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

110 of 11 results
578.
Asturian
(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Defaults.py:1743
681.
One of these actions is taken when the message matches one of
the content filtering rules, meaning, the top-level
content type matches one of the <a
href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/filter_mime_types"
>filter_mime_types</a>, or the top-level content type does
<strong>not</strong> match one of the
<a href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/pass_mime_types"
>pass_mime_types</a>, or if after filtering the subparts of the
message, the message ends up empty.

<p>Note this action is not taken if after filtering the message
still contains content. In that case the message is always
forwarded on to the list membership.

<p>When messages are discarded, a log entry is written
containing the Message-ID of the discarded message. When
messages are rejected or forwarded to the list owner, a reason
for the rejection is included in the bounce message to the
original author. When messages are preserved, they are saved in
a special queue directory on disk for the site administrator to
view (and possibly rescue) but otherwise discarded. This last
option is only available if enabled by the site
administrator.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/ContentFilter.py:130
720.
There are two ownership roles associated with each mailing
list. The <em>list administrators</em> are the people who have
ultimate control over all parameters of this mailing list. They
are able to change any list configuration variable available
through these administration web pages.

<p>The <em>list moderators</em> have more limited permissions;
they are not able to change any list configuration variable, but
they are allowed to tend to pending administration requests,
including approving or rejecting held subscription requests, and
disposing of held postings. Of course, the <em>list
administrators</em> can also tend to pending requests.

<p>In order to split the list ownership duties into
administrators and moderators, you must
<a href="passwords">set a separate moderator password</a>,
and also provide the <a href="?VARHELP=general/moderator">email
addresses of the list moderators</a>. Note that the field you
are changing here specifies the list administrators.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/General.py:81
728.
This text will be prepended to subject lines of messages
posted to the list, to distinguish mailing list messages in
mailbox summaries. Brevity is premium here, it's ok to shorten
long mailing list names to something more concise, as long as it
still identifies the mailing list.
You can also add a sequential number by %%d substitution
directive. eg.; [listname %%d] -> [listname 123]
(listname %%05d) -> (listname 00123)
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/General.py:147
736.
This option controls what Mailman does to the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header in messages flowing through this
mailing list. When set to <em>Poster</em>, no <tt>Reply-To:</tt>
header is added by Mailman, although if one is present in the
original message, it is not stripped. Setting this value to
either <em>This list</em> or <em>Explicit address</em> causes
Mailman to insert a specific <tt>Reply-To:</tt> header in all
messages, overriding the header in the original message if
necessary (<em>Explicit address</em> inserts the value of <a
href="?VARHELP=general/reply_to_address">reply_to_address</a>).

<p>There are many reasons not to introduce or override the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header. One is that some posters depend on
their own <tt>Reply-To:</tt> settings to convey their valid
return address. Another is that modifying <tt>Reply-To:</tt>
makes it much more difficult to send private replies. See <a
href="http://www.unicom.com/pw/reply-to-harmful.html">`Reply-To'
Munging Considered Harmful</a> for a general discussion of this
issue. See <a
href="http://www.metasystema.net/essays/reply-to.mhtml">Reply-To
Munging Considered Useful</a> for a dissenting opinion.

<p>Some mailing lists have restricted posting privileges, with a
parallel list devoted to discussions. Examples are `patches' or
`checkin' lists, where software changes are posted by a revision
control system, but discussion about the changes occurs on a
developers mailing list. To support these types of mailing
lists, select <tt>Explicit address</tt> and set the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> address below to point to the parallel
list.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/General.py:194
738.
This is the address set in the <tt>Reply-To:</tt> header
when the <a
href="?VARHELP=general/reply_goes_to_list">reply_goes_to_list</a>
option is set to <em>Explicit address</em>.

<p>There are many reasons not to introduce or override the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header. One is that some posters depend on
their own <tt>Reply-To:</tt> settings to convey their valid
return address. Another is that modifying <tt>Reply-To:</tt>
makes it much more difficult to send private replies. See <a
href="http://www.unicom.com/pw/reply-to-harmful.html">`Reply-To'
Munging Considered Harmful</a> for a general discussion of this
issue. See <a
href="http://www.metasystema.net/essays/reply-to.mhtml">Reply-To
Munging Considered Useful</a> for a dissenting opinion.

<p>Some mailing lists have restricted posting privileges, with a
parallel list devoted to discussions. Examples are `patches' or
`checkin' lists, where software changes are posted by a revision
control system, but discussion about the changes occurs on a
developers mailing list. To support these types of mailing
lists, specify the explicit <tt>Reply-To:</tt> address here. You
must also specify <tt>Explicit address</tt> in the
<tt>reply_goes_to_list</tt>
variable.

<p>Note that if the original message contains a
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header, it will not be changed.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/General.py:228
796.
Normally, Mailman sends the regular delivery messages to
the mail server in batches. This is much more efficent
because it reduces the amount of traffic between Mailman and
the mail server.

<p>However, some lists can benefit from a more personalized
approach. In this case, Mailman crafts a new message for
each member on the regular delivery list. Turning this
feature on may degrade the performance of your site, so you
need to carefully consider whether the trade-off is worth it,
or whether there are other ways to accomplish what you want.
You should also carefully monitor your system load to make
sure it is acceptable.

<p>Select <em>No</em> to disable personalization and send
messages to the members in batches. Select <em>Yes</em> to
personalize deliveries and allow additional substitution
variables in message headers and footers (see below). In
addition, by selecting <em>Full Personalization</em>, the
<code>To</code> header of posted messages will be modified to
include the member's address instead of the list's posting
address.

<p>When personalization is enabled, a few more expansion
variables that can be included in the <a
href="?VARHELP=nondigest/msg_header">message header</a> and
<a href="?VARHELP=nondigest/msg_footer">message footer</a>.

<p>These additional substitution variables will be available
for your headers and footers, when this feature is enabled:

<ul><li><b>user_address</b> - The address of the user,
coerced to lower case.
<li><b>user_delivered_to</b> - The case-preserved address
that the user is subscribed with.
<li><b>user_password</b> - The user's password.
<li><b>user_name</b> - The user's full name.
<li><b>user_optionsurl</b> - The url to the user's option
page.
</ul>
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/NonDigest.py:61
803.
When you scrub attachments, they are stored in archive
area and links are made in the message so that the member can
access via web browser. If you want the attachments totally
disappear, you can use content filter options.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/NonDigest.py:142
1234.
Run one or more qrunners, once or repeatedly.

Each named runner class is run in round-robin fashion. In other words, the
first named runner is run to consume all the files currently in its
directory. When that qrunner is done, the next one is run to consume all the
files in /its/ directory, and so on. The number of total iterations can be
given on the command line.

Usage: %(PROGRAM)s [options]

Options:

-r runner[:slice:range]
--runner=runner[:slice:range]
Run the named qrunner, which must be one of the strings returned by
the -l option. Optional slice:range if given, is used to assign
multiple qrunner processes to a queue. range is the total number of
qrunners for this queue while slice is the number of this qrunner from
[0..range).

If using the slice:range form, you better make sure that each qrunner
for the queue is given the same range value. If slice:runner is not
given, then 1:1 is used.

Multiple -r options may be given, in which case each qrunner will run
once in round-robin fashion. The special runner `All' is shorthand
for a qrunner for each listed by the -l option.

--once
-o
Run each named qrunner exactly once through its main loop. Otherwise,
each qrunner runs indefinitely, until the process receives a SIGTERM
or SIGINT.

-l/--list
Shows the available qrunner names and exit.

-v/--verbose
Spit out more debugging information to the logs/qrunner log file.

-s/--subproc
This should only be used when running qrunner as a subprocess of the
mailmanctl startup script. It changes some of the exit-on-error
behavior to work better with that framework.

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

runner is required unless -l or -h is given, and it must be one of the names
displayed by the -l switch.

Note also that this script should be started up from mailmanctl as a normal
operation. It is only useful for debugging if it is run separately.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/qrunner:20
1238.
Reduce disk space usage for Pipermail archives.

Usage: %(PROGRAM)s [options] file ...

Where options are:
-h / --help
Print this help message and exit.

Only use this to 'fix' archive -article database files that have been written
with Mailman 2.1.3 or earlier and have html_body attributes in them. These
attributes can cause huge amounts of memory bloat and impact performance for
high activity lists, particularly those where large text postings are made to
them.

Example:

%% ls -1 archives/private/*/database/*-article | xargs %(PROGRAM)s

You should run `bin/check_perms -f' after running this script.

You will probably want to delete the -article.bak files created by this script
when you are satisfied with the results.

This script is provided for convenience purposes only. It isn't supported.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/rb-archfix:21
110 of 11 results

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

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Contributors to this translation: Heikki Mäntysaari, Joni Töyrylä, Jussi Aalto, Kai Kasurinen, Mika Tapojärvi, Pekka Haavisto, Pekka Niemi.