Axton,
While I can see the benefits of collecting usage information, I'm not overly
convinced that Remedy is the best place to put that information. Why don't
you modify the code to write the data out to an Apache style log file so it
can be used in conjunction with awstats (or another funky
The best place to discuss this is on the project developers mailing list:
http://lists.arswiki.org/listinfo/browserstats-devel
Axton Grams
On 5/7/07, John Baker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Axton,
While I can see the benefits of collecting usage information, I'm not overly
convinced that Remedy
A new open source project was started on the ARwiki site. The program
is a statistics collector for the mid-tier. Thorough documentation is
available on the project website. This is the summary of the project
from the project website:
summary
The Mid-tier Browser Statistics Collector provides
Mailing lists were created for the following projects:
- Remedy .net Utilities
- Kinetic Link
- Data Visualization Plugin Framework
Two lists were created for each project:
- source-changes: system generated messages that announce changes to
the source code
- devel: general discussion mailing
A few new happenings:
- Open Source Projects:
- Stephen is cooking up a new .net utility
- ARS_EditWUTHelp: Edit the Help Text for fields
- http://arswiki.org/projects/dotnetutil
- There are new releases of 2 .net utilities:
- ARS_CreateEntry 1.01
- ARS_DeleteEntry 1.01
- Ben is
Some updates:
The projects page was cleaned up to show some information about the
open source projects hosted on arswiki:
http://arswiki.org/projects
I've been working with Kinetic Data and the owner of the Klink app on
making ARSWiki the home of the Klink project. There is still a little
work
Forgot 1 thing. I added some links to the wiki nav bar that add an
rss/atom feed to your google search page if you use the google
personalization feature. It basically lists the last X updates from
the following 3 areas (each is a separate feed):
- Bugs
- RFE's
- Wiki
The links to add the
The Bugzilla app is taking off. Here are some vital stats:
- 22 bugs, of which 10 have a BMC defect id
- 13 enhancement requests
- 62 registered users
http://arswiki.org/bugs
I want to encourage people to sign up and register their defects and
vote on the rfe's and defects if they (do/would)
A flood of updates from BMC on many of the rfe's just came in. To
summarize, it looks like there are potentially lots of very very
interesting features coming down the pipeline ;-)
I've broken the updates into 2 sections in this email:
(1) those that are being considered
(2) those that are not
Added the Windows 701p1 api to the arapi download area:
http://arswiki.org/projects/arapi
Axton Grams
On 3/16/07, Axton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Been toying with the Bugzilla voting mechanism some more (still
learning the best way to use this feature). I now have it set up so
every user has 5
I reorganized the site content to make finding information a little
more manageable (hopfully). Let me know what you think.
http://arswiki.org
The bugzilla app for BMC product defect tracking is up and running.
Waiting for those that expressed an interest to start submitting the
defects that
I wanted to add one thing to this post. The bugzilla app provides the
ability to vote on bugs. Each user is granted 1 vote per bug; once 5
votes are registered for ARS defects or 10 for ITSM defects, the bug
automatically goes to a confirmed state. Vote your pain points.
Been toying with the Bugzilla voting mechanism some more (still
learning the best way to use this feature). I now have it set up so
every user has 5 votes they can apply/revoke from different bugs; up
to 5 votes can be applied against a single defect. The rationale
behind this is that it gives
A few new items:
- An event was registered for the 'March 2007 Kinetic Survey Request
V4.0 Launch and Service Catalog Management Premier in Australia'
- http://arswiki.org/wiki/Current_events
- We have a new contributor to the Data Visualization Plugin FrameWork
(dvpfw) project.
-
As an update to this, I added a download tab to the app to make using
tools like wget possible.
Axton Grams
On 3/3/07, Axton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
New releases of the Remedy api are in a different location on ARSWiki.
A subversion repository with a Trac frontend are now serving the
files.
New releases of the Remedy api are in a different location on ARSWiki.
A subversion repository with a Trac frontend are now serving the
files.
There were a number of reasons (storage, maintenance, ability to
view/grab single files, and others) for this change. The latest patch
levels of the
**
Some new content:- JOARSE javadoc from snapshot on 2006-11-12. JOARSE uses doxygen for it's documentation, so if you are familiar with javadoc's layout, this will be helpful.
http://arswiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=BMC_JavadocAxton Grams
__20060125___This posting was
**
Some additional content:- A sample Hello World data visualization plugin. http://arswiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Data_Visualization_Plugins#Simple_Hello_World_Example
I am working through using the DV plugins. As I get further along in understanding how they work, I will add additional
The api download section of arswiki.org has been updated. Many thanks
to Misi for his assistance in creating the files, checksums, and
getting some useful information from the informed people at BMC on the
subject. The downloads now include the following platforms/versions:
Solaris - 7.0 p002
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