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FAQ

Help

FAQ

Table of Contents 
  1. 1. Help!
    1. 1.1. Where can I get help?
    2. 1.2. Can I ask you a question?
    3. 1.3. Who are the Aegir developers?
    4. 1.4. I'd like to help out / become a developer!
  2. 2. Installing Aegir
    1. 2.1. Can I run Aegir on a shared hosting environment?
    2. 2.2. Can I run Aegir on Windows?
    3. 2.3. Can Aegir be installed next to CPanel/Plesk/AlternC/etc?
    4. 2.4. Where can I get support for Barracuda/Octopus Aegir?
    5. 2.5. Do I really need to create an aegir user?
    6. 2.6. Install fails with 'dummy connection failed to fail' on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS!
    7. 2.7. How can I tell what version of Aegir I have installed?
    8. 2.8. After installing Aegir I have two servers listed, is this normal?
    9. 2.9. I followed the installation instructions. What directory holds all of my sites now?
    10. 2.10. I tried to create a site, but the create task failed and retries don't succeed. How do I delete the partially created site and associated Aegir tasks?
  3. 3. Upgrading Aegir
    1. 3.1. What is a patch or 'hotfix', and how can I apply it to fix my site if I can't / don't want to upgrade to HEAD?
    2. 3.2. I upgraded Aegir by mistake, can I downgrade it?
  4. 4. Using Aegir
    1. 4.1. Cron isn't running (scheduled tasks aren't being executed), what do I do?
    2. 4.2. How do I get debug/verbose info from Drush when running the hosting commands?
    3. 4.3. How do I update a site's or platform's modules using Aegir?
    4. 4.4. Is it best to set up sites under aegir as www.example.com or just as example.com?
    5. 4.5. How can I setup a site to use https:// under Aegir?
    6. 4.6. Aegir is not verifying / deleting / migrating my site because of file permission problems.
    7. 4.7. I can verify a platform but Aegir fails to provision a site on it (often OpenAtrium)
    8. 4.8. A platform with an installation profile has verified okay, but Aegir doesn't seem to be able to use the profile
    9. 4.9. I tried to migrate a site, but Aegir incorrectly reported an incompatibility between one or more modules in my source and destination platforms. How do I force Aegir to see that the two platforms are compatible?
    10. 4.10. What about .htaccess settings?
    11. 4.11. I'm using a Git repo for a site, but symlinks make crazy things happen!
    12. 4.12. How can I tell what database name my site is using?
    13. 4.13. Can I use the subdirectory multisite feature of Drupal in Aegir?
    14. 4.14. My cache/performance settings in /admin/settings/performance keep resetting themselves!
    15. 4.15. I get [warn] NameVirtualHost *:80 has no VirtualHosts when I restart Apache
    16. 4.16. I get 'Dummy connection failed to fail' when doing $stuff
    17. 4.17. How do I make custom changes to a site's settings.php?
    18. 4.18. How to migrate site via drush

1. Help!

1.1. Where can I get help?

From the Aegir Handbook (which should be the first place you look) :

The Issue Queue for all the projects that make up Aegir is here: http://is.gd/ek2Dl

This is the first place to look - chances are someone's had the same problem as you before, and you'll get the quickest answers by searching for what they discovered.

Before asking a question or reporting an issue, you should read the bug reporting guidelines.

You can join the #aegir channel at Freenode on IRC. (IRC instructions for drupal users are at: http://drupal.org/irc). It's a friendly community, but a small one, so ask nicely and be patient!

If you find a solution to a problem that isn't in the documentation or in this FAQ, be the first to login and edit these pages to bring them up to date! The rest of the community thrives on your helpful information!

1.2. Can I ask you a question?

Of course you can! Don't ask to ask, just ask! It is polite to look if the question has already been answered in the documentation, the issue queue or here, but if not, please do ask around! If you ask a question and we have a nice answer, you can even add it to the FAQ here so that others can have your valuable answer.

1.3. Who are the Aegir developers?

The Aegir core developers are listed on the Aegir maintainers page.

1.4. I'd like to help out / become a developer!

We love people who want to help and get involved! We even made a page for you to read.

2. Installing Aegir

2.1. Can I run Aegir on a shared hosting environment?

Shared hosting will not give you enough permissions to install new sites. Toughen up, read some Linux beginners tutorials and buy a cheap VPS which will do nicely.

2.2. Can I run Aegir on Windows?

To install Aegir you need a unix based operating system (for details see: http://community.aegirproject.org/handbook/operating-system-support). Aegir will not work on Windows and there are no plans to add support for it.

2.3. Can Aegir be installed next to CPanel/Plesk/AlternC/etc?

No, or rather "it's not supported". See http://drupal.org/node/587554

2.4. Where can I get support for Barracuda/Octopus Aegir?

Barracuda/Octopus are custom scripts for Aegir that install or set up various things that Aegir doesn't do out of the box. This is a custom solution tailored to Nginx systems, provided by Omega8.cc and is not officially supported by the core Aegir project or team. For help or more information, please visit BOA Group, Barracuda and Octopus project pages / issue queue on drupal.org.

2.5. Do I really need to create an aegir user?

If you have a UNIX system, you already have a user. It just needs to not be root for safety reasons. But you don't really have to create a user.

2.6. Install fails with 'dummy connection failed to fail' on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS!

Ubuntu 12.04, by default, installs an insecure MySQL server configuration that allows anonymous users to login without a password. This must be rectified by running 'mysql_secure_installation' before attempting to apt-get install Aegir.

Please see this step in the Install Documentation and this other FAQ item.

2.7. How can I tell what version of Aegir I have installed?

This works for version 1.1 and above . . . maybe earlier too . . . .

grep '[hostmaster][download][tag]' /var/aegir/.drush/provision/aegir.make

Also, if you have drush installed someplace other than in /var/aegir/.drush, then you should grep the aegir.make file in the directory tree where you have drush installed. For example, on Ubuntu, apt-get may install drush in /usr/share/drush/. So, the file to be grep'd would be /usr/share/drush/commands/provision/aegir.make.

If you're still unsure or this didn't work, contact a developer on IRC and we'll be able to tell you after you answer a few questions.

2.8. After installing Aegir I have two servers listed, is this normal?

Yes. By default, after installing Aegir, a server node is created that represents your webserver. This also generates the 'server_master' Drush alias on your system. The second server node is called 'localhost' and has your database service attached to it, because by default MySQL listens on localhost and not your webserver's IP (or on all interfaces). This corresponds to the 'server_localhost' Drush alias on your system.

This is normally fine: you want your websites to be serve-able via your web server's IP / all interfaces, and your database server to only listen on localhost.

If you end up creating remote webservers, you'll not be able to have them use databases on this Aegir server is all.

If you know you want to have remote webservers communicate back to the Aegir server as the 'remote database server', you'll need to attach the database service type to the non-localhost server node, comment out bind-address in /etc/mysql/my.cnf and perform the necessary firewall changes to allow remote access to TCP port 3306 on the Aegir server.

But generally its recommended to create remote database servers too (or combine web + db on the one remote server), so this is generally a non-issue, rather than use the original Aegir server as a 'remote' database server for remote web servers.

2.9. I followed the installation instructions. What directory holds all of my sites now?

For a full overview of a typical Aegir filesystem structure, read this.

2.10. I tried to create a site, but the create task failed and retries don't succeed. How do I delete the partially created site and associated Aegir tasks?

See the section 'Manually deleting the site' from the documentation

3. Upgrading Aegir

3.1. What is a patch or 'hotfix', and how can I apply it to fix my site if I can't / don't want to upgrade to HEAD?

Sometimes releases are made and bugs are discovered afterward. We commit fixes for such bugs to HEAD, but HEAD is often volatile and you don't want to use a non-stable release in your environment. Fortunately we do (or should: if it's critical, please ask for a patch otherwise) provide a 'hotfix' or patch for users. A patch means that you can 'patch' your Aegir system to fix the bug without running the risks of using HEAD.

To patch an Aegir component, use the following example, in which we fix the Provision module with an imaginary patch. The same or similar steps apply for Hosting or Hostmaster (though you shouldn't need to patch Hostmaster, you only use it once to install!)

Run the steps as the aegir user.

1) Backup /var/aegir/.drush/provision to somewhere else for safety, such as /tmp/provision

2) Download the patch given in the ticket, to your server. Use wget or a similar useful tool for downloading it over the commandline. You can download the file to anywhere.

3) edit your aegir user's crontab (crontab -e) and comment out the dispatch entry (place a '#' in front of the hosting dispatch cron entry). This is a precautionary step in case you patch the module, something goes wrong and it breaks the module. The hosting dispatch cron might come around and try and run the queue dispatcher and break/complain due to a broken component. If you know what you are doing and are fast enough to fix it, you may skip this.

4) cd /var/aegir/.drush/provision/

5) patch -p0 < /path/to/the/patch/file

6) crontab -e and uncomment the dispatch cron task

If the patch doesn't apply or prompts you to enter the filename to patch, try running patch -p1 instead of -p0 above.

If it still asks for clarification, verify that you are in the top-level directory of the component (in this case, we are inside /var/aegir/.drush/provision)

If it still doesn't work, it might be an unclean patch, and you should make a request in the relevant ticket to be given a cleaner patch to apply.

For more information on patches, please read the Drupal documentation.

3.2. I upgraded Aegir by mistake, can I downgrade it?

Short answer: no, that would be crazy.

Long answer: well... maybe. Actually, yes. But it could destroy your house, your cat, your life insurance and certainly give you headaches. We will tell you anyways because we're nice.

This assumes you have a backup from before the upgrade. We will be deploying that backup, so understand that you will loose any changes done on the frontend since the upgrade was performed (or more precisely, since that backup was done). That's the way Drupal works, you can't downgrade Drupal, and we're just cheating by restoring a previous backup.

So first, delete that frontend site:

drush @hostmaster provision-delete

This is not absolutely mandatory, but you should make a backup, and deleting the site does that, plus it's important to cleanup after ourselves. We can use the backup to restore to that upgraded version if we give up on the downgrade.

Then remove the Debian packages (if you installed through those, if not, you're on your own: but you need to at least remove the provision code):

apt-get purge aegir2 aegir2-provision aegir2-hostmaster

This may also be:

apt-get purge aegir2 aegir-provision2 aegir-hostmaster2

Depending on the release candidate you installed.

Next, you install the old provision, but only that - don't go around installing the frontend just yet because you will have an empty site to overwrite.

apt-get install aegir-provision

Then you need to edit the @hostmaster alias to point to the old platform, which supposedly exists (if not, you're in trouble: create it by hand or something).

(Alternatively, you could install aegir-hostmaster, which would create you the alias, but this could fail exactly because the alias already exists. Just edit the alias already.)

So you need to change three parameters:

  'platform' => '@platform_hostmaster6x1x',
  'root' => '/var/aegir/hostmaster-6.x-1.x',
  'site_path' => '/var/aegir/hostmaster-6.x-1.x/sites/aegirphp52.koumbit.net',

Then you can deploy your backup on that platform:

drush @hostmaster provision-deploy $PWD/backups/aegirphp52.koumbit.net-20131017.173034.tar.gz

From there the frontend should be back. Maybe. Probably. Well, the purge earlier may have killed the aegir.conf symlink, so if you want to test the frontend right now, restore that. Otherwise, be bold and upgrade to the latest 1.x release using the debian packages, which should restore everything you need:

apt-get install aegir

This should perform an upgrade from your older 1.x release to (for example here) 1.11.

If it doesn't work, sorry, i told you it could break. :)

4. Using Aegir

4.1. Cron isn't running (scheduled tasks aren't being executed), what do I do?

If you're using Aegir 2.x ensure the "Task queue" feature is activated. To do so go to /admin/hosting/queues check "Task queue". Click on "Save changes" button. With default settings the item(s) in the queue will be process in roughly 1 min.

Below are other options to resolve that issue

At the shell prompt as the aegir user, type

crontab -e

a) If you get an error that the command is not found, then you need to install cron on your server (some basic images don't include it - Linode's Ubuntu 9.04 image is one):

sudo apt-get install cron
Now go back to the directory /var/aegir/drupal-6.19 and re-execute the hosting dispatch:
/var/aegir/drush/drush.php @hostmaster hosting-setup
Type 'crontab -e' again.

b) You should see the default entry:

*/1 * * * * (php  '/<path to drush>/drush.php' @hostmaster hosting-dispatch

But if this is still not working it may well be a permissions issue. An example error :

Forking : (php /<path to drush>/drush.php  --quiet @hostmaster  'hosting' 'task' '266' --backend &) > /dev/null [0.432 sec]                [notice]
sh: /dev/null: Permission denied

This means the system doesn't have permissions to access /dev/null. To resolve it, give the system permissions to write to /dev/null (it should have this anyway), by executing:

sudo chmod a+w /dev/null

c) If this still hasn't worked, have you moved the location of drush? If so - see http://drupal.org/node/540152

d) If you are a *BSD user (verified on freebsd at least) You need to add the line : PATH=/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin at the TOP of your cron file. Simply log in as the aegir user and type crontab -e and insert the above line on top. Thanks goes to mauror for http://drupal.org/node/323732.

e) When cron for your sites stops working, it is possible that for some reason (system overload, broken site, timeout etc), Aegir failed to release a sites cron semaphore. To release it, use this simple recipe:

$ su -s /bin/bash - aegir
$ cd /path/to/hostmaster/sites/domain
$ drush vdel hosting_queue_cron_running -y

4.2. How do I get debug/verbose info from Drush when running the hosting commands?

Add these to the drush call :

--debug

If you're having specific problems when using the frontend, you can easily run the hosting commands from the command line by:

  1. Click the view button and then copy the Drush command which was executed at the top of the log;
  2. While logged in as the aegir user, paste the command in at the terminal and replace --backend with --debug at the end of the commandline.

4.3. How do I update a site's or platform's modules using Aegir?

Aegir isn't a package management GUI for installing modules or themes on your site.

It's designed to help manage your site between builds. To upgrade sites, you should be using the Migrate tool to move your site between two platforms, which invokes drush updatedb.

If you aren't ready for this paradigm, and are frustrated that Aegir isn't some GUI for wildly updating or installing new modules with no regards for rollback or dealing with when it will inevitably break your site, Aegir is probably not for you.

4.4. Is it best to set up sites under aegir as www.example.com or just as example.com?

Aegir supports either method and can even automatically create whichever one you didn't use as the main site name. Read more about Aliases and this feature in our documentation.

4.5. How can I setup a site to use https:// under Aegir?

Aegir ships with an experimental SSL feature, but currently doesn't provide any means of managing SSL certificates.

You can follow the ongoing SSL work here.

In the meantime, to set up SSL with basic self-signed certs, follow our documentation.

4.6. Aegir is not verifying / deleting / migrating my site because of file permission problems.

Aegir releases prior to 0.3 RC3 encountered an error when the web server has uploaded files and made new directory in the sites/$url/files directory. A prevalent example of this occurring is with the color module and when imagecache is used (such as in atrium).

This bug (see: #203204 ) was introduced with Drupal 6, and has since been fixed with Drupal 7. The patch has however not been backported yet, and the patch won't fix existing files that were created incorrectly.

In Aegir 0.3 RC3 we introduced a work around which sets the umask for the site, which forces new files and directories to be the correct permissions, but this will only take effect after the site has been succesfully verified. To enforce the correct file ownership and permissions on the files, run the following command on each of your Drupal 6 platforms :

  sudo chown -R $aegir_user $platform/sites/*/files

This will allow the verify task to correctly set the permissions and succesfully modify/remove the files.

4.7. I can verify a platform but Aegir fails to provision a site on it (often OpenAtrium)

A premature failure of a site install with an unhelpful message such as 'The external command could not be executed due to an application error' often, but not always, means your php-cli's memory_limit is set too low.

To confirm that this is an issue, try running drush @example.org provision-verify --debug from the command line to find out what caused the problem. Remember to replace 'example.org' with the URL of the site you are trying to verify.

Raise your memory_limit in your php cli php.ini file to something like 128MB, or maybe 64MB if that's too much. On Debian-based distributions this is /etc/php5/cli/php.ini. Apache does not need a restart for this: installations fail because the command is being executed via drush using php cli.

This is a common issue for OpenAtrium as it requires more memory to run its install profile as it has a lot more to do than a regular Drupal install.

4.8. A platform with an installation profile has verified okay, but Aegir doesn't seem to be able to use the profile

Your platform has been setup and verified okay, but when you go to create a new site Aegir keeps giving an error message about the profile, or the list doesn't offer you the profile you're expecting. This could be a namespace issue. Modules, themes and profiles in Drupal all have a machine name - which is essentially their folder name. This is also used to prefix their functions etc, so that there are no clashes. What isn't often recognised or well documented is that Drupal has a single namespace for all items - so your themes, modules and install profiles can't have the same name as each other. Often an installation profile will be created called 'OpenPotato' and the theme for it will also be called 'OpenPotato'. This makes Drupal unhappy, and when Drupal's unhappy Aegir's unhappy. We don't want that, but it isn't Aegir's fault, it's the developer's limited or lack of understanding of this Drupal caveat. The easiest thing is to name your installation profile directory 'OpenPotato_install' and name the profile file 'OpenPotato_install.profile'. You'll also need to rename the functions inside this file. Then everything should work just fine.

4.9. I tried to migrate a site, but Aegir incorrectly reported an incompatibility between one or more modules in my source and destination platforms. How do I force Aegir to see that the two platforms are compatible?

This problem can arise for at least two different reasons. First, you may have updated a module in a platform that you imported and forgotten to run update.php before you imported the site into Aegir. Second, you may have updated a module in a platform and not re-verified the platform in Aegir. Be sure that you have run update.php on a drupal platform that you will be importing into Aegir before you import. Also, if you make any change to the modules in an Aegir Platform, re-verify that platform and all sites using that platform. (At least, experience suggests that doing these things will allow the migration to succeed.

4.10. What about .htaccess settings?

As of recent 0.4 alpha releases, Aegir now reads in the contents of a platform's .htaccess file when generating the Apache configurations. You can safely make additions/changes to the platform .htaccess and expect the relevant site to respect those changes.

If you're symlinking an entire /sites/ folder, Aegir may not acknowledge the site, as this will cause problems when cloning/migrating a site.

If you are using Git to version control your themes, custom modules, etc, and symlinking these into your sites folder, you will find that cloning a site will clone those symlinks (by virtue of copying the sites folder). This is probably not what you want to happen!

Themes and custom modules are better off being checked out to or symlinked into the install profile folder. If your site's install profile is 'foobar' (there's an 'install_profile' variable in the variables table), Drupal core understands to look inside the /var/aegir/yourplatform/profiles/foobar/ folder for modules and themes directories.

The files directory for uploads (which I don't think can be efficiently versioned anyway in most cases) and the settings.php file will be all that's left in your sites folder, and Aegir will happily move that all around as you clone or migrate your site between platforms.

Storing your site's dir in git is an archaic and inefficient method of developing sites. It's 2010 and there are more elegant ways of doing things thanks to Drush Make and Aegir. You might like to look at mig5's excellent article where he provides some great tips on how to manage Drupal deployments & workflows with version control, drush_make, and Aegir.

4.12. How can I tell what database name my site is using?

Check the site's vhost configuration file in /var/aegir/config/server_$whatever/apache/vhost.d/. The db name (and user/password) are stored as 'SetEnv' parameters to Apache, allowing us to cloak database credentials in the settings.php so that they are protected in a multisite environment from prying eyes (admins with PHP filter permissions).

You can also use 'drush st' on your site to get a status report containing the database name, user, password, among other things.

In modern releases (0.4-alpha9 or so and above), the site database names have switched from site_$nid style names to more properly reflect the site name/URL itself.

4.13. Can I use the subdirectory multisite feature of Drupal in Aegir?

Also known as "http://example.com/site1" and "http://example.com/site2" are different sites.

Short answer: not yet - at least not natively. (see the 'aegir_subfolders' experimental extension)

Long answer: this is currently not supported, because multiple sites usually end up sharing the same virtual host entry in the webserver and you will be required to upgrade/migrate all of the sites simultaneously. That is because /site1 is on the same drupal root as /site2. Another problem is that they can't be on separate servers...

To fix this, you would need to decouple virtual hosts and sites in Aegir, which is a fairly deeply rooted assumption. It would be possible to use Aliases to work around that and have the sites be in different document roots.

But even if you actually coerce Aegir into having multiple sites in the same domain, you get into crazy namespace issues. Do you want to allow the site on example.com to completely break sites example.com/site1 or example.com/site2? If so, who can? The same client? The same user? If not, you need to implement checks so there's no overlap...

Tools shouldn't dictate policy, people should. Therefore, this should probably be allowed, from a strictly technical perspective.

The thing is: domain names are cheap, contrary to common opinion. You only have to get one domain and you can have as many sub-domains as you want. Hell, you can even have sub sub domains and have your whole domain tree down there, you're free to go. Providers often give out a free DNS namespace to their customers based on their username (full disclosure: Koumbit does :P).

The other thing is: /site1 is exactly what drupal does: ot dispatches menus callbacks based those GET URLs. So trying to make Aegir (or Apache + Drupal, rather) do that is rather backward. On the other hand, Drupal is notoriously bad (if you make exception of the Domain module) at dispatching requests based on domains, and that's where Apache, DNS, Aegir and all their happy friends gets in.

In short, it's been very low priority for the use cases of the development team so far. If developers step up or if funding is provided, this could very well be part of a future release. See this feature request for followup: http://drupal.org/node/705026

Also see an extension for Aegir, written by mig5, called 'aegir_subfolders', which works (mostly)

4.14. My cache/performance settings in /admin/settings/performance keep resetting themselves!

Some values such as $conf['cache'] are hardcoded in the site's settings.php, which Aegir generates. This prevents some settings from being changed in the admin interface.

You can change the value of cache, and other variables, by creating a brand new file called 'local.settings.php' inside your site directory (e.g, alongside the settings.php). Put any value you want in it, e.g:

<?php
$conf['cache'] = 3;

..leave off the closing ?> tag, and this setting will now override all others. Aegir will not edit or remove this file.

4.15. I get [warn] NameVirtualHost *:80 has no VirtualHosts when I restart Apache

This is a harmless warning that Apache throws when you have duplicate 'NameVirtualHost *:80' entries in the Apache config somewhere. It doesn't cause any problem.

Aegir inserts this config line into an Aegir-managed apache config file just to make sure it's there at least once. If it's annoying you and you want to remove this warning, you need to remove the IP address from the server node and verify the server again. Note that this may fail in 2.x if the IP address is used by an SSL certificate yet the SSL certificate is unused. This shouldn't generally happen unless you are running a pre-2.0 release candidate, see #2159265 for details and [/discuss/how-delete-unused-ssl-certificate#comment-2163](this workaround).

4.16. I get 'Dummy connection failed to fail' when doing $stuff

Aegir attempts to make a connection to your database server that is deliberately designed to fail. The intention of this, is to get the 'remote host' of your webserver as seen from the perspective of the database server. This is used to generate appropriate GRANT statements so that your Aegir-managed sites can connect to their appropriate databases.

If you get the message 'Dummy connection failed to fail', this means that Aegir was able to login to your mysql server using username 'intntnllyInvalid' with a null password. This is a security problem on your behalf!

You should secure your MySQL service by running 'mysql_secure_installation' or manually by removing users in your mysql database's User table that don't have a valid password. See http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/default-privileges.html for more information.

Alternatively, if your MySQL server is sufficiently secured, there's always a possibility that your MySQL server responded with something Aegir didn't understand. Aegir expects either of these error messages:

Access denied for user(.... etc)

Host (...) is not allowed to connect to (....etc).

If your MySQL server responded with something else, but is secure, please open a bug report.

4.17. How do I make custom changes to a site's settings.php?

Aegir re-generates the settings.php for a site on certain tasks (Verify, Migrate, Backup, Restore, etc). For this reason it is not wise to put custom settings in the settings.php as you will probably lose them.

Instead, create a file 'local.settings.php' alongside your site's settings.php and put your custom changes in there.

If you want to make a change and have it apply to all sites immediately, put that change in /var/aegir/config/includes/global.inc.

Neither of these files will be overwritten by Aegir on any task. thus preserving your changes.

4.18. How to migrate site via drush

drush @www.site.alias provision-migrate '@platform_new_platform_alias'

Then, to update the frontend to reflect the changes:

drush @hostmaster hosting-import '@www.site.alias'

Need help?

Documentation

The notebook section provides a way for you to store and share information with your group members. With the book feature you can:

  • Add book pages and organize them hierarchically into different books.
  • Attach files to pages to share them with others.
  • Track changes that others have made and revert changes as necessary.
  • Archive books that are no longer of interest to the group. Archived books can be reactivated later if needed.