[commits] [Wiki] changed: FAQ/Admin/General

Wiki Guest wikiguest at horde.org
Mon Nov 5 03:35:43 UTC 2012


guest [173.79.223.27]  Mon, 05 Nov 2012 03:35:43 +0000

Modified page: http://wiki.horde.org/FAQ/Admin/General
New Revision:  14
Change log:  Update link to MARC

@@ -32,9 +32,9 @@

  In other words, there are millions (if not billions) of different  
ways to configure Horde based on your local configuration.  Writing  
documentation that would cover every possible configuration option  
would be quite a chore for a large software company (i.e. Microsoft,  
IBM), let alone a volunteer effort with only a small group of core  
developers.  So while always mindful that our documentation //could//  
be better (of course it could), we can't do it all by ourselves.  It  
may be that your setup uses a driver/configuration that is somewhat  
rare and, therefore, there is a lack of concise documentation on how  
to configure the exact way you envision.  But on the other hand, the  
simple fact that a driver/configuration exists for your bizarre setup  
is a testament to the ability of Horde to adapt to your local  
environment.  And sharing your experiences with everyone else (through  
the wiki, mailing lists, etc.) after taking the time to figure out  
these configuration secrets is a fantastic way to give back to the  
community for using this free software.

  +++ Is there a mailing list for Horde and its components?
-Not just //a// mailing list, but //many//. The  
[http://www.horde.org/mail/ Horde mailing lists], one for each  
component and then some, and the most active ones are also  
[http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/ archived and searchable].
+Not just //a// mailing list, but //many//. The  
[http://www.horde.org/mail/ Horde mailing lists], one for each  
component and then some, and the most active ones are also  
[http://marc.info/ archived and searchable].

  Horde users are encouraged to join the //announce// list and the  
list specific to their module; those interested in getting their hands  
a little dirty might also wish to join the //horde// and //dev//  
lists. Those interested in knowing everything that's going on with  
Horde development might wish to join the machine-generated //commits//  
and //bugs// list, which report changes in the Git repository and in  
the bugs database.

  +++ I found a bug in Horde. Who should I tell?



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