Running JHipster Gradle task from Intellij IDEA - intellij-idea

This error happens when I run with Gradle through from Intellij IDEA.. but from console everything works fine... someone knows why?
Executing external task 'run --stacktrace'... :compileJava UP-TO-DATE
:compileScala UP-TO-DATE :bower FAILED
org.gradle.api.tasks.TaskExecutionException: Execution failed for task
':bower'.
Caused by: java.io.IOException: Cannot run program "bower" (in
directory "/Users/eduardo/Development/projects/jhipster"): error=2, No
such file or directory

I contacted JetBrains support about this. The one thing they suggested was running IntelliJ from the command line, which is working for me:
open -a "/Applications/IntelliJ IDEA 15.app"

At a guess, you are running IntelliJ on OSX, maybe with a brew install of bower?
Recent versions of OSX (at least 10.10.1) don't let you easily set the PATH for graphical applications (launchctl seems to have a bug in regards to PATH). Combined with there being no way to modify the current environment PATH for launching subprocesses in Java, this results in being unable to find the bower executable. A Complete rundown of the root problem can be seen here (Setting the environment for ProcessBuilder), but essentially IntelliJ must have your PATH set correctly in order for non standard PATHs to be searched.
My solution for now is a complete hack taken from https://apple.stackexchange.com/a/51737 - essentially, create a wrapper script:
create /Application/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ 14.app/Contents/MacOS/idea.sh with contents of:
#!/bin/sh
. ~/.bash_profile
logger "`dirname \"$0\"`/idea"
exec "`dirname \"$0\"`/idea" $#
then chmod +x /Application/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ 14.app/Contents/MacOS/idea.sh
then edit /Application/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ 14.app/Contents/Info.plist and set CFBundleExecutable to idea.sh
lastly, run /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Support/lsregister -v -f /Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ 14.app
It's a hack, but it works... and until Apple fixes launchctl, it's the only solution I've come up with.

Related

Singularity: failed to resolve session directory

I wrote a Singularity container that works just fine on my computer. However, when a colleague of mine tries to run it, he gets the error output
FATAL: container creation failed: failed to resolve session directory /usr/local/var/singularity/mnt/session: lstat /usr/local/var: no such file or directory
In the past, he could run containers I build. In fact, he used being able to run a container with the same recipe. The change was that the version of Singularity on the machine I use to build it was upgraded.
I entered the error in a search engine, and I only found a single hit, https://forum.image.sc/t/improving-cluster-supercomputer-performance-tesla-v100-volta-16-32gb-gpu/37459/8, in which this is not resolved.
Does anybody know a way to fix this? Or what the source of the problem is? Or a workaround, preferably one that does not require me to downgrade Singularity? (The machine on which I build it is shared between several users, that's why I don't want to do that.)
Okay, this was somewhat trivial to solve, we just had the colleague create the required folder,
mkdir -p /usr/local/var/singularity/mnt/{container,final,overlay,session}

Unable to use read('classpath:') when running tests with standalone karate.jar

I am attempting to execute my tests using the karate stand-alone jar. Throughout my project, I use the read('classpath:') when locating files.
However, when I attempt to execute my tests from the CLI, I receive the following error:
src.test.java.Users.getUser: -unknown-:6 - javascript evaluation failed: read('classpath:commonUtils.feature'), java.io.FileNotFoundException: commonUtils.feature (The system cannot find the file specified)
Command: java -jar -Dkarate.config.dir="src/test/java" karate.jar -e DEV -t #tests src/test
It seems that I will have to declare the classpath on execution, would you be able to provide some insight on how to do this please? I'm not sure whether my issue is linked to [karate][standalone] Error : could not find or read file
Can you try the ZIP release and if you open the karate batch file you will see this:
java -cp karate.jar:. com.intuit.karate.Main $*
So the trick to setting a custom classpath is to use the com.intuit.karate.Main entry point and in the above example the current dir is also added to the classpath.
It would be great if you try the current RC version (0.9.5.RC3) to ensure we have everything working as expected.
For more information, see this part of the docs: https://github.com/intuit/karate/tree/develop/karate-netty#custom-classpath

tar: Error opening archive: Can't initialize filter; unable to run program "bzip2 -d"

I'm trying to run this code from : https://github.com/pnnl/safekit ,using cmd on windows 10, I already installed python.
when I type the command:
tar -xjvf data_examples.tar.bz2
I keep getting the error:
tar: Error opening archive: Can't initialize filter; unable to run
program "bzip2 -d"
I have tried to download bzip2 through easy-7 zip and GnuWin32 , but it didn't work.
Can any one help me?
P.S.: I did search for the same problem before posting mine.
If you run the command in git bash instead of cmd it should work.
I've run into the same problem! My non-elegant solution so far has been to force Windows's tar.exe to use the bzip2.exe provided with my Windows Git installation. The trick is to add to your user PATH the directory where bzip2.exe is located, in my case:
C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\bin
So, right now my PATH looks like:
Path=%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps;C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\bin
Notice that I've only touched the user environment PATH, not the system PATH, and I've appended the new directory. As always, touching your PATH can be a little bit dangerous, proceed with care. If someone has a better solution, I'd be glad to hear it.
Note: I tried copying the bzip2.exe to a separate directory, but this didn't work (I presume because bzip2.exe couldn't find some dependencies).

Jenkins + Phing: Build Failure - can't find build.xml

Trying to set up Jenkins on one of my servers for the first time and think I might be missing something.
Jenkins 1.545
Phing 2.6.1
Jenkins builds give me the following output.
Building in workspace /var/www/vhosts/domain.co.uk/httpdocs
looking for '/var/www/vhosts/domain.co.uk/httpdocs/build.xml' ...
looking for '/var/www/vhosts/domain.co.uk/httpdocs/build.xml' ...
looking for 'build.xml' ...
buildfile 'build.xml' not found.
Build step 'Invoke Phing targets' marked build as failure
Finished: FAILURE
If I run my build.xml on it's own it works fine.
I'm using a custom workspace at the moment, before I tried a symlink from the default workspace to my webroot, when I did that it found the build file but failed when trying to run phing. I know it's a problem with permissions but I'm not sure exactly what.
I'm running this on a plesk web server and have tried adding the jenkins user to the psacln and psaserv groups but that didn't work either.
I use hudson but I think is the same problem.
Provide to ant job the full path (advanced settings)
${WORKSPACE}/buil.xml
Assuming the correct set of jenkins user
RUN_AS_USER=jenkins
Go to the custom workspace and
chown -R jenkins:jenkins myworkspace
if it doesn't work
chmod -R 777 myworkspace
then you will fix later.
I hope it helps.

I am trying to open Jmeter by the batch file but it gives me a Windows error

Here is the related error its showing:
java.exe is not a recognized file as an internal or external command,
operable or external command
errorlevel=9009
i was getting the same error on WIndows 8.1(64 bit) and checked java path but it was ok
so i just run my jmeter.bat with Run as Administrator and it worked for me
Many operating systems have an environment variable such as PATH that contains a list of directories (or folders) to be searched when looking for a command to execute. Commands that can be found via the PATH are commonly called external commands. The program that reads the command line or the batch file and invoked the commands may have a number of built in commands, these are commonly called internal commands.
I suggest you examine the PATH (or equivalent) set when your java command executes from the command line and also when execution is attempted from the batch file. Compare the two and make sure the directory containing your java.exe is in the PATH.
Does not work with Java 9 beta:
Running:
C:\java -version
Gives:
java version "9-ea"
Just go into command line and run:
java -jar ApacheJMeter.jar
Set the correct Java Path (installed in your system) in Computer -> Advanced System settings -> Environment Variables -> Ok -> System Variables -> Path
I got the same issue and resolved by following the above steps.
I tried everything, this eventually worked.
Within System Variables:
PATH = "C:\WINDOWS\system32;C:\WINDOWS;C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_101\bin"
May help someone.
This error occurs due to the path has not been set properly.
Either you can set it in environmental varialables or right click jmeter .bat file,choose edit set the path their,for reference see the jmeter.apache.org user manuals.
For me, my Java path has a space in it and jmeter said it can't find Java
/Library/Internet Plug-Ins/JavaAppletPlugin.plugin/Contents/Home
.. I looked at the jmeter.sh script and saw it got the path from "Plugin-Ins" .. onward. I tried just commenting out the exit command after that check in the script .. and then I was able to run jmeter.
So apparently the validation logic has a bug, where the error message about can't find java is in fact not true (if Java is indeed set up correctly), so it can be ignored.
For windows 8.1 Users:
Error when trying to run jmeter.bat
Error message:
Not able to find Java executable or version. Please check your Java installation. errorlevel=2
Press any Key to continue
Resolution:
Right Click jmeter.bat and Run as Administrator.
This worked for me, hope this helps. Good luck
Set the correct JM_LAUNCH variable to java.exe
For Windows XP users set Java environment by following the steps here:
http://www.tutorialspoint.com/jmeter/jmeter_environment.htm
Note the path depends on your installed JDK.
And download the file from:
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/jmeter/trunk/bin/jmeter.bat
Then replace your jmeter.bat with the downloaded file.
If you have installed Java and still you get this error, please set the java_home path to below using typing below command in terminal:
export JAVA_HOME="/Library/InternetPlugIns/JavaAppletPlugin.plugin/Contents/Home"
Since I run many versions of Java.. I modified jmeter.bat.
rem JM_START - set this to "start" to launch JMeter in a separate window
rem this is used by the jmeterw.cmd script.
rem
rem =====================================================
setlocal
rem Minimal version to run JMeter
set MINIMAL_VERSION=1.8.0
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files (x86)\IBM\Java80\jre\bin <<< add This line to jmeter.bat
Copied the JAVA executable from Installed version of Java from C:\Program FilesJava\jdk1.8.0_191\bin and pasted in the folder where the jmeter bat resides and it worked for me.
Not exactly the same issue but somebody might find it helpful
Do not double click jmeter.bat but instead ApacheJMeter.jar in the same directory
For me jmeter.bat run but for a brief moment closing almost immediately and not prompting any error. Above workaround allowed me to start working
if JAVA -version shows as blank or empty in the command prompt (CMD) then you need to clear the all java paths in environment variable and again add JAVA_HOME=C:\Program Files\Java\jdk-11.0.15.1
path= C:\Program Files\Java\jdk-11.0.15.1\bin;
if you see C:\Program Files\Common Files\Oracle\Java\javapath; like this remove this
and try in new CMD prompt then Java -version will work.