How to Manage your Athena Lists | Who to Contact for Help | Glossary of List Management Terms
How to Manage your Athena Lists
Athena List Management is one of the tools list owners have to manage their lists. Other tools include blanche and listmaint on Athena. To get started, you will need MIT Personal Certificates on your machine. Once you have them, select any function, provide a list name, and press enter on your keyboard, or 'Go'. Each page of the web interface has context sensitive help to guide you. [top of help]
If you do need further assistance with your lists, Athena User Accounts provides assistance with Athena list concerns, including creating new lists, modifying lists, and deleting lists. If you have trouble using this interface to maintain your lists, please contact Accounts at accounts@mit.edu, or 617-253-1325. [top of help]
Glossary of List Management Terms
List Description
A short
description may be specified for an Athena list. This description is
displayed for lists which are not marked hidden if list information is
generated by another Athena user. [top of help]
Mailing List
An Athena list is by
default a mailing list. That means that the members of the list will
be mailable through the address listname@mit.edu, which will
distribute the mail the all the members of the list. Such a list may
include email addresses for users outside of MIT. Lists can be both a
mailing list and a group. [top of
help]
Group
In addition to (or instead of)
being a mailing list, an Athena list can also be a group. A group can
be used as an access control list on the AFS file system, for
example. If you wish to be able to set access permissions on an Athena
directory or locker for the members of your list, you should choose to
make it a group. When a list can maintain a file space on Athena, it
is also has a group ID number.
Note that only Athena users on your list will be able to take advantage of this feature. If you have any other members on your list, such as email addresses outside of MIT, they will not be able to access Athena file systems. [top of help]
List Administrator(s)
Every Athena
mailing list must be owned by one or more
administrators. Administrators have the power to change list
characteristics. Administrators can be a user or another Athena
list. [top of help]
List Permissions
These
describe the state of the list and what users who are not the
administrator can do with the list. A list's permissions can be viewed
with the "display list characteristics" option, and edited
by list owners with the "update list characteristics"
option.
Last Modification
This tells you
when the list was last changed in some way and by who. [top of help]
Athena User
Email addresses of the
form name@mit.edu usually indicate name is an Athena username (also
sometimes called a Kerberos Name or MIT Network ID). To add an Athena
user to an Athena list, you enter only member name to the left of the
@. For example, to add eclapton@mit.edu to an Athena list, provide
'eclapton' as the member name. [top
of help]
List
An Athena list is by default a
mailing list. That means that the members of the list will be mailable
through the address listname@mit.edu, which will distribute the mail
the all the members of the list. Such a list may include email
addresses for users outside of MIT.
List members can be other Athena lists, of the form listname@mit.edu. To add an Athena list as a member of another Athena list, enter only the part of the address before the @ symbol. For example, to add accounts@mit.edu as a member, provide 'accounts' as the member name. [top of help]
String
Athena lists often have
non-MIT users and lists as members. To add an email address that
contains an @ but is outside of mit.edu, such as
mitalum@anotherisp.net, you add them as member type string. To add a
string, provide the complete address, including information on both
sides of the @. [top of
help]
Kerberos Principal
Specifying a list member as a Kerberos principal allows a member to be
on a list without receiving any email sent to the list. This is a
rarely used member type. [top of
help].