ID |
Date |
Icon |
Author |
Author Email |
Category |
OS |
ELOG Version |
Subject |
483
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Fri Feb 27 10:09:04 2004 |
| Ulrich Trüssel | ulrich.truessel@familienhund.ch | Question | Linux | Windows | 2.5.1 | Default Sorting Option | I really don't know if anybody already had this problem or i just didn't
find the solution in the documenttaion:
There is a possibility to sort the log by the value of a attribute as
well as a flag for reverse sort. anf it's quite easy to build up a
command line with the sort attribute and value. But this only works from
a self written command line.
Is there any possibilty to make ELOG soring by default (without a
command line option) by a other attribute than date? I would use a date
set by the user manually to sort the log file, even the user clicks on
the log-name.
or may it be a possibility for a additional feature, like a logbook
option "Default sort = my own date" and the logbok get sorted by this
attribute and option by default.
Would be happy about every tip! ThankX! |
482
|
Fri Feb 27 09:15:07 2004 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Question | Windows | 2.5 | Re: Instant Edit Link | I have added that functionality according to your request. In elogd.cfg, you
can specify
List Display = ID, Edit, Delete, Date, Author, ... <other attributes>
which gives you two colums, one to edit and entry and one to delete one. See
the attached picture. I presume that's what you want. This works on the
newest version
http://midas.psi.ch/cgi-bin/cvsweb/elog/src/elogd.c?rev=1.272
and you need the two icons
http://midas.psi.ch/cgi-bin/cvsweb/elog/themes/default/edit.gif?rev=1.1
http://midas.psi.ch/cgi-bin/cvsweb/elog/themes/default/delete.gif?rev=1.1
to be put under your elog/themes/default/ directory. Or you wait for the
next official release (;-) |
Attachment 1: moz.gif
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481
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Fri Feb 27 03:48:05 2004 |
| Raj | Elog+rajelio@yahoo.com | Question | Windows | 2.5 | Instant Edit Link | How I can dynamically create a link when a new submission is entered that
will have a value of <ELOG_URL$message id?=Edit>
I want the users to be able to go straight from the main page to an edit
page. This would skip 1 step to get to the edit page.
Is this possible.
If that link could use one of the icons for the src image that would be
great.
Thanks.
:-) |
480
|
Thu Feb 19 09:38:13 2004 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | Bug report | Linux | 2.5.0 | Re: elogd does not exit on SIGTERM | Noee. Here it works immediately.
Can you try with a fresh server from the distribution, with the example
elogd.cfg, to see if there is any difference?
The killing is handled in the funciton ctrlc_handler(), which sets _abort =
TRUE. This is checked in line 16195, just after the select(), and the main
loop is exited. The select finishes after one second, although I believe
that the kill signal also terminates the select prematurely. The kill
command and a Ctrl-C keystroke should work the same way, they both generate
a SIGTERM or SIGINT signal. |
479
|
Wed Feb 18 16:54:27 2004 |
| Heiko Scheit | h.scheit@mpi-hd.mpg.de | Bug report | Linux | 2.5.0 | elogd does not exit on SIGTERM | When trying to stop elogd processes with the kill command
elogd exits only after access to the logbook.
It should exit immediately, maybe after some cleanup. |
478
|
Mon Feb 16 17:18:39 2004 |
| Heiko Scheit | h.scheit@mpi-hd.mpg.de | | Linux | 2.5.0 | Re: -W -Wall options (using gcc) | > > Have a look at the gcc info pages:
> >
> > $ info gcc "invoking gcc" "warning options"
>
> Sure, I'm not stupid!
Sorry, didn't mean to offend you.
> I looked for ~10 minutes how to turn off the remaining
> warnings, but I could not find it. The code is now correct, like I do want the
> "%y" format specifier in the strftime() function, but the warning is wrong.
One way to remove the warnings would be to use "%Y" in a separate strftime() call
and then taking only the last two digits (characters) of that string.
Something like:
old:
strftime(str, sizeof(str), "%A, %d-%b-%y %H:%M:%S GMT", gmt);
new:
strftime(str, sizeof(str), "%A, %d-%b-XX %H:%M:%S GMT", gmt);
strftime(year, sizeof(year), "%Y", gmt);
i=strstr(str,"XX"); /* find position of XX */
if ( i+1 < sizeof(str) ) {
str[i] =year[3];
str[i+1]=year[4];
} else ...
Somewhat cumbersome, but should work. Maybe consider using the four
digit year directly, where possible.
Gruss, Heiko |
477
|
Mon Feb 16 16:47:55 2004 |
| Stefan Ritt | stefan.ritt@psi.ch | | Linux | 2.5.0 | Re: -W -Wall options (using gcc) | > Have a look at the gcc info pages:
>
> $ info gcc "invoking gcc" "warning options"
Sure, I'm not stupid! I looked for ~10 minutes how to turn off the remaining
warnings, but I could not find it. The code is now correct, like I do want the
"%y" format specifier in the strftime() function, but the warning is wrong. The
closest I came to was
-W -Wall -Wno-format
which removes ther warning in strftime(), but I do want this warning, since it
helps in many other printf() statements. |
476
|
Mon Feb 16 16:40:50 2004 |
| Heiko Scheit | h.scheit@mpi-hd.mpg.de | | Linux | 2.5.0 | Re: -W -Wall options (using gcc) | > So I fixed all compiler generated warnigns except these:
>
> [midas@pc2075 ~/elog]$ gcc -g -O -W -Wall -o elogd src/elogd.c
> src/elogd.c: In function `set_cookie':
> src/elogd.c:4675: warning: `%y' yields only last 2 digits of year
> src/elogd.c: In function `send_file_direct':
> src/elogd.c:5483: warning: `%y' yields only last 2 digits of year
> src/elogd.c: In function `show_elog_list':
> src/elogd.c:11938: warning: `%x' yields only last 2 digits of year in some
> locales
> src/elogd.c:11957: warning: `%x' yields only last 2 digits of year in some
> locales
> src/elogd.c:11979: warning: `%x' yields only last 2 digits of year in some
> locales
> src/elogd.c:11987: warning: `%x' yields only last 2 digits of year in some
> locales
> src/elogd.c: In function `ctrlc_handler':
> src/elogd.c:15864: warning: empty body in an if-statement
> src/elogd.c: In function `hup_handler':
> src/elogd.c:15870: warning: empty body in an if-statement
>
> Do you know how to disable these warnings or any other workaround? I would
> like to compile without any remaining warnings.
Have a look at the gcc info pages:
$ info gcc "invoking gcc" "warning options" |
|