Cassie Ferguson wrote:
>Is there a way to change the name of a mailing list using the
>administrator's web interface?
No
>If not, is there a relatively simple
>way to do it by logging into my machine?
It can be done, but it's not that simple.
You have to rename the lists/listname/ director
Meike Aulbach wrote:
>
>On Sat, Jun 11, 2005 at 07:20:11AM -0700, Mark Sapiro wrote:
>> Are you still getting the smtp-failure message you originally reported,
>> namely one like
>>
>> Jun 09 22:00:35 2005 (32666) delivery to xxx at .net failed with
>> code -1: (-2, 'Name or service no
> I wish to insert an ampersand (&) into the footer, but when I
> use plain &, it generates & into the footer. Should I enclose it
> in some way?
1. Create a plain text file in /bin named "footer". Make your footer there
like this:
msg_footer="""
Hi all,
I'm not really having any problems as such with Mailman
currently, but I do have a minor question that some searching has not
revealed an easy answer to.
I wish to insert an ampersand (&) into the footer, but when I
use plain &, it generates & into the footer. Should I en
Hello!
On Sat, Jun 11, 2005 at 07:20:11AM -0700, Mark Sapiro wrote:
> Are you still getting the smtp-failure message you originally reported,
> namely one like
>
> Jun 09 22:00:35 2005 (32666) delivery to xxx at .net failed with
> code -1: (-2, 'Name or service not known')
No, the er
Is there a way to change the name of a mailing list using the
administrator's web interface? If not, is there a relatively simple
way to do it by logging into my machine?
I'd rather not have to bother with resubscribing people, plus it
would be nice to move the archive from the old list int
Meike Aulbach wrote:
>
>On Fri, Jun 10, 2005 at 11:35:39AM -0700, Mark Sapiro wrote:
>> def __connect(self):
>> self.__conn = smtplib.SMTP()
>> syslog('smtp-failure', 'host = %s, port = %s',
>>mm_cfg.SMTPHOST, mm_cfg.SMTPPORT)
>> x = self.__conn.connect(m
Hello,
I'm starting to believe something is very broken in my system.
On Fri, Jun 10, 2005 at 11:35:39AM -0700, Mark Sapiro wrote:
> def __connect(self):
> self.__conn = smtplib.SMTP()
> syslog('smtp-failure', 'host = %s, port = %s',
>mm_cfg.SMTPHOST, mm_cfg.SM