I am having problems accessing the bitbucket website on my laptop or even update my repository through the terminal. After typing git pull, the terminal complains that the connection has timed out. This has been happening for 2 days now and I have not been able to update my repository at all.
However, on my desktop, it appears that I can access the bitbucket website (which I can't do on my laptop). Is there a way for me to reset some settings on my laptop? Both are connected to the same school network but my laptop's internet is through the wifi.
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I am trying to connect to an ssh network (call it 2nd ssh), that I connect after having connected to another ssh through an ip address. The project in IntelliJ (2020.3.3 Community Edition) is from github, and I was wondering whether there is a way to connect Intellij with the 2nd ssh. So instead of connecting to the 2nd ssh through the windows terminal, and having to commit - push - pull whenever I make changes in IntelliJ, is there a way to work on IntelliJ and connect it with the 2nd ssh so I can run things there more quickly?
Thank you!
I'm newly moving from a Linux working environment to Windows, and I'm mainly using local port forwarding+Pycharm to run my python code on a server that is double-hop from my laptop.
I am able to establish the ssh tunnel through Windows cmd or MobaXterm local terminal or MobaXterm tunneling tool. I works fine on my Pycharm, when I check it from tools/deployment/configuration/test connection, and I can also see the files in remote server. But every time I start my Pycharm, it shows two background process, "updating python interpreter" and "updating pycharm helper", and the precess bar simply do not show any moving on! And I cannot run python on remote server, because Pycharm says I lack python helper.
And most wired, when it is running these two precess, my terminal for local port forwarding freezes, and I cannot type in commands in the jump server. And when I try to recheck the connection, it turns out that connection fails.
My ssh tunneling+pycharm deployment used to work fine in my Ubuntu. Thanks anybody who can shed light on my confusion!
Well, thanks everyone, I have solved this problem.
The reason is simple, but I did not notice that the ~/.pycharm_helper 's size is actually changing in the process, while the GUI bar may be not moving.
So it is due to my double-hop inconvenience, and the low Internet speed. I left it in dorm for a whole night out, and it comes out just fine.
Let me start by saying that I have no experience with Linux and this is my first attempt at getting into the IoT with a raspberry pi3. My question is why can I connect via ssh to my pi when I use the ip address but not the hostname?
After getting everything set up at home, I tried to remote in via PuTTY from my laptop. (The laptop is less than 6 months old and if I need to provide the specs on it, I can. It is running windows 10 if that matters). It worked when I entered the ip address of the pi, but when I tried again with the host name (which is clearly defined in the raspberry pi configuration) it said host does not exist. I used hostname.local and still failed.
Today, I brought the whole setup to work to try a few more scenarios. From my work desktop, which is running windows 7 and not wireless, I could remote in via hostname.local. I then tried again on a different laptop running windows 7 and it worked too. Next attempt was on another new (less than 3 months old) laptop running windows 10 and it failed to remote in via the hostname.
This would tell me that there is nothing wrong with my home network or the network at work, and it also makes me think that this has nothing to do with the pi, since other computers can resolve the hostname to the ip address and successfully login. What the hell am I doing wrong or missing?
I spent 2 nights googling and browsing forums trying to find an answer for this but cant, so instead of bashing this post, please poke me for more information you think might be helpful for a solution.
EDIT I gave my computer and PI to my cousin to fix. He installed Samba, though I don't know what it does differently. After doing more research, it sounds like the problem I was having was a DNS issue. I don't know how it was resolved by downloading samba on the pi, but I can now connect via the hostname.
So if I understand correctly it would appear that there is some particular settings on that laptop preventing you from using SSH if that is the only thing you are changing? I think this is likely to be something to do with the security settings on the laptop but Windows isn't my thing sorry.
I have installed windows phone 8 SDK and tried running a simple app which embeds a WebBrowser on a page. When I try to run the app in emulator the emulator does not get internet connection. It displays an error message saying "You don't have permission to modify internal Hyper-V network adapter settings required to run the emulator". Im sure my login has admin permissions. My machine is 64bit, hyper v is enabled and Hyper v manager is running, hardware virtualization is enabled in the BIOS settings, DHCP is enabled and its connected to a wired network. I have checked all the system requirements. What ever I do it keeps on giving the same error message. I setup everything in a different machine and tried running the app in that machine. The same error message is displayed in the that machine also. Can anyone tell me how to get it working.
DHCP is enabled and its connected to a wired network
Can you run ipconfig /all on your host machine and post it here please?
seems you have problem with your DHCP or maybe multiple DHCP and conflict.
You need to add your user account as a member of the "Hyper-V Administrators" group on the machine.
Detailed steps:
Hit Windows key + Q and search for "local users and groups". Change the search scope to "Settings". Click "Edit local users and groups".
Expand the "Groups" section. Right-click on "Hyper-V Administrators" and select "Add to group".
Add your user account.
Some connection tools on the host can have negative effects when used with the emulator; I found having cisco VPN client installed on the host prevented the emulator from finding the internet. Other VPN clients may have similar side-effects. I simply uninstalled cisco (the inbuilt windows VPN is fine for what I need) and it worked perfectly.
I've also seen problems where it won't find the internet after the host has been suspended / resumed. In that scenario, it turned out to be bad network drivers. I installed a dedicated Intel NIC (rather than the on-board NIC on the motherboard) - problem solved.
Basically, Hyper-V is a bit fussy.
try refreshing the hyper-v by unchecking and then checking it again,this worked for me.
Steps:
1.control panel>>programs>>Programs and features>>turn windows features on and off>>hyper-v
2.uncheck it and restart the pc.
3.again go to control panel an check hyper-v and restart the pc again.
the try to run the emulator,should work..
another possible reason is that you did not start vs2013 as admin
I have written an application using ALSA (snd_pcm_open, snd_pcm_readi, etc). The application works perfect locally on my machine. However, when I SSH to another machine and run it through the SSH connection, all calls to snd_pcm_open fails with a message "Device does not exist" or similar. The remote machine has a soundcard just as my local machine has.
What could be the problem here?
Thanks!
EDIT: If I run the application using the console on the remote computer (walk to the computer, login, run the application), the application runs fine.
The problem might be with /dev/snd/* access rights.
Be sure the user is in the audio group.
In my case, I had to do adduser $USER audio, disconnect and then reconnect.
Just to check for the obvious: Are the drivers for the sound card on the remote machine loaded and working correctly? Check /proc/asound/cards and see so that the card is listed.
Just to confirm...you have the application installed on the remote machine and the remote machine has otherwise working aplay etc? The remote machine must be set up so that if you were to login from the console and run the application, it would work
If this is the case then check your environment variables as sometimes they can be subtly different.
Found the reason. Turns out /dev/audio and the devices below /dev/snd/ where all owned by the user logged in on the remote computer, and readable/writable by no one else. For testing I applied chmod 777 /dev/audio /dev/snd/* and it started working.
Anyone know how I can apply a bit more generous permissions to the audio devices for the remote computer (which will last after a reboot)?