►
From YouTube: Using the Log Viewer Tool
Description
This tutorial explains the uses of the Log Viewer Tool.
A
Hi,
my
name
is
Kelly
Mikkel,
Agha
and
I'm.
One
of
the
educators
here
with
Bywater
solutions
and
I,
have
the
short
tutorial
video
on
the
log
viewer
tool
found
in
Koha.
The
purpose
of
the
log
viewer
tool
is
to
see
transactions
that
happen
on
the
staff
client
in
each
of
the
modules
now
I'm
going
to
show
you
that
you
can
actually
choose
which
modules
you'd
like
to
be
logged
and
which
you
don't
over
in
the
Koha
administration
module.
A
A
Now,
here,
I
can
see
each
of
the
modules
and
actually
gets
a
little
bit
more
granule
than
that
on
which
logs
that
I
can
turn
on
or
off
so
I
have
something
first,
I
have
the
authorities,
log
and
I
could
go
ahead
and
log
or
don't
log.
So
if
my
library
did
use
authorities,
I
could
go
ahead
and
change
that
to
log
I
personally,
this
kohat
does
not
use
authorities.
The
next
one
is
borrowers
log.
This
would
log
any
changes
to
the
patron
records,
whether
a
patron
is
created
or
any
changes
are
made
to
them.
A
So
you
go
ahead
once
again
and
just
toggle
between
log
and
don't
log.
We
have
the
catalog
in
log.
This
is
any
changes
to
bibliographic
or
item
records
and,
as
you
can
imagine,
this
is
a
huge
amount
of
transactions
happening
for
your
library.
I
would
say
that
this
is
also
when
a
book
is
checked
in
and
out.
This
is
advisable
not
to
turn
this
on,
but
if
this
is
something
your
library
is
considering,
please
contact
by
water
solutions
via
the
phone
number
or
a
ticket
and
talk
to
a
systems
person
before
turning
this
on.
A
This
does
take
up
a
lot
of
memory
on
your
server.
We
have
the
cron
job
log
and
you
can
turn
that
on
or
off
we
have
the
fines
log.
This
is
when
fines
are
charged
paid
or
forgiven
holds
log.
Any
actions
on
holds,
create
canceled,
suspend
resume,
etc,
issues
issues,
and
then
we
also
have
return
log.
These
are
items
are
checked
in
or
checked
out.
We
have
the
automatic
claim
notice
if
that
is,
if
you
would
like
to
make
sure
that
that
is
sent
that
you
could
turn
that
on.
A
A
So
here
we
can
just
answer
some
basic
questions.
If
you
were
looking
for
a
specific
librarian
and
what
those
changes
were
made
with
that
person,
you
can
go
ahead
and
put
in
their
borrower
number
now.
Their
borrower
number
is
not
their
username
or
their
card
number,
it's
their
actual
borrower
number.
So,
let's
pop
over
to
my
I'll
show
you
my
detail.
Screen
and
I'll
show
you
where
to
find
the
borrower
number.
A
I
could
go
ahead
and
either
choose
what
actions
I
wanted
to
look
at
if,
whether
they
added
say
they
added
one
just
look
at
which
patrons
they
added
I
could
do
that.
What
interface
that
it
was
made
on
if
I
wanted
to
look
at
all
interfaces
or
specifically
to
the
staff
client
to
the
OPAC
or
through
any
of
your
sip
connections,
and
then
I
have
a
place
to
go
ahead
and
choose
the
date.
A
The
dates
once
again,
these
logs
could
be
quite
large,
so
narrowing
down
what
you're
looking
for
is
really
helpful
to
your
system,
so
it
doesn't
create
such
a
big
report
for
you,
then
the
output
I
can
go
ahead
and
put
that
straight
to
a
file
or
I
could
just
look
at
it.
On
the
screen,
so
I'm
going
to
say
what
changes
did
this
librarian
to
seven
nine
make
in
the
month
of
June
and
I'm,
going
to
keep
this
as
in
all
modules,
all
actions
and
go
ahead
and
submit
to
the
to
the
screen.
A
So
in
two
weeks
or
sixty-one
lines
found
I
can
see
that
on
June
1st,
this
librarian
changed
their
change.
This
person's
password,
and
that
was
done
on
the
internet.
I
can
see
that
this
librarian
changed
a
system,
preference
and
that
was
called
the
OPAC
nav
and
I
can
go
ahead
and
see
that
that
affects
the
OPAC.
A
Now
we
did
have
some
the
cataloging
log
turned
on
just
for
a
moment,
so
I
do
have
some
cataloging
logs.
We
also
have
fines,
so
I
can
see
that
there
was
a
fine
created
for
this
patron.
This
patron
is
clickable.
I
can
go
ahead
and
look
at
their
account
see
another
system
preference
modified
in
the
OPAC
privacy,
and
then
you
can
see
I
created
some
patrons
once
again.
I
could
go
ahead
and
click
any
of
those
patron
names
and
look
at
it.
A
So
this
is
a
great
tool
for
your
library
to
use.
If
you
are
looking
for
something
specific
once
again,
I
would
caution
you
about
the
cataloging
log,
but
overall
this
is
a
good
tool
to
use.
There
are
going
to
be
times
that
you're
going
to
get
a
lot
of
information
and
you're
not
sure
what
you're
looking
at
and
we'd
be
happy
to
help
you
with
any
of
that
I.