Dear list,
I have now some time a drupal 7.10 installation running. Some modules are outdated, but I got no notification from the system that there are updates available.
Under /#overlay=admin/reports/updates/settings I filled my email address, selected daily check and send for all versions.
Under reports I see that the cron process was execute 1 hour 17 minutes ago, so I think with the cron process is everything fine.
Is this a bug in drupal7 or must I setup some more options?
Thanks Matthias
On 12/14/2011 08:19 AM, Matthias Fechner wrote:
Dear list,
I have now some time a drupal 7.10 installation running. Some modules are outdated, but I got no notification from the system that there are updates available.
Under /#overlay=admin/reports/updates/settings I filled my email address, selected daily check and send for all versions.
Under reports I see that the cron process was execute 1 hour 17 minutes ago, so I think with the cron process is everything fine.
Is this a bug in drupal7 or must I setup some more options?
Thanks Matthias
Have you set up your Drupal 7 site up on a computer that does not have a mail transfer agent on it, like your local computer or a Windows server? If so, you won't see any of the messages Drupal sends, because there is no software installed on the computer to send the messages with.
To test, try sending yourself a message using the Contact module. If you do not receive that message, then you most likely do not have a mail transfer agent installed on that computer.
If you cannot or are not allowed to install a mail transfer agent, you can use either the PHPMailer module [1] or the SMTP Authentication Support module [2]. Be sure to follow the directions for installation, because both modules require an external library.
[1] http://drupal.org/project/phpmailer [2] http://drupal.org/project/smtp
Adding to what Jason said, 99% of the time this turns out to be a server issue. I've got about a 1/2 dozen Drupal 7 sites running that I get notifications from all the time, so it's working in Drupal.
Check your reports for PHP errors relating to mail. You can also quickly check if mail is working by logging out then requesting a new password for your account. It won't change your password unless you click the link in the email, so just ignore it (if you get it) and log back in then check out the reports.
If Drupal isn't spitting out an error in the log, then there's something wrong on the server. You can check the mail logs for hints and try sending mail straight from a terminal window (if you have access to these). These can sometimes turn into a real pain to track down and the easiest alternative is generally using the SMTP module and configure it to use something like GMail to send you site's emails with.
Jamie Holly http://www.intoxination.net http://www.hollyit.net
On 12/14/2011 12:10 PM, Jason Flatt wrote:
On 12/14/2011 08:19 AM, Matthias Fechner wrote:
Dear list,
I have now some time a drupal 7.10 installation running. Some modules are outdated, but I got no notification from the system that there are updates available.
Under /#overlay=admin/reports/updates/settings I filled my email address, selected daily check and send for all versions.
Under reports I see that the cron process was execute 1 hour 17 minutes ago, so I think with the cron process is everything fine.
Is this a bug in drupal7 or must I setup some more options?
Thanks Matthias
Have you set up your Drupal 7 site up on a computer that does not have a mail transfer agent on it, like your local computer or a Windows server? If so, you won't see any of the messages Drupal sends, because there is no software installed on the computer to send the messages with.
To test, try sending yourself a message using the Contact module. If you do not receive that message, then you most likely do not have a mail transfer agent installed on that computer.
If you cannot or are not allowed to install a mail transfer agent, you can use either the PHPMailer module [1] or the SMTP Authentication Support module [2]. Be sure to follow the directions for installation, because both modules require an external library.
[1] http://drupal.org/project/phpmailer [2] http://drupal.org/project/smtp
Dear Jason and Jamie,
Am 14.12.11 18:10, schrieb Jason Flatt:
To test, try sending yourself a message using the Contact module. If you do not receive that message, then you most likely do not have a mail transfer agent installed on that computer.
at first thanks a lot for your answer.
I don't think it is a problem with the mta, because all other emails in drupal7 are working fine. The contact form, the trigger and action module sends emails, so it should not be a problem with the mta on this server. The server handle around 1000 emails a day so searching in the logfile for good luck to find the right line doesn't make sense.
I checked the error log of the apache and my logfile is around 400MB big with tons of: PHP Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated and files not found.
I think that is not a problem. What is the script path that sends the update notification, so I can search more detailed for it?
Or can I trigger this notification process manually if a new update is available?
As php version 5.3.8 and mysql 5.5.17 is installed.
Thanks, Matthias