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These translations are shared with GNU Mailman 2.1 series template mailman.

1119 of 19 results
1099.
Check the permissions for the Mailman installation.

Usage: %(PROGRAM)s [-f] [-v] [-h]

With no arguments, just check and report all the files that have bogus
permissions or group ownership. With -f (and run as root), fix all the
permission problems found. With -v be verbose.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/check_perms:20
1175.
Find all lists that a member's address is on.

Usage:
find_member [options] regex [regex [...]]

Where:
--listname=listname
-l listname
Include only the named list in the search.

--exclude=listname
-x listname
Exclude the named list from the search.

--owners
-w
Search list owners as well as members.

--help
-h
Print this help message and exit.

regex
A Python regular expression to match against.

The interaction between -l and -x is as follows. If any -l option is given
then only the named list will be included in the search. If any -x option is
given but no -l option is given, then all lists will be search except those
specifically excluded.

Regular expression syntax is Perl5-like, using the Python re module. Complete
specifications are at:

http://docs.python.org/library/re.html

Address matches are case-insensitive, but case-preserved addresses are
displayed.

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There are leading/trailing spaces here. Each one represents a space character. Enter a space in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/find_member:19
1183.
Regenerate Mailman specific aliases from scratch.

The actual output depends on the value of the `MTA' variable in your mm_cfg.py
file.

Usage: genaliases [options]
Options:

-q/--quiet
Some MTA output can include more verbose help text. Use this to tone
down the verbosity.

-h/--help
Print this message and exit.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/genaliases:19
1238.
Remove members from a list.

Usage:
remove_members [options] [listname] [addr1 ...]

Options:

--file=file
-f file
Remove member addresses found in the given file. If file is
`-', read stdin.

--all
-a
Remove all members of the mailing list.
(mutually exclusive with --fromall)

--fromall
Removes the given addresses from all the lists on this system
regardless of virtual domains if you have any. This option cannot be
used -a/--all. Also, you should not specify a listname when using
this option.

--nouserack
-n
Don't send the user acknowledgements. If not specified, the list
default value is used.

--noadminack
-N
Don't send the admin acknowledgements. If not specified, the list
default value is used.

--help
-h
Print this help message and exit.

listname is the name of the mailing list to use.

addr1 ... are additional addresses to remove.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/remove_members:20
1243.
Reset the passwords for members of a mailing list.

This script resets all the passwords of a mailing list's members. It can also
be used to reset the lists of all members of all mailing lists, but it is your
responsibility to let the users know that their passwords have been changed.

This script is intended to be run as a bin/withlist script, i.e.

% bin/withlist -l -r reset_pw listname [options]

Options:
-v / --verbose
Print what the script is doing.
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There are leading/trailing spaces here. Each one represents a space character. Enter a space in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/reset_pw.py:21
1280.
Move a message from the shunt queue to the original queue.

Usage: %(PROGRAM)s [options] [directory]

Where:

-h / --help
Print help and exit.

Optional `directory' specifies a directory to dequeue from other than
qfiles/shunt. *** Warning *** Do not unshunt messages that weren't
shunted to begin with. For example, running unshunt on qfiles/out/
will result in losing all the messages in that queue.
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There are leading/trailing spaces here. Each one represents a space character. Enter a space in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/unshunt:20
1309.
Ignoring bad pended data: %(key)s: %(val)s
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/update:598
1310.
WARNING: Ignoring duplicate pending ID: %(id)s.
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/update:614
1326.
General framework for interacting with a mailing list object.

There are two ways to use this script: interactively or programmatically.
Using it interactively allows you to play with, examine and modify a MailList
object from Python's interactive interpreter. When running interactively, a
MailList object called `m' will be available in the global namespace. It also
loads the class MailList into the global namespace.

Programmatically, you can write a function to operate on a MailList object,
and this script will take care of the housekeeping (see below for examples).
In that case, the general usage syntax is:

%% bin/withlist [options] listname [args ...]

Options:

-l / --lock
Lock the list when opening. Normally the list is opened unlocked
(e.g. for read-only operations). You can always lock the file after
the fact by typing `m.Lock()'

Note that if you use this option, you should explicitly call m.Save()
before exiting, since the interpreter's clean up procedure will not
automatically save changes to the MailList object (but it will unlock
the list).

-i / --interactive
Leaves you at an interactive prompt after all other processing is
complete. This is the default unless the -r option is given.

--run [module.]callable
-r [module.]callable
This can be used to run a script with the opened MailList object.
This works by attempting to import `module' (which must be in the
directory containing withlist, or already be accessible on your
sys.path), and then calling `callable' from the module. callable can
be a class or function; it is called with the MailList object as the
first argument. If additional args are given on the command line,
they are passed as subsequent positional args to the callable.

Note that `module.' is optional; if it is omitted then a module with
the name `callable' will be imported.

The global variable `r' will be set to the results of this call.

--all / -a
This option only works with the -r option. Use this if you want to
execute the script on all mailing lists. When you use -a you should
not include a listname argument on the command line. The variable `r'
will be a list of all the results.

--quiet / -q
Suppress all status messages.

--help / -h
Print this message and exit


Here's an example of how to use the -r option. Say you have a file in the
Mailman installation directory called `listaddr.py', with the following
two functions:

def listaddr(mlist):
print mlist.GetListEmail()

def requestaddr(mlist):
print mlist.GetRequestEmail()

Now, from the command line you can print the list's posting address by running
the following from the command line:

%% bin/withlist -r listaddr mylist
Loading list: mylist (unlocked)
Importing listaddr ...
Running listaddr.listaddr() ...
mylist@myhost.com

And you can print the list's request address by running:

%% bin/withlist -r listaddr.requestaddr mylist
Loading list: mylist (unlocked)
Importing listaddr ...
Running listaddr.requestaddr() ...
mylist-request@myhost.com

As another example, say you wanted to change the password for a particular
user on a particular list. You could put the following function in a file
called `changepw.py':

from Mailman.Errors import NotAMemberError

def changepw(mlist, addr, newpasswd):
try:
mlist.setMemberPassword(addr, newpasswd)
mlist.Save()
except NotAMemberError:
print 'No address matched:', addr

and run this from the command line:
%% bin/withlist -l -r changepw mylist somebody@somewhere.org foobar
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/withlist:20
1119 of 19 results

This translation is managed by Ubuntu Catalan Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: David Planella, Iván R., Robert Garrigos.