On Tue Feb 8 12:25:00 2000 Gilles Detillieux wrote...
>
>Hi, Stan. I see you're using ELM as your mailer. You should use the
>group reply (g) command, rather than a simple reply (r) command, to make
>your replies go to the list as well as the person who posted the message
>to which you reply.
OK, thanks, I continue to learn new things. This is good.
>
>The comments in conv_doc.pl do clearly state it's for htdig 3.1.4 or
>later. The documentation on www.htdig.org always reflects the latest
>stable release, so it may describe things not available in earlier
>versions, without explicitly stating at which version a feature came
>into effect.
Yes, that was a stupid mistake on my part.
>
I got distracted from this project for a day or so by setting up a
squid server, but I am fetting back to it now.
Here is where I am. I decided to use the parse_doc.pl technique, mostly
because you had it working. At this point, I am getting a databse
built, even thought I continue to get the errors from pdrtotext, and I
will address those errors with the xpdf folks.
However now I have another question.
I am atempting to set up a second set of manuals on a system that
already serves one set by a totally differnt venfor. As a result I need
2 different database. I am runing on FreeBSD built from the ports
collection which set up the original configuration as follows:
database_dir /usr/local/share/htdig
common_dir was also set to this. So as a first effort, I created a new
file /usr/local/share/htdig.ab.conf, and chaged the source URL, and
database_dir to /usr/local/share_ab/htdig.
I then ran rundig with the -v and -c /usr/local/etc/htdig.ab.conf
Should this have worked?
At the momnnet I seem to have the new database, but not the old one. O
am reruning htdig with the old config file to see waht happens.
Thanks.
--
Stan Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] 843-745-3154
Westvaco
Charleston SC.
--
Windows 98: n.
useless extension to a minor patch release for 32-bit extensions and
a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system
originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit
company that can't stand for 1 bit of competition.
-
(c) 2000 Stan Brown. Redistribution via the Microsoft Network is prohibited.
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