From 68acc2bf8dea9acc285ceb55b231c8d08d18d9be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: msapiro <> Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2007 23:33:47 +0000 Subject: mmdsr.readme is replaced by README.mmdsr. --- contrib/mmdsr.readme | 33 --------------------------------- 1 file changed, 33 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 contrib/mmdsr.readme diff --git a/contrib/mmdsr.readme b/contrib/mmdsr.readme deleted file mode 100644 index fa074704..00000000 --- a/contrib/mmdsr.readme +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ -Daily Status Report script... - -The mmdsr script was created by Brad Knowles to produce a daily status report for mailman. It was initially posted at which see for possible patches and other enhancements. - -It is intended that there will be a 'cleaner', more complete readme file in the future. In the interim, here are Brad's original comments. - -I quickly whacked together a Daily Status Report script for -Mailman (using Bourne shell, not Python ;), and thought that other -folks might be interested in seeing it. - -The basic concept is a program that gets fired off at 23:59 every -night, and goes through a variety of log files looking for entries -specific to that date, and indicating problems or certain types of -activity that might be of interest to someone trying to administer -the server. It also does an "ls -la" of /usr/local/mailman/qfiles/*, -so that you can see what is in the queue at the time of the running -of the script. - -My concept was that this daily report would get e-mailed to the -admin, or posted to a "reports" mailing list, where they could be -archived and kept for future reference. - -The script does not (yet) do any statistics calculations, although it -should be relatively easy to hack together some basic stats using -awk, sort, etc.... - -Anyway, I thought I'd share it and let folks take a look at it, and if -anyone has any recommended improvements, we can incorporate -those and share them back out with everyone. - -The code is written under a BSD-style license, so if you don't want -to contribute any changes back to me, that's okay. Of course, I -would prefer that you did, but I leave the choice up to you. -- cgit v1.2.3