On Ma, 15 nov 11, 21:11:25, David Prévot wrote: > > I don't know Mailman enough: is there a possibility to store related > data (at least the “{com,edu,gov,org}/<name>” part) associated with > each subscribed person? Some people may have referenced several > organizations, and at least this information must be personalized in > each message.
An option would be to create sub-sub lists. Just some examples (as far as I know you have to include the alioth project name in the mailing list name): webwml-users-org webwml-users-com ... webwml-consultants webwml-cd-vendors webwml-systems webwml-chd-distro ... Also mailman stores a name for each "subscriber", maybe we can (ab)use that field if one person subscribes several organizations in the same category. BTW, using such mailing lists for tracking subscribers could allow for interesting side-effects, like allowing automatic de-listing by un-subscribing from the correct mailing ist ;) In theory also automatic subscription would be possible if we request a BTS style format, but it would be too easy to get the syntax wrong, so probably a webform is much more user-friendly. Maybe something like this would work: 1. Webform requesting all details, which might include some basic checks (like the validity of the URL, maybe also scan for the word "debian", etc.) 2a. the e-mail address is submitted to the corresponding mailman list, which triggers the typical e-mail address check for every mailing list 2b. a pre-formated commented-out entry is generated in the corresponding .data file 3. a corresponding wishlist bug is created in BTS (with apropiate (user)tags, which will also notify -www of the pending request 4. a human does whatever additional checks are required, un-comments the entry and closes the applicable bug. > >BTW, how about concentrating the handling of all subscriptions to a > >separate mailing list (in order not to overload debian-www). > > I'm not sure: there is not that much people asking to be listed on > the website (a lot less than the spam gathered), and keeping this > handling in an already existing public place can help to share the > load (even if Kåre seems currently a bit alone on this task, I don't > think hiding this handling in another mailing list will help). > Furthermore, a simple rule on the “Who's using Debian?” subject > could easily help someone who would feel overload by these requests. I was thinking of *all* subscriptions (users, consultants, CD-vendors, pre-installed systems, children distros, etc.), i.e. anything that is a list of non-Debian contacts, but if much is automated it probably makes sense to keep it all on -www. Hope this explains, Andrei -- Offtopic discussions among Debian users and developers: http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/d-community-offtopic
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature