![]() ![]() Lots of minor fixes and changes, some new functions, and new additions to other functions. There are a lot, all the details, as always are in GitHub : v4.1.4 will run on centos and 4.2 and later will be ubuntu only. ![]() What happened to centos?įileMaker Server for linux was a centos version of linux, but is now ubuntu, and so we’re only building for a single platform. So this means you can have a Mac plugin in windows, without breaking the Mac folder/bundle format. gz file and it will come in as uncompressed. So you can insert a plugin into a container field using the insert file step, and select a. Gz is just another compression format, but it has the advantage of it being the internal compression format for FileMaker container fields. Please contact us if you notice anything. This isn’t a final 4.2 release, that will come shortly, but it passes all our tests and is just waiting on some time out in real testing to make sure there’s nothing we’ve missed. With FileMaker 19.3 out, and now with native support for the new Apple M1 processor, plus a new Ubuntu release for FileMaker Server, there’s a need for a new BE plugin. You can delete the container fields after the import if required, just access the data on the BaseElements data file layouts.It’s been a bit slow here on the releases, but things are hectic at Goya with lots of development going on all over the place. So your BaseElements files will take up a lot more space on disk when you utilise this option. The greatest advantage is more than you're not locking up your copy of FileMaker Pro while the import is happening and you can continue working as normal.īaseElements is storing a copy of the XML for all the files within container fields in tables in BaseElements. We've found FileMaker Server imports to be faster than a local FileMaker Pro import, but your experience may vary and it will depend a lot on hardware. The speed of an import is really determined more by the specs of the machine that is doing the work, however FileMaker server does have an advantage in that it doesn't have to run any user interface, so some operations can be quicker. Export the contents there to a csv file and attach it to a support request. You can find the details of the error by going to the BaseElements Data file, and to the "ServerLog" layout. If there are any issues while importing, the "Importing on Server" will be changed to " Error when Importing". While the DDR is importing, the Solution Name will be appended with " Importing on Server". While you're waiting, control returns to BaseElements and you can continue to use it as normal. Your import will then process the XML files as normal on the local client, and once that is complete, it will hand over to the FileMaker Server via Perform Script on Server so that the import steps will be run on the server. If you're a FileMaker Pro client connected to a copy of BaseElements shared from FileMaker Server then there will an extra option when importing a DDR.Īfter selecting a summary file, there will be a radio button choice for "Local" or "Server" imports :Ĭheck the option for Server, and click Continue. There's no specific setting to enable server side imports.
0 Comments
![]() ![]() The papers include information on Olson's involvement with various conservation organizations, particularly the National Park Service, the National Parks Association, the President's Quetico-Superior Committee, the Friends of the Wilderness, the Izaak Walton League of America, and the Wilderness Society, as well as his role in issues related to the Superior National Forest and the Boundary Waters Canoe Area are exceptionally well detailed. Olson, one of Minnesota's leading outdoor writers and wilderness preservationists. ![]() ![]() (1920s-1989) Contains correspondence, graduate school papers, published and unpublished literary manuscripts, book drafts and publication proofs, film scripts, a bio-bibliography, maps, photographs, research notes, subject files, minutes, speeches and lecture material, schedules, newspaper and magazine clippings, reports, surveys, land use studies and proposals, newsletters, and other printed material related to the literary career and environmental advocacy of Sigurd F. The collection also includes Oberholtzer's short stories, essays, and articles notes on photography personal journals detailed reports of his field investigations of flood and timber conditions and information on International Joint Commission lake level hearings. His correspondents included many noted conservationists and public figures. The papers focus on northern Minnesota conservation issues, particularly the creation and management of Superior National Forest, the Quetico Provincial Forest Reserve (Canada), Kabetogama State Forest, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, and Voyageurs National Park lake levels and hydroelectric power development in the Rainy Lake watershed and attempts to marshal support for forest reserves, natural resource conservation, and wilderness values in general among the United States and Canadian governments and public. He is most closely associated with the struggle to preserve the wilderness character of the border lakes region between the United States and Canada, especially as founder and an officer of the Wilderness Society. MNHS call number: See the finding aid in the library (P1008).Ĭonsists of the papers (1856-198-) of a noted conservationist, explorer, and wilderness philosopher of the Rainy Lake area. ![]() (1963-1970) Consists of correspondence, clippings, reports, booklets, financial statements, fact sheets, and promotional literature pertaining to the chapter's membership and activities, wildlife and resource management, water resources and water pollution, Superior National Forest, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, Voyageurs National Park, timber wolf protection, hunting and fishing, conservation education, and the Quetico-Superior Council. Izaak Walton League of America, Duluth Chapter Records. MNHS call number: See the finding aids in the library (P630 and ALPHA- Friends of the Wilderness). Later it opposed logging, mining, and other commercial activities in the area, and supported efforts in Congress to pass a wilderness act (1957-1964), designate the BWCA as a wilderness area, and create Voyageurs National Park (1964-1971). During 1949-1954 the organization concentrated on opposing the use of aircraft and on supporting federal land acquisition in the roadless areas of the Superior National Forest Boundary Waters Canoe Area (BWCA). (1917-1981) Includes correspondence, printed materials, clippings, and miscellaneous items (mainly 1949-1975) related almost entirely to the activities of its executive secretary, William H. (1970-1978) Contains newsletters, reports, fact sheets, maps, drafts of bills, printed material, and correspondence produced or collected by this coalition of conservation groups formed in 1976 to lobby for the preservation of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area in the Superior National Forest. Papers Relating to the Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness ![]() |