Book Image

Plone 3.3 Site Administration

Book Image

Plone 3.3 Site Administration

Overview of this book

In the past few years, we have seen some dramatic changes in the way Plone sites are being developed, deployed, and maintained. As a result, developing and deploying sites, changing their default settings, and performing day to day maintenance tasks can be a challenge. This book covers site administration tasks, from setting up a development instance, to optimizing a deployed production site, and more. It demonstrates how-to perform these tasks in a comprehensive way, and walks the user through the necessary steps to achieve results.We have divided the subject of Plone site administration into three categories: development, deployment, and maintenance. We begin by explaining how a Plone site is built, and how to start using it through the web. Next, we add features by installing add-on products, focusing on themes, blogging, and other common enhancements. After the basics of developing and deploying a Plone site are covered, the book covers the basics of maintaining it.Further, throughout the book we preview some new technologies related to Plone site administration, available now as add-ons to the current Plone release. Finally, we will cover a variety of techniques to help you optimize your site's performance.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Plone 3.3 Site Administration
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface
Index

Configuring mail settings in a development environment


We will proceed to user and group management shortly. But first, let us address an important concern—how to configure the mail settings when your site is in development.

If you browse to http://localhost:8080/Plone and click on Site Setup on your newly-created Plone site, you should see:

This warning message was designed to encourage folks to configure their mail settings now, rather than waiting for an error message to appear later, in case they failed to do so.

However, the need for the warning message mostly applies only to production sites. In development, you may not be running a mail server locally (that is, on your laptop), or you may not have access to the production mail servers, a mail server you can test with, and so on.

Having to configure the mail settings in production is expected, but having to configure them in development can be a mild annoyance. Nevertheless, having the mail server working in development is often quite...