[Koha] Hide MARC View separator

| dalmeida | divalmeida at gmail.com
Tue Sep 19 12:39:45 NZST 2017


Thank you, Mark Alexander and Owen Leonard! It worked thanks to your help!

But this code didn't work for my Koha version:

$(document).ready(function(){
    $("#MARCview").parent().hide();
});

This one did:

$(".view a:contains('MARC view')").hide();

Thank you!
Diva Almeida



On Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 1:16 PM, <koha-request at lists.katipo.co.nz> wrote:

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> Today's Topics:
>
>    1. Re: Hide MARC View separator (Mark Alexander)
>    2. Re: Problem with migration from KOHA 3.20 to 16.11.11
>       (Przemek Kosiński)
>    3. Some questions about virtualization. (Przemek Kosiński)
>    4. Re: Some questions about virtualization. (Fridolin SOMERS)
>    5. Re: Some questions about virtualization. (lists)
>    6. Re: Some questions about virtualization. (Michael Kuhn)
>    7. Check-out Counts difference (SATISH)
>    8. Re: Some questions about virtualization. (Tim Young)
>    9. Re: Some questions about virtualization. (Scott Owen)
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Mark Alexander <marka at pobox.com>
> To: "| dalmeida |" <divalmeida at gmail.com>
> Cc: koha <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>
> Bcc:
> Date: Sun, 17 Sep 2017 20:55:18 -0400
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Hide MARC View separator
> Excerpts from | dalmeida |'s message of 2017-09-16 18:57:03 +0100:
> > Does anyone know how to hide MARC View separator on book Details page?
> I'd
> > like to have only Normal View and ISBD View.
>
> I used the following as a hint:
>
>   https://wiki.koha-community.org/wiki/JQuery_Library#Hide_
> Marc_.26_ISBD_view_from_OPAC
>
> which recommended using:
>
>   $(".view a:contains('MARC view')").hide();
>
> But using Firefox's "Inspect Element" feature, I saw that the "MARC view"
> tab
> has an ID of "MARCview".  So I was able to simplify the Javascript in
> OPACUserJS preference to the following:
>
>   $(document).ready(function(){
>     $("#MARCview").hide();
>   });
>
> Note: I tested this only on 17.05.
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: "Przemek Kosiński" <p.kosinski at biblioteka24.eu>
> To: koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 11:22:41 +0200
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Problem with migration from KOHA 3.20 to 16.11.11
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the hints. This explained a lot to me.
> The data transfer attempt was made only for testing. I tested how
> migration works and whether there will be problems. Now I know what to
> expect.
> I plan to migrate data to KOHA 17.05 on Ubuntu server 16.04 in the near
> future.
>
> Thank you and best regards
> Przemek
>
> W dniu 15.09.2017 o 15:31, Jonathan Druart pisze:
>
>> Paul,
>>
>> I am sure you understood what I meant: the Koha debian packages are based
>> on Jessie (and so Ubuntu 16.04).
>> We had problems with Apache versions (2.4) and other Perl libs that were
>> not packaged/packagable easily for Wheezy.
>> Debian packages are generated by only 1 guy (Mirko) and developers are
>> (almost) all working on the same system. Same for the CI, we only run
>> tests
>> on Ubuntu 16.04 and Jessie. If someone need Wheezy support (or any other
>> linux distro support), they can contact us and propose their help.
>>
>>  From the wiki page:
>> """
>> As of November 2016, the Debian packages for Koha are based on Jessie
>> (Debian 8). Xenial (Ubuntu 16.04 LTS) is based on Jessie.
>> That means Ubuntu 14.04 LTS is no longer supported.
>> """
>> + http://lists.koha-community.org/pipermail/koha-devel/2016-Ju
>> ly/042874.html
>>
>> Regards,
>> Jonathan
>>
>> On Thu, 14 Sep 2017 at 20:38 Paul A <paul.a at navalmarinearchive.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> On 2017-09-14 09:51 AM, someone wrote:
>>>
>>> Note that Ubuntu 14.04 is not longer supported.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Please note that Ubuntu 14.04 LTS is supported until April 2019 --
>>> <https://www.ubuntu.com/info/release-end-of-life>. Koha tends to be very
>>> pro-active with enhancements (a potentially marvelous thing) but
>>> possibly might leave stable operating systems in the dust.
>>> --
>>> Paul
>>> Tired old sys-admin
>>> [just celebrated 78 years of life, 62 years of FORTRAN, and 58 years of
>>> COBOL]
>>> [now ducking the inevitable flames]
>>> [ ;=} ]
>>> [still running Koha 3.8.24 on 14.04LTS as a reference, non-lending,
>>> library at very respectable speeds on copper wire]
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Koha mailing list  http://koha-community.org
>>> Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
>>> https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>> Koha mailing list  http://koha-community.org
>> Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
>> https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
>>
>>
>
> --
> *************************************************
> Powiatowa i Miejska Biblioteka
> Publiczna w Skarżysku-Kamiennej
> www: www.biblioteka24.eu
> mail: p.kosinski at biblioteka24.eu
> *************************************************
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: "Przemek Kosiński" <p.kosinski at biblioteka24.eu>
> To: "koha at lists" <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 12:03:26 +0200
> Subject: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> Hi
> I have some questions about virtualization.
>
> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
> Docker containers?
> 3. Does it work on production servers or only on test servers?
> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
>
> Tips, hints, guides welcome;)
> Przemek Kosinski
> --
> *************************************************
> Powiatowa i Miejska Biblioteka
> Publiczna w Skarżysku-Kamiennej
> www: www.biblioteka24.eu
> mail: p.kosinski at biblioteka24.eu
> *************************************************
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Fridolin SOMERS <fridolin.somers at biblibre.com>
> To: koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 12:39:21 +0200
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> Hi,
>
> We at Biblibre use LXD with Ubuntu Xenial as host and guest.
> Super powerfull with a huge scalability, we run 50 Koha on one server.
> In each container, unix user is always the same which makes scripting very
> easy.
> We use images to backup and create test/dev containers.
>
> PS : to show lxd env in prompt we used a trick : "hostname -A" in PS1
> instead of "hostname".
>
> Regards,
>
> Le 18/09/2017 à 12:03, Przemek Kosiński a écrit :
>
>> Hi
>> I have some questions about virtualization.
>>
>> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
>> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
>> Docker containers?
>> 3. Does it work on production servers or only on test servers?
>> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
>>
>> Tips, hints, guides welcome;)
>> Przemek Kosinski
>>
>
> --
> Fridolin SOMERS
> Biblibre - Pôles support et système
> fridolin.somers at biblibre.com
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: lists <lists at merit.unu.edu>
> To: koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 12:48:26 +0200
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> Hi Przemek,
>
> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
>>
> We do, yes.
>
> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
>>
> Proxmox with ceph storage.
>
> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
>>
> There are no differences with bare-metal, as far as we know. Only the many
> benefits that virtualisation gives you. :-)
>
> MJ
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Michael Kuhn <mik at adminkuhn.ch>
> To: koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 13:32:43 +0200
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> Hi Przemek
>
> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
>>
>
> I have installed about ten productive Koha instances so far. All of them
> are on virtualized hosts.
>
> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
>> Docker containers?
>>
>
> I never choose the solution myself, but the responsible IT department of
> the library does. To my knowledge, some used Vmware, some LXC, some Proxmox
> VE, of some I even don't know it and until now there was never reason to
> care about it (as long as the people at the IT department know what they're
> doing).
>
> My own Koha demo installation (koha.adminkuhn.ch) is virtualized with
> Proxmox and hosted by an external IT provider (Contabo). This setup has 2
> CPU, 6 GB RAM, 500 GB harddisk and costs me less than 100 Euro per year.
>
> For my own local Koha test installations I usually use Virtualbox.
>
> 3. Does it work on production servers or only on test servers?
>>
>
> Both.
>
> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
>>
>
> Generally the same problems as with physical machines but of course, a
> virtual machine can never be as fast as a physical machine. Also there may
> be problems if too many virtual machines are sitting on the same host resp.
> if some of them are eating up CPU etc. So if you need total control and
> maximum power there's still nothing better than hardware - but usually you
> won't need that, so the benefits of virtualization (especially backups)
> will outweigh everything else.
>
> Besides, there are only minor problems with virtualization, for example
>
> Best wishes: Michael
> --
> Geschäftsführer · Diplombibliothekar BBS, Informatiker eidg. Fachausweis
> Admin Kuhn GmbH · Pappelstrasse 20 · 4123 Allschwil · Schweiz
> T 0041 (0)61 261 55 61 · E mik at adminkuhn.ch · W www.adminkuhn.ch
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: SATISH <lis4satish at gmail.com>
> To: Koha <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>, satish <lis4satish at gmail.com>
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 17:07:34 +0530
> Subject: [Koha] Check-out Counts difference
> Hi
>
> After upgrade from Koha 16.5 to 16.11.09.000 / Package Installation/ Ubuntu
> 14.04 Desktop, In Patrons, did browser cache clearing.
>
> found two problems with check-out.
> 1)  for some patrons, "Check-out Count" is not same as "Circulation
> History"
> This is causing, confusion while patron login to their account using OPAC.
> In OPAC, it showing Available even though it has been checkout.
> For koha administrator, the "status" shows blank.
>
> 2) Unable to Check-in books, for some patrons.
>
> Therefore, it is most urgent for me to answer the patrons.
> I did not understand what is the reason for this behaviour.
> Can you please give your suggestions for a fix.
>
>
> Looking forward for your valuable answers.
>
> With thanks
> Satish MV
> Librarian
> Govt. Engineering College, Hassan.
> Karnataka - 573201
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Tim Young <Tim.Young at lightsys.org>
> To: "koha at lists" <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 07:02:19 -0500
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> I have done a fair bit with different ones of these.
>
> 1) Yes
>
> 2) I will spend most of my time discussing this below.  Skipping this
> answer for the moment.
>
> 3) Koha works fine on virtualized servers, so long as the host machine is
> powerful enough to run it.  For the most part, you never realize a service
> is on a virtualized server, unless your virtualization environment has
> issues.
>
>
> Choosing a virtualization environment:
>
> The first rule is to *use what you are familiar with*.  If all your
> techies are Windows people, use Hypervisor.  If they are all Linux, use one
> of the Linux ones KVM, Proxmox, etc.  If you already have a VMWare
> presence, then you can add Koha to your VMWare host.
>
> Containers are a linux-only thing.  If you go to install them on Windows,
> it creates a Linux VM under which the containers run. Containers work very
> nicely if you have lots and lots of machines, or if you are really strapped
> for CPU power  But if you have never used containers before, the learning
> curve is a lot steeper than you might think.  Remember, not only do you
> need to get a server running, but you need to be able to back it up.
>
>
> If you are starting into Virtualization, the first question is what
> operating systems do you know.  The Linux hosting options are very nice if
> you know Linux pretty well.  Proxmox, for example, is a paid-for GUI that
> you can use to access the free Linux KVM stuff.  Linux does that all for
> free, but the interface is either harder to set up, or very manual.  You
> can use an openstack or cloudstack, but those are very complex and awkward
> to maintain if you are new at virtualization.  I like Linux, and I use
> Linux VMs all the time.  But, more people prefer hypervisor or VMWare
> because they have much nicer user interfaces.  As nice as virtualization
> is, you need to get something you can manage.  No server is "turn it on and
> forget it."  All servers require backing up, upgrading, and the like.  With
> Virtualization, you want to be able to take snapshots and access the
> machine "console" if it has an issue booting.
>
> Windows licenses are always a pain.  I think "understanding licensing" is
> the biggest complaint I hear from people who use Windows Hypervisor.  And
> it can get fairly expensive.
>
> The biggest complaint I hear from Linux people is the interface and trying
> to manage the machine from a Windows platform.
>
> The biggest complaint I hear from VMWare people is that it is hard to
> manage the computer from a machine that you do not have everything set up
> on.  And, the VMWare licenses usually end up costing a fair bit more than
> you anticipated.
>
> You may notice I did not mention Oracle Virtualbox as an option. Many
> people are tempted to use it since it appears to be free.  It does have a
> lot of features, but it does not scale well in the server world.  And, you
> are supposed to pay for it if you are using it for servers.  It is an
> awesome virtualization environment for testing and for use for yourself,
> but the free setup is missing a lot of features (like, starting VMs at
> boot) which you expect out of a server platform.  I have never use it in a
> paid-for environment; I am sure it would work well, but it is the one
> platform I have not used myself.
>
> My 2c.
>
>     - Tim Young
>
> On 9/18/2017 5:03 AM, Przemek.KosiA at LightSys.org wrote:
>
>> Hi
>> I have some questions about virtualization.
>>
>> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
>> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
>> Docker containers?
>> 3. Does it work on production servers or only on test servers?
>> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
>>
>> Tips, hints, guides welcome;)
>> Przemek Kosinski
>>
>
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Scott Owen <sowen at edzone.net>
> To: "koha at lists" <koha at lists.katipo.co.nz>
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 08:15:56 -0400
> Subject: Re: [Koha] Some questions about virtualization.
> "The biggest complaint I hear from VMWare people is that it is hard to
> manage the computer from a machine that you do not have everything set up
> on.  And, the VMWare licenses usually end up costing a fair bit more than
> you anticipated."
>
> ---the flip side.....ESXi is still free. I have run and entire school
> district off 3-4 EXSi servers for a number of years....
> I truly just don't need all the bells/whistles (and cost) of the fully
> licensed VMware products.
> ESXi 6 (latest version) runs from a web browser...no special client needed.
>
> ESXi -- free...Koha ---free.....all you have to purchase is the hardware.
>
> I have run 3 Koha VM's off ESXi for a few years now....no issues that could
> be attributed to a virtual infrastructure.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 18, 2017 at 8:02 AM, Tim Young <Tim.Young at lightsys.org> wrote:
>
> > I have done a fair bit with different ones of these.
> >
> > 1) Yes
> >
> > 2) I will spend most of my time discussing this below.  Skipping this
> > answer for the moment.
> >
> > 3) Koha works fine on virtualized servers, so long as the host machine is
> > powerful enough to run it.  For the most part, you never realize a
> service
> > is on a virtualized server, unless your virtualization environment has
> > issues.
> >
> >
> > Choosing a virtualization environment:
> >
> > The first rule is to *use what you are familiar with*.  If all your
> > techies are Windows people, use Hypervisor.  If they are all Linux, use
> one
> > of the Linux ones KVM, Proxmox, etc.  If you already have a VMWare
> > presence, then you can add Koha to your VMWare host.
> >
> > Containers are a linux-only thing.  If you go to install them on Windows,
> > it creates a Linux VM under which the containers run. Containers work
> very
> > nicely if you have lots and lots of machines, or if you are really
> strapped
> > for CPU power  But if you have never used containers before, the learning
> > curve is a lot steeper than you might think.  Remember, not only do you
> > need to get a server running, but you need to be able to back it up.
> >
> >
> > If you are starting into Virtualization, the first question is what
> > operating systems do you know.  The Linux hosting options are very nice
> if
> > you know Linux pretty well.  Proxmox, for example, is a paid-for GUI that
> > you can use to access the free Linux KVM stuff.  Linux does that all for
> > free, but the interface is either harder to set up, or very manual.  You
> > can use an openstack or cloudstack, but those are very complex and
> awkward
> > to maintain if you are new at virtualization.  I like Linux, and I use
> > Linux VMs all the time.  But, more people prefer hypervisor or VMWare
> > because they have much nicer user interfaces.  As nice as virtualization
> > is, you need to get something you can manage.  No server is "turn it on
> and
> > forget it."  All servers require backing up, upgrading, and the like.
> With
> > Virtualization, you want to be able to take snapshots and access the
> > machine "console" if it has an issue booting.
> >
> > Windows licenses are always a pain.  I think "understanding licensing" is
> > the biggest complaint I hear from people who use Windows Hypervisor.  And
> > it can get fairly expensive.
> >
> > The biggest complaint I hear from Linux people is the interface and
> trying
> > to manage the machine from a Windows platform.
> >
> > The biggest complaint I hear from VMWare people is that it is hard to
> > manage the computer from a machine that you do not have everything set up
> > on.  And, the VMWare licenses usually end up costing a fair bit more than
> > you anticipated.
> >
> > You may notice I did not mention Oracle Virtualbox as an option. Many
> > people are tempted to use it since it appears to be free.  It does have a
> > lot of features, but it does not scale well in the server world.  And,
> you
> > are supposed to pay for it if you are using it for servers.  It is an
> > awesome virtualization environment for testing and for use for yourself,
> > but the free setup is missing a lot of features (like, starting VMs at
> > boot) which you expect out of a server platform.  I have never use it in
> a
> > paid-for environment; I am sure it would work well, but it is the one
> > platform I have not used myself.
> >
> > My 2c.
> >
> >     - Tim Young
> >
> > On 9/18/2017 5:03 AM, Przemek.KosiA at LightSys.org wrote:
> >
> >> Hi
> >> I have some questions about virtualization.
> >>
> >> 1. Does anyone use KOHA on virtualized servers?
> >> 2. What solution did you choose KVM, LXC / LDX, VMVare, ProxmoxVE or
> >> Docker containers?
> >> 3. Does it work on production servers or only on test servers?
> >> 4. Problems, challenges, thoughts?
> >>
> >> Tips, hints, guides welcome;)
> >> Przemek Kosinski
> >>
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Koha mailing list  http://koha-community.org
> > Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> > https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
> >
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Koha mailing list
> Koha at lists.katipo.co.nz
> https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
>
>


-- 

D'Almeida Ateliê

*arte final desde 1997*divalmeida.com
S E T Ú B A L . P O R T U G A L


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