I am learning hyperledger fabric and want to use an IDE for the same.While searching about it in google, i came across Chaincoder IDE, But according to the website, its only available for Windows 10(Pro or Enterprise) and MacOs. I am working in Ubuntu 18.04 so i want to know will it work in Ubuntu or not ?
The website is clear
There is an exe for Windows
a Zip for Macos
So no available version for Linux.
Downloading it was enough to answer your question.
Related
I have followed these steps while installing the gnome extension of chromium in Ubuntu 20.04.
Installed the GNOME Shell integration extension on chromium.
As per their documentation ran a command to install chrome-gnome-shell
sudo apt-get install chrome-gnome-shell
Still while loading the gnome-extensions page, it is showing error that "Although GNOME Shell integration extension is running, native host connector is not detected. Refer documentation for instructions about installing connector."
Can anyone tell me how to resolve this issue in steps?
FYI: starting from Ubuntu 21.10 Firefox comes as a default browser and as a snap, as well as Chromium. And has the same problem: GNOME Shell integration shows the same error.
Other ways to install the extensions are:
gnome-extensions install --force your_downloaded_extension.zip
unzip your_downloaded_extension.zip ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/
Probably this is because you are running Chromium as a Snap. There is an open bug in Launchpad about this, that appears to still be happening in Ubuntu 20.04 (still happening in Ubuntu 22.04):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/chromium-browser/+bug/1741074
The easiest solution would probably be to use another web browser, not in a Snap.
I experienced this issue when upgrading from Ubuntu 21.04 to Ubuntu 22.04 (Jammy Jellyfish), where Firefox was installed via snap - supposedly the sandboxing made it unable to detect.
My resolution (which brought back gnome extensions connector being seen) was to install firefox manually by debian package via the directions in https://balintreczey.hu/blog/firefox-on-ubuntu-22-04-from-deb-not-from-snap/ . You may also be able to install the direct tarball following directions in https://fostips.com/install-latest-firefox-non-esr-debian/
Another option is to use a native extension manager as suggested in https://haydenjames.io/ubuntu-22-04-install-gnome-extensions-manager-workaround/
I solved using Chrome and not more Firefox for extensions.gnome.
(I use Chrome just for manage this extension)
If you still got problems, you could simply do this:
sudo apt-get reinstall chrome-gnome-shell
For me it did work after all, but just by using another browser - Firefox
I'm using Ubuntu 20.10 and I also had this issue. I was using Chromium but I found that Chromium dropped support for this, therefore I installed Firefox from the software. This did not work either.
The fix was to uninstall Firefox from software and install Firefox from ubuntu software with the source: ubuntu-groovy-updates-main
I installed the browser extension on there and it worked perfectly.
Aevin J He gave the answer if you're on ubuntu 21.10. it really matters whom you install it from. don't use the default one, use the one with most reviews
I have recently installed Linux mint, and installed Spotify (the preview version). I have set up some manual media shortcuts (play, next, ...) which seem to work fine with Banshee, but not Spotify.
Anyone has a solution how to make Spotify work with keyboard shortcuts?
Thanks.
I have used this quite successfully: https://github.com/jreese/spotify-gnome
It is likely someone will have already packaged this for apt-get so it might be worth having a google for it before doing a manual install.
I have just upgraded to Windows 8 Pro, mostly because my Windows 7 license has reached maximum activations and I have a free copy of 8, and partially so I can ensure my software is 8-compatible.
I seem to be incapable of installing the JDK. I just downloaded it from the Oracle website (jdk-7u21-windows-x64.exe).
Windows reports itself as: 64-bit Operating System, x64-based processor.
When I try and run it, either normally or as administrator is shows up with the message:
This app can't run on your PC
To find a version for your PC, check with the software publisher
Does anyone have any ideas on this, a quick Google indicates it should just install same as usual.
While 8 still insistently refuses to install the JDK even after re-downloading and checking the hash, the Netbeans + JDK bundle does install which includes the JDK so that solves this issue sufficiently for now.
Update: The 64-bit version now works fine.
Try the x86 version: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk7-downloads-1880260.html , I don't think there is a proper build for Windows 8 Pro.
it seems that it's possible to run a web server on a USB stick using XAMPP, but would this work on Windows, Mac and Linux? I want to run a PHP/MySQL demo site which can be used cross platform. Any advice appreciated!
XAMPP is a windows compiled application
Unless you use an emulator you might struggle to get it working on linux or mac
Consider a diffrent portable webserver for each OS
XAMPP is a cross platform (hence the 'X'), Apache MySQL PHP and Perl application. While the application runs on Windows, Linux and Mac, each installation is a different set of binary files for the given platform. While there is a Windows version that can run a from a relative path on a USB stick; no such version exists for Mac or Linux at this time. The installation location for the later operating systems must be on the system's hard drive at /Applications/XAMPP on Mac.
Trying to move my development environment to Linux. And new to Curl. Can't get it to install the IDE & RTE packages on an AMD HP PC running Ubuntu x64. I tried to install the Debian package via the package installer and get "Error: Wrong architecture - i386". Tried using the --force-architecture switch but it errors out.
I'm assuming Curl IDE will just run under Intel processors? Anyone have any luck with this issue and can advise?
It's been a while since I ran linux, but try looking for the x64 version. There are also x64 to x86 compatibility libraries available that should make 32 bit programs work for most situations.
The ubuntu forums are a much better place for this question, however.