On 28/06/2003 To Mailman-Users wrote:
> hello,
> i realized some strange behavior of mailman with the
> EXTERNAL_PUBLIC_ARCHIVER option. simply setting it to
> '/usr/bin/id > /tmp/log 2>&1' gives in /tmp/log:
> uid=38(list) gid=38(list) groups=0(root),102(lpadmin),109(shutdown)
mh, the problem is
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
David Both wrote:
> I have RedHat 9 and Mailman 2.1 (not 2.1.2). When using the RedHat command
>
> # service mailman start
>
> I get the following error traceback.
>
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "/var/mailman/bin/mailmanctl", lin
This one is from the web if this might help...
Bug in Mailman version 2.1.2
We're sorry, we hit a bug!
If you would like to help us identify the problem, please email a copy of
this page to the webmaster for this site with a description of what
happened. Thanks!
Traceback:
Traceback (most rece
when try to remove member from the list via command line :
--
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/sbin/remove_members", line 186, in ?
main()
File "/usr/sbin/remove_members", line 176, in main
admin_notif, us
I have RedHat 9 and Mailman 2.1 (not 2.1.2). When using the RedHat command
# service mailman start
I get the following error traceback.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/var/mailman/bin/mailmanctl", line 524, in ?
main()
File "/var/mailman/bin/mailmanctl", line 319, in main
c
I've been trying to figure this out for days, and have gotten nowhere.
All of my administrative Mailman mail comes back looking like this:
Subject: (,)
when it should say something like this:
Subject: Your new mailing list: mailman
I'm guessing it's a configuration setting, but
Adam Lipson wrote:
Finally sometimes email comes across like this
A few lines below this the rest of the digest is without line
breaks. Clearly some part of the encoding instructions you gave caused
this change. I've seen this a few times, and it's rather annoying and all
but impossible t
hello,
i realized some strange behavior of mailman with the
EXTERNAL_PUBLIC_ARCHIVER option. simply setting it to
'/usr/bin/id > /tmp/log 2>&1' gives in /tmp/log:
uid=38(list) gid=38(list) groups=0(root),102(lpadmin),109(shutdown)
at commandline:
$ whoami
list
$ id
uid=38(list) gid=38(list) groups