I've created a document detailing the install of clam antivirus for use with sendmail on FC1. It was suggested to me to perhaps see if it could be of use here.
If anyone is interested, the doc can be found at http://www.airride.net/linux/fedora+clamav-howto.html
Feel free to post a copy wherever you think it may help.
Thank you Ron Goulard
On Mon, 2004-04-12 at 18:24, Ron Goulard wrote:
I've created a document detailing the install of clam antivirus for use with sendmail on FC1. It was suggested to me to perhaps see if it could be of use here.
If anyone is interested, the doc can be found at http://www.airride.net/linux/fedora+clamav-howto.html
Feel free to post a copy wherever you think it may help.
This is definitely worthwhile, and fits well into our charter. Are you looking for volunteers to wrangle this into the Fedora docs XML format? If there is going to be an XML version, I'll hold off on making my editor comments.
- Karsten
On Thu, 2004-05-13 at 19:17, Karsten Wade wrote:
On Mon, 2004-04-12 at 18:24, Ron Goulard wrote:
I've created a document detailing the install of clam antivirus for use with sendmail on FC1. It was suggested to me to perhaps see if it could be of use here.
If anyone is interested, the doc can be found at http://www.airride.net/linux/fedora+clamav-howto.html
Feel free to post a copy wherever you think it may help.
This is definitely worthwhile, and fits well into our charter. Are you looking for volunteers to wrangle this into the Fedora docs XML format? If there is going to be an XML version, I'll hold off on making my editor comments.
Well, considering the fact that I know nothing about XML, if somebody wants to pick up that part of it, I certainly don't have any complaints. It would give me a chance to study the structure of the doc (kind of a before and after thing) and learn from it.
Ron
I've created a document detailing the install of clam antivirus for use with sendmail on FC1. It was suggested to me to perhaps see if it could be of use here.
If anyone is interested, the doc can be found at http://www.airride.net/linux/fedora+clamav-howto.html
Feel free to post a copy wherever you think it may help.
This is definitely worthwhile, and fits well into our charter. Are you looking for volunteers to wrangle this into the Fedora docs XML format? If there is going to be an XML version, I'll hold off on making my editor comments.
I'm working on the XML right now. Hope to have a first crack done by COB today... while I'm at it, do we have a specific tag to use instead of <command> for package names? (For package *file* names, obviously I'd use <filename>.)
On Fri, 2004-05-14 at 10:52, Paul W. Frields wrote:
I've created a document detailing the install of clam antivirus for use with sendmail on FC1. It was suggested to me to perhaps see if it could be of use here.
If anyone is interested, the doc can be found at http://www.airride.net/linux/fedora+clamav-howto.html
Feel free to post a copy wherever you think it may help.
This is definitely worthwhile, and fits well into our charter. Are you looking for volunteers to wrangle this into the Fedora docs XML format? If there is going to be an XML version, I'll hold off on making my editor comments.
I'm working on the XML right now. Hope to have a first crack done by COB today... while I'm at it, do we have a specific tag to use instead of <command> for package names? (For package *file* names, obviously I'd use <filename>.)
Apologies to all for musing out loud without reading more carefully. The Documentation Guide states that <filename> is to be used for RPM package names. Confusingly, however, it uses the tag <command> in the example given (section 6.9 BTW). I'll use <filename> and humbly submit the following.
/me moves slowly away from the keyboard....
diff -uNr documentation-guide-original/docs-xml-tags-en.xml documentation-guide/docs-xml-tags-en.xml --- documentation-guide-original/docs-xml-tags-en.xml 2004-03-12 07:51:42.000000000 -0500 +++ documentation-guide/docs-xml-tags-en.xml 2004-05-14 10:58:22.000000000 -0400 @@ -473,14 +473,14 @@ </para> <screen> To use the <application>Keyboard Configuration Tool</application>, the -<command>redhat-config-keyboard</command> RPM package must be installed. +<filename>redhat-config-keyboard</filename> RPM package must be installed. </screen> <para> The output: </para> <para> To use the <application>Keyboard Configuration Tool</application>, the - <command>redhat-config-keyboard</command> RPM package must be installed. + <filename>redhat-config-keyboard</filename> RPM package must be installed. </para>
<note>
OK, my first crack (with *very* minimal editing) is up at:
http://frields.com/paul/fedora/docs/clamav-tutorial-en.tar.gz
If I have any more time today I will try and dig into content tweaks, but I do have to get some actual paid work done today. ;-) If anyone else would like to have at it, please do so.
On Fri, 2004-05-14 at 08:01, Paul W. Frields wrote: [snip]
The Documentation Guide states that <filename> is to be used for RPM package names. Confusingly, however, it uses the tag <command> in the example given (section 6.9 BTW). I'll use <filename> and humbly submit the following.
[patch snipped]
This reminded me, and I went to file https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=123258 to fix a small but annoying grammatical/conceptual error in the <para> example.
As a tip for everyone, I recommend filing bugzilla reports, and after you file the report you can "Create a New Attachment," and attach the patch to the report.
Even little bugs deserve reports. :) It helps us writers to keep track of what we're doing. I'd suggest that anyone who is writing and maintaining a guide will need a bugzilla.redhat.com account. It's a project management tool, and it does its little job pretty well.
- Karsten
At 15:52 14/05/2004, Paul W. Frields wrote:
I'm working on the XML right now. Hope to have a first crack done by COB today... while I'm at it, do we have a specific tag to use instead of <command> for package names? (For package *file* names, obviously I'd use <filename>.)
Nothing at http://www.docbook.org/tdg/en/html/docbook.html
I've asked on docbook list.
Let you know if I get an answer.
regards DaveP