I have a small issue with a Drupal 7 site. A user wants to upload .otf (outlook template file) into Drupal and then link to it in a content page. This has all been completed. When they click on the .otf file in any browser except IE they are prompted to download or open the file. In IE it just displays the binary as if it was text. Does anyone have any experience with this? We would like for IE to also produce a Save or Open option for users.
I have been trying to move a drupal site (7.5.9) from an Ubuntu 14 sharedserver (Virtualmin) to an Ubuntu 18 vps server (Virtualmin). I have tried to use a full backup of the virtual server and restore it on the new server, but then I get:
The website encountered an unexpected error - and when I look in the watchdog table I see this error:
I was able to successfully configure and generate a complete map of colored markers using the differentiation options of the "IP Geolocation Views & Maps" module but now I need to draw (and save in the map) polygon areas that should be seen further to the Markers.
I tried with the "Leaflet Widget for Geofield" module - but I can only draw an area when I create a node. I want to draw an area in the View.
Anyone have a suggestion on which solution to adopt?
I was able to successfully set the display of Markers in different colors in the map generated by the view with Format set to "Map (Leaflet API, via IPGV & M)" using the differentiation system based on Content Type. I just enter the machine name of the Content Type and associate a color for the Marker and it works fine.
I have inherited a Drupal site (with CiviCRM back end). We offer a directory service, where you can look up our users and/or use their contact form.
When logged into the site all user info pages can be viewed.
When logged or not, all contact forms can be used.
When not logged in, some profiles load -- the majority redirect to the home page.
I have worked a few hours on this and am utterly stumped. I can see no consistent differences between users who show, and users who don't. I have tried a lot of other theories, but am finding nothing.