hello,
we need to use the easiest solution, if possible just use a perl module, to
be able to send automated emails on an Ubuntu server. The scenario is this:
we ran a cron job, and say we would like to send a message after
completion, to a certain for example gmail account. The ideal would be to
e are SMTP modules for Perl, and things like that which could
> do it all at socket level, but I wouldn’t see that as being easier
> necessarily. It depends on what control you have over your server.
>
>
>
> Matthew
>
>
>
> *From:* Sergio Letuche [mailto:code4libus...@gm
_ __
>>
>> I’m sure there are SMTP modules for Perl, and things like that which
>> could do it all at socket level, but I wouldn’t see that as being
>> easier necessarily. It depends on what control you have over your
>> server.
>>
>> __
i do not object to any approach suggested, all are welcome
2014-11-19 16:46 GMT+02:00 Marc Chantreux :
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 02:19:26PM +, PHILLIPS M.E. wrote:
> > open (MAIL, "|-", '/bin/mailx', '-s', $subject, @addresses)
> > || die "Failed to e-mail report: $!\n";
>
> what's th
hello everybody,
could someone provide me with an example UNIMARC iso2709 file in order to
test a module?
Thank you in advance
thank you very much
2014-12-11 14:53 GMT+02:00 Galen Charlton :
> Hi,
>
> On Thu Dec 11 2014 at 3:08:53 AM Sergio Letuche
> wrote:
>
>> could someone provide me with an example UNIMARC iso2709 file in order to
>> test a module?
>>
>> Thank you in advance
&
hello community,
Say we have the following structure in our filesystem:
dir1
dir2
dir3
dir4
dir stands for directory of course.
In dir1, there is a file1.txt that has in it numbers, like below
6576576 898798789 5645436549 76567576576 876876876876
Same goes for dir2. In dir2, there is a fi
Hello community,
how would you treat the following?
I need a way to identify all tags - subfields, that have stored an ISSN
number in them.
What would you suggest as a clever approach for this?
Thank you
t the match.
>
>If option -c is not specified, the output format can be "line" or
>"inline" (both human readable),
> or "marc" for MARC binary (ISO2709). For formats "line" or
> "inline",
> the -f
gt; (and if you're interested in spotting ISSNs in the middle of a field use
> \b\d{4}-?\d{3}[\dxX]\b
> but beware this also finds year ranges [e.g. 1990-2000]!)
>
> Ben
>
>
> On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 12:06:15 GMT Sergio Letuche wrote:
> > Thank you dear Stefan
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