![]() Put the copy in a safe place, somewhere outside the OPML folder. Make a physical copy of the file that’s reporting the problem, in case something goes wrong with the recovery. If you’re slow at this step you may have to repeat step 1.ģ. It periodically checks if opml.exe is running, and if not, it launches it. This app may have been automatically launched by opml.exe. If you’re running a Windows server, in the Task Manager app, force flaunch.exe to quit. It may appear that everything is fine, but eventually you will lose the database.ġ. This is a serious situation, do not let it go on. “I’m willing to let it go like this since River2/Blork still works just fine but I think if config.root gets much bigger it will be bad.” “I checked in c: and there is no copy of config.root so I’m assuming the backup didn’t happen. “I attempted to do the filemenu.savecopy(“c:\config.root”) command and got this error. The size of the file in Guest Databases is over 700 megabytes. It hasn’t been able to sucessfully back it up in a week or more. “I’ve been getting errors with config.root during the nightly backup operations. On the ec2-for-poets list, Michael Helleson writes: If you run into any problems or bugs, or have questions about Manila, please ask on frontier-user. A few minor optimizations were made to improve performance.Several verbs in .prefs were fixed to run in the OPML Editor, and the Website Framework responder.Picture shortcuts which linked to the database-backed URLs are updated if pictures have static URLs.Bugs were fixed related to the way mainResponder (on which Manila depends) works in the OPML Editor.The Tool’s sub-menu (Tools > Manila) was updated to work in the context of the OPML Editor.The relevant parts of the Frontier Admin interface were ported to the Manila Tool’s admin website, which runs via the Website Framework responder, instead of mainResponder.If you don’t yet have Manila installed, you can install via the Tools Catalog page: Click OK on the dialog that asks, “Get the latest “manila.root” code?”.If you have Manila installed but automatic updates are turned off, you can update manually as follows: If you’ve already installed Manila in the OPML Editor, and you have automatic updates enabled for installed Tools (via Prefs > Web Services > Automatic Updates), then you likely already have the changes. Recently, I completed a set of updates to bring Manila up to speed when running in the OPML Editor, and with Dave Winer’s help, that work is now released as a set of updates to the Manila.root Tool. Here are the notes from the previous release in November 2005.If you’ve been following me for the last couple of months, may have noticed that I’ve been spending some time looking at Manila again. See the OPML Editor help site for tips on using the outliner. You can edit as much as you like, create new posts, etc.Ħ. Click the View button to bring the browser to the front and you can see the post in WordPress. When you hear a short beep that means the post has been saved. Click on New Post, enter the title of your post, then enter a bit of text, and click on Save. A window opens, with three buttons at the top, Save, New Post and View. Bring the OPML Editor to the front, choose Open Workspace from the WordPress sub-menu of the Tools menu. If all goes well, it confirms that, otherwise you will see an error message in red that explains what went wrong.Ĥ. When you click on Submit the OPML Editor communicates with your WordPress installation to get information that connects the two, and it verifies that you have a valid username and password. After a few seconds the WordPress prefs page appears, asking for three pieces of information: Your weblog’s URL, username and password. A dialog confirms that you want to install it, click on OK.ģ. In the last column is a link named Install, click it. A list of Tools should appear in your web browser and you should see wordPress in that list. Choose the Tool Catalog command in the Misc menu. First, if you haven’t already done so, download and install the OPML Editor app for Windows or Macintosh.Ģ. This document explains how to get going.ġ. WordPress.root is a Tool that runs in the OPML Editor that makes it easy to create and edit posts in the outliner and save them in WordPress.
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