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These translations are shared with GNU Mailman 2.1 series template mailman.

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642.
Policies concerning the content of list traffic.

<p>Content filtering works like this: when a message is
received by the list and you have enabled content filtering, the
individual attachments are first compared to the
<a href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/filter_mime_types">filter
types</a>. If the attachment type matches an entry in the filter
types, it is discarded.

<p>Then, if there are <a
href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/pass_mime_types">pass types</a>
defined, any attachment type that does <em>not</em> match a
pass type is also discarded. If there are no pass types defined,
this check is skipped.

<p>After this initial filtering, any <tt>multipart</tt>
attachments that are empty are removed. If the outer message is
left empty after this filtering, then the whole message is
discarded. Then, each <tt>multipart/alternative</tt> section will
be replaced by just the first alternative that is non-empty after
filtering.

<p>Finally, any <tt>text/html</tt> parts that are left in the
message may be converted to <tt>text/plain</tt> if
<a href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/convert_html_to_plaintext"
>convert_html_to_plaintext</a> is enabled and the site is
configured to allow these conversions.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/ContentFilter.py:42
650.
One of these actions is take when the message matches one of
the content filtering rules, meaning, the top-level
content type matches one of the <a
href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/filter_mime_types"
>filter_mime_types</a>, or the top-level content type does
<strong>not</strong> match one of the
<a href="?VARHELP=contentfilter/pass_mime_types"
>pass_mime_types</a>, or if after filtering the subparts of the
message, the message ends up empty.

<p>Note this action is not taken if after filtering the message
still contains content. In that case the message is always
forwarded on to the list membership.

<p>When messages are discarded, a log entry is written
containing the Message-ID of the discarded message. When
messages are rejected or forwarded to the list owner, a reason
for the rejection is included in the bounce message to the
original author. When messages are preserved, they are saved in
a special queue directory on disk for the site administrator to
view (and possibly rescue) but otherwise discarded. This last
option is only available if enabled by the site
administrator.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/ContentFilter.py:130
705.
This option controls what Mailman does to the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header in messages flowing through this
mailing list. When set to <em>Poster</em>, no <tt>Reply-To:</tt>
header is added by Mailman, although if one is present in the
original message, it is not stripped. Setting this value to
either <em>This list</em> or <em>Explicit address</em> causes
Mailman to insert a specific <tt>Reply-To:</tt> header in all
messages, overriding the header in the original message if
necessary (<em>Explicit address</em> inserts the value of <a
href="?VARHELP=general/reply_to_address">reply_to_address</a>).

<p>There are many reasons not to introduce or override the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> header. One is that some posters depend on
their own <tt>Reply-To:</tt> settings to convey their valid
return address. Another is that modifying <tt>Reply-To:</tt>
makes it much more difficult to send private replies. See <a
href="http://www.unicom.com/pw/reply-to-harmful.html">`Reply-To'
Munging Considered Harmful</a> for a general discussion of this
issue. See <a
href="http://www.metasystema.org/essays/reply-to-useful.mhtml">Reply-To
Munging Considered Useful</a> for a dissenting opinion.

<p>Some mailing lists have restricted posting privileges, with a
parallel list devoted to discussions. Examples are `patches' or
`checkin' lists, where software changes are posted by a revision
control system, but discussion about the changes occurs on a
developers mailing list. To support these types of mailing
lists, select <tt>Explicit address</tt> and set the
<tt>Reply-To:</tt> address below to point to the parallel
list.
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Located in Mailman/Gui/General.py:169
827.
Each header filter rule has two parts, a list of regular
expressions, one per line, and an action to take. Mailman
matches the message's headers against every regular expression in
the rule and if any match, the message is rejected, held, or
discarded based on the action you specify. Use <em>Defer</em> to
temporarily disable a rule.

You can have more than one filter rule for your list. In that
case, each rule is matched in turn, with processing stopped after
the first match.
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Located in Mailman/Gui/Privacy.py:378
857.
This setting determines the moderation policy of the
newsgroup and its interaction with the moderation policy of the
mailing list. This only applies to the newsgroup that you are
gatewaying <em>to</em>, so if you are only gatewaying from
Usenet, or the newsgroup you are gatewaying to is not moderated,
set this option to <em>None</em>.

<p>If the newsgroup is moderated, you can set this mailing list
up to be the moderation address for the newsgroup. By selecting
<em>Moderated</em>, an additional posting hold will be placed in
the approval process. All messages posted to the mailing list
will have to be approved before being sent on to the newsgroup,
or to the mailing list membership.

<p><em>Note that if the message has an <tt>Approved</tt> header
with the list's administrative password in it, this hold test
will be bypassed, allowing privileged posters to send messages
directly to the list and the newsgroup.</em>

<p>Finally, if the newsgroup is moderated, but you want to have
an open posting policy anyway, you should select <em>Open list,
moderated group</em>. The effect of this is to use the normal
Mailman moderation facilities, but to add an <tt>Approved</tt>
header to all messages that are gatewayed to Usenet.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/Usenet.py:68
859.
Mailman prefixes <tt>Subject:</tt> headers with
<a href="?VARHELP=general/subject_prefix">text you can
customize</a> and normally, this prefix shows up in messages
gatewayed to Usenet. You can set this option to <em>No</em> to
disable the prefix on gated messages. Of course, if you turn off
normal <tt>Subject:</tt> prefixes, they won't be prefixed for
gated messages either.
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(no translation yet)
Located in Mailman/Gui/Usenet.py:95
1041.
Fix the MM2.1b4 archives.

Usage: %(PROGRAM)s [options] file ...

Where options are:
-h / --help
Print this help message and exit.

Only use this to `fix' some archive database files that may have gotten
written in Mailman 2.1b4 with some bogus data. Use like this from your
$PREFIX directory

%% %(PROGRAM)s `grep -l _mlist archives/private/*/database/*-article`

(note the backquotes are required)

You will need to run `bin/check_perms -f' after running this script.
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/b4b5-archfix:19
1078.
Clean up an .mbox archive file.

The archiver looks for Unix-From lines separating messages in an mbox archive
file. For compatibility, it specifically looks for lines that start with
"From " -- i.e. the letters capital-F, lowercase-r, o, m, space, ignoring
everything else on the line.

Normally, any lines that start "From " in the body of a message should be
escaped such that a > character is actually the first on a line. It is
possible though that body lines are not actually escaped. This script
attempts to fix these by doing a stricter test of the Unix-From lines. Any
lines that start "From " but do not pass this stricter test are escaped with a
> character.

Usage: cleanarch [options] < inputfile > outputfile
Options:
-s n
--status=n
Print a # character every n lines processed

-q / --quiet
Don't print changed line information to standard error.

-n / --dry-run
Don't actually output anything.

-h / --help
Print this message and exit
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/cleanarch:20
1105.
Convert a list's interpolation strings from %-strings to $-strings.

This script is intended to be run as a bin/withlist script, i.e.

% bin/withlist -l -r convert <mylist>
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(no translation yet)
Located in bin/convert.py:19
1124.
Reset a list's web_page_url attribute to the default setting.

This script is intended to be run as a bin/withlist script, i.e.

% bin/withlist -l -r fix_url listname [options]

Options:
-u urlhost
--urlhost=urlhost
Look up urlhost in the virtual host table and set the web_page_url and
host_name attributes of the list to the values found. This
essentially moves the list from one virtual domain to another.

Without this option, the default web_page_url and host_name values are
used.

-v / --verbose
Print what the script is doing.

If run standalone, it prints this help text and exits.
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There are leading/trailing spaces here. Each one represents a space character. Enter a space in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in bin/fix_url.py:19
110 of 21 results

This translation is managed by Ubuntu German Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: Daniel Winzen, Dennis Baudys, Hendrik Schrieber, Kristjan SCHMIDT, Laura Ohrndorf, Peer Heinlein, Sascha Bluhme, Sascha Herres, Tobias Bannert, dt, pehkaher, pheinlein.