Difference between revisions of "APEL/APELSSMExternalTesting"
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
Let us know using the mailing list if you are going to send us some messages, and we can tell you whether they arrive and whether they are valid. | Let us know using the mailing list if you are going to send us some messages, and we can tell you whether they arrive and whether they are valid. | ||
If your SSM is configured correctly, you should be able to send us any message | If your SSM is configured correctly, you should be able to send us any message. We will receive the message whether or not it is a valid APEL message. | ||
* Run the SSM | * Run the SSM | ||
* Put any file in the directory <code>$SSM_HOME/messages/outgoing/</code> | * Put any file in the directory <code>$SSM_HOME/messages/outgoing/</code> |
Revision as of 15:37, 5 July 2011
This page is for people who would like to help testing the new APEL SSM package.
Mailing list
Firstly, there is a mailing list set up for discussing installation and : apel-ssm-test@mailtalk.ac.uk. To join the list:
- email listserv@mailtalk.ac.uk with no subject and message body subscribe apel-ssm-test firstname lastname
You will receive an email confirming your subscription and with instructions on how to do other things, such as view old messages.
Installation
There are detailed instructions for installing the latest version of the SSM here: APEL/SSMInstallation.
Usage
Let us know using the mailing list if you are going to send us some messages, and we can tell you whether they arrive and whether they are valid.
If your SSM is configured correctly, you should be able to send us any message. We will receive the message whether or not it is a valid APEL message.
- Run the SSM
- Put any file in the directory
$SSM_HOME/messages/outgoing/
- The file should disappear.
If you would like to send us messages using the new APEL message format, we can let you know whether they are accepted by the server. The message format is described on this page: APEL/MessageFormat.
To monitor more closely what your SSM is doing, you can look at the ssm.log file (the default location is /var/log/apel/ssm.log
). However, we know that this file can be a bit cryptic.