Juergen,
Of course the wiki gives the necessary information to change your password yourself (or to remove your current account):
* If you’re a Wicket developer and want to change the auto-generated
password you were sent, you should obtain the MD5 hash of your new
password then update your entry in
|/home/groups/w/wi/wicket/htdocs/wiki/conf/users.auth| to use the
new value.
o There’s an online MD5 calculator here
<http://www.xboxmediacenter.com/info_faq.htm#MD5> if needed!This Wiki supports |sections|, effectively different namespaces. This both helps prevent name-collisions of pages and allows differential access controls to pages, e.g. an |supported-examples| section might be set such that it could only be edited by a particular group of users. The current areas are the root area, a |wiki| area, a |user| area and an |open| area (see below).
If you need help doing this, you can always ask me to do some action:
- remove your account so you can register again
- update your password's MD5 record to a newly generated MD5 password, calculator here: (http://www.xboxmediacenter.com/info_faq.htm#MD5)
Martijn
Juergen Donnerstag wrote:
That is what I think I did. I used my sourceforge login name. Is that any different to the ID you mean. Trying to register again, the wiki complains that my username is already in use.
Juergen
On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 22:40:38 +0100, Martijn Dashorst
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think you have to use your sourceforge ID to register. That's at least what I remember. I've used that ID to register myself, and didn't have problems accessing the wiki.
Martijn
Juergen Donnerstag wrote:
Eelco,
does it make sense to copy such info into the wiki?
I tried to access the wiki a couple of days before and failed. I registered, but did never receive the email with my password as is mentioned on the register page and thus are not able to add any information I intended to copy the maven infos you sent to Jon into the Wicket.
Juergen
On Thu, 06 Jan 2005 09:26:48 +0100, Eelco Hillenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Another anti-pattern: replacing components while not invalidating the page. This gives problems with the back button. If you do not want *any* backbutton problems, you should work paged based (like Hangman does). The disadvantage of this is that the re-use of highlevel components like panels will be harder.
Eelco
Eelco Hillenius wrote:
I tried it some time ago, and did not find leaks. I would be a good idea for more people to do some serious profiling.
Anti-patterns would be using too many internal classes (I just found out); you'll end up with spaghetti code. And - though not an anti-pattern - be carefull about your component's instance variables (including objects you use in anonymous classes) as they are stored in the session.
Eelco
Jonathan Carlson wrote:
Has anyone tried running a Wicket app over a long period of time to make sure that old objects are garbage collected properly? (Preferably with something like JMeter hitting pages the whole time)
Are there any anti-patterns to avoid?
- Jonathan
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