We have a standardized list of shared consortium-wide shelving locations and a
general convention for naming them.
https://nccardinalsupport.org/index.php?pg=kb.page=99
We try to avoid adding system level shelving locations, but if there is a
reason to do so, we will. Every few years we'll see
We are a single system with 3 libraries and all of our shelving locations are
at the system level, which lets us regulate them a bit more, but still we have
239 locations. Every once in a while I will do a query to find those locations
with very few items, and try to convince folks that we
Ideas needed!
1. Do you know if anyone is developing a simple computer that libraries can
make available to patrons who have no idea how to use a standard computer?
2. What help do you offer to patrons who have no idea how to use a
computer? Computer classes are nice but don't meet the needs of
Missouri Evergreen is in the same situation as Bibliomation. Over a
thousand shelving locations for sixty-five libraries. Each member library
creates its own shelving locations. Reporting circulation by target
audience.to the State Library each year is a challenge.
Pros:
Each library can do
We give permissions to designated staff at each library system to manage
their own shelving locations and they can name them whatever makes sense
for the patrons in that building.
We've found that it works best to have the shelving locations set at the
branch level. If you do this, the library
Hi everyone,
We've been having some internal discussions around handling an increasingly
large number of shelving locations across our consortium (over 1300 now),
and wanted to ask you all for your thoughts & perspective.
How do you all handle shelving locations? Do you have a set standardized
Hello Blake and Jane,
thanks for all the magic.
We still try to solve multiple problems with localization. So image with
enabled i18n will be better for us and our testing.
Unfortunately our builded image does not start correctly / it reports some
access issue
fatal: [127.0.0.1]: FAILED! => {
Linda,
The images that we've posted to dockerhub were not built with i18n
turned on. That switch needs to have been set to "yes" during the build
process. Which means, you'll probably want to build your own docker
image instead of using the pre-made images.
Repo:
Thank you very much, Jane!
We will follow your recipe :-)!
Linda
On 8/11/23 15:17, Jane Sandberg wrote:
That is very mysterious!
These steps worked for me to add the 950 db seed in French within a
docker container:
docker exec -it [container_name] bash
cd /home/opensrf/repos/Evergreen
That is very mysterious!
These steps worked for me to add the 950 db seed in French within a docker
container:
docker exec -it [container_name] bash
cd /home/opensrf/repos/Evergreen
make -f Open-ILS/src/extras/Makefile.install ubuntu-focal-translator
su opensrf
cd build/i18n
mkdir locale
make
Thank you very much, Jane!
We currently use the dev tag (but we may also try some other non-dev
tags as you have suggested :-); actually, it seems that the language
selector in the OPAC correctly appears after a couple of reloads, then -
for a couple of other reloads - it disappears only to
Hi Linda,
What tag of the Evergreen container are you using? I believe that the
instructions under "Restarting Evergreen services" are only applicable to
the "dev" tag (i.e. if you ran `docker run
[...] mobiusoffice/evergreen-ils:dev`). If you don't specify a tag, it
defaults to the "latest"
Dear all,
We have just started experimenting with a Docker container
(https://hub.docker.com/r/mobiusoffice/evergreen-ils), mainly to see
whether it could help us identify what causes i18n issues reported in a
separate thread (with a subject "Evergreen 3.11.0a not properly
switching into
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