have to dig out my dusty Windows PC?
Stefan
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
I Stefan, it works with the 587 port.
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68865
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Wed Nov 28 16:43:14 2018 |
| Yanick Vachon | yvachon@materiauxblanchet.ca | Request | Windows | 3.1.2 | Re: Need to change port 25 |
Hello,
now we kwow it's working are you gonne send us a version with the SMTP port editable?
Thanks!
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
I Stefan, it works with the 587 port.

Stefan Ritt wrote: |
I believe Yanick means the SMTP port, not the port under which elogd is listening. The SMPT port is hard wired to 25, because port 587 was not yet defiend when I wrote that code. I can make this a variable, but only if it works. So Yanick can you test if port 587 accepts normal SMTP commands? We don't have such a new server at our lab and I cannot test it. Under Windows you can open a command prompt and telnet to the mail server:
telnet <server> 587
HELO test
MAIL FROM: test
your server should then reply with "220 ..." and "250 ..." messages. Once this works, I will implement the variable SMTP port.
Stefan
Andreas Luedeke wrote: |
This is nicely explained in the documentation: https://elog.psi.ch/elog/config.html#global
The following options are specific to the [global] section:
Port = <port>
Specifies the TCP port under which the server is listening. Default is 80. Can be superseeded via the '-p' command line flag.
Yanick Vachon wrote: |
Hi,
We've made changes in our network and now we have to use port 587 instead of port 25, how can i edit that parameter?
Thanks
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