I have a module I am trying to package as an RPM using Maven RPM plugin. When I run mvn package from the command line, it generates the rpm as expected. When I try to run the package phase from within Intellij, it seems unable to find the rpm command:
[WARNING] /bin/sh: rpm: command not found
...followed later by:
[ERROR] Failed to execute goal org.codehaus.mojo:rpm-maven-plugin:2.1-alpha-1:rpm (default-rpm) on project ve_hive_client: RPM query for default vendor returned: '127' executing '/bin/sh -c rpm -E '%{_host_vendor}'' -> [Help 1]
My hunch is that my rpm installation (/usr/local/bin/rpm) isn't available in Intellij's PATH. Any idea how to add it?
had the same problem on ubuntu. i just installed the rpm program and the PATH then had rpm then.
/usr/bin/rpm
Maven did not complain then
try adding:
PATH=PATH:/usr/local/bin/rpm
in your .bashrc?
Not sure if this will help or not, but worth a try.
If you are running OSX and you've installed rpm using homebrew then it's not related with paths or rpm itself.
In OSX executing
/bin/sh -c rpm -E '%{_host_vendor}'
is different than executing
/bin/sh -c "rpm -E '%{_host_vendor}'"
The latter works pretty well.
Anyone found a way to fix this without changing the plug-in's source code?
Related
I want to install janus-gateway on CentOS7.
I read the following document and tried installation.
https://github.com/meetecho/janus-gateway/blob/master/README.md
git clone https://github.com/meetecho/janus-gateway.git
cd janus-gateway
sh autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/opt/janus
However, configuring janus-gateway will cause an error. The error is as follows.
checking if libtool supports shared libraries... yes
checking whether to build shared libraries... yes
checking whether to build static libraries... no
checking for pkg-config... /bin/pkg-config
checking pkg-config is at least version 0.9.0... yes
checking for JANUS... no
configure: error: Package requirements (
glib-2.0 >= 2.34
libconfig
nice
jansson >= 2.5
libssl >= 1.0.1
libcrypto
) were not met:
No package 'nice' found
Consider adjusting the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable if you
installed software in a non-standard prefix.
Alternatively, you may set the environment variables JANUS_CFLAGS
and JANUS_LIBS to avoid the need to call pkg-config.
See the pkg-config man page for more details.
I installed libnice(libnice-0.1.3-4.el7.x86_64) in the following way.
yum install libnice
How can I solve it?
Thank you.
try this and rebuild
echo "export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/lib/pkgconfig" >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
Disclaimer: I am using Ubuntu 18.04 when testing this.
If you are using Ubuntu system and trying to install Janus and running this code
./configure --prefix=/opt/janus
And then getting this error: No package 'nice' found
Make sure you have been installation of the nice from aptitude.
sudo install aptitude
aptitude install libmicrohttpd-dev libjansson-dev \
libssl-dev libsrtp-dev libsofia-sip-ua-dev libglib2.0-dev \
libopus-dev libogg-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.3-dev \
libconfig-dev pkg-config gengetopt libtool automake
For some reason installation of nice using the answer from Frank, Ahmet or Zallfire doesn't work in Ubuntu. It has to be installed using aptitude.
You should download libnice source code to install.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libnice/libnice
You need the development libnice.
yum install libnice-devel
I am trying to build OpenJpeg on an AWS Amazon Linux EC2 instance. I installed cmake and gcc and had no issues during installation. When I try to cmake openjpeg I get the following error:
-- Check if the system is big endian
-- Searching 16 bit integer
CMake Error at /usr/share/cmake/Modules/TestBigEndian.cmake:44 (message):
no suitable type found
Call Stack (most recent call first):
CMakeLists.txt:164 (TEST_BIG_ENDIAN)
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
Checking the error logs it seems CMake is unable to determine the size of integers, shorts and longs. The full error log can be found in this gist
How can I work this out and make CMake work?
Amazon has a guide: Preparing to Compile Software, which proposes the following command to install a C compiler.
sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
Next, you can download and build Cmake yourself: Install Cmake 3.
wget https://cmake.org/files/v3.18/cmake-3.18.0.tar.gz
tar -xvzf cmake-3.18.0.tar.gz
cd cmake-3.18.0
./bootstrap
make
sudo make install
Note: the last make actually needs sudo.
This works in the most recent Amazon Linux image (Nov 2021):
# Install sudo, wget and openssl, which is required for building CMake
yum install sudo wget openssl-devel -y
# Install development tools
sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools" -y
# Download, build and install cmake
wget https://cmake.org/files/v3.18/cmake-3.18.0.tar.gz
tar -xvzf cmake-3.18.0.tar.gz
cd cmake-3.18.0
./bootstrap
make
sudo make install
Though this does not actually answer why the error was happening but I was able to build OpenJpeg by building CMake from source. So I just removed Cmake which was installed via yum and I believe was 2.8.12. Downloaded the latest CMake3 sources (v 3.10) built Cmake and openjpeg and all my other packages with no issues.
You could try to set up a Docker container to replicate correct environment. This way, you could form a container on your local machine, make sure it all builds on the container environment, and later use this environment on the EC2.
There is a project on Github that provides a Docker image which can be used to compile for Lambda and test stuff locally. Have a look: https://github.com/lambci/docker-lambda
I'm trying to put together a Travis CI script for my application, which requires CMake 3.5 or greater. The entire Travis script can be found here. Following advice I found elsewhere, I use the following to install CMake:
install:
- DEPS_DIR="${TRAVIS_BUILD_DIR}/deps"
- mkdir -p ${DEPS_DIR} && cd ${DEPS_DIR}
- if [[ "$TRAVIS_OS_NAME" == "linux" ]]; then
CMAKE_URL="https://cmake.org/files/v3.7/cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz";
mkdir cmake && travis_retry wget --no-check-certificate --quiet -O - ${CMAKE_URL} | tar --strip-components=1 -xz -C cmake;
export PATH=${DEPS_DIR}/cmake/bin:${PATH};
else
brew outdated cmake || brew upgrade cmake;
fi
- cmake --version
Then I fill out the build matrix with various OS/compiler combinations, and finally I run a Python installation script (see here):
before_script:
- cd "${TRAVIS_BUILD_DIR}"
script:
- ./install.py --compiler=$COMPILER
The Python script essentially just calls cmake and make, the first CMakeLists.txt can be found here.
The OSX builds which install CMake using Homebrew works perfectly. However, all of the Linux builds fail at the script stage due to CMake not meeting the minimum requirement:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:1 (cmake_minimum_required):
CMake 3.5 or higher is required. You are running version 3.2.2
Even though CMake 3.7 was successfully installed during install:
$ cmake --version
cmake version 3.7.2
What am I doing wrong?
This is strange, the preinstalled version of CMake (= v3.2 on Travis) is used instead of the newer one – but only when called from Python.
You can try these:
Solution 1: Remove the CMake shipped by Travis
This will prevent the usage of the older version. If this doesn't work (eg. maybe because "Cmake isn't found"), this will show the actual reason of the problem.
You can add this to your linux branch of the install step:
sudo apt-get purge cmake
Or:
sudo apt-get remove cmake
(Possible you need to add -y for confirmation, so it becomes remove -y).
Solution 2: Use the CMake installer
Installation through the CMake Installer is a much cleaner way. It turned out the be the faster one on Travis btw.
...
- if [[ "$TRAVIS_OS_NAME" == "linux" ]]; then
CMAKE_INSTALLER=install-cmake.sh
curl -sSL https://cmake.org/files/v3.7/cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.sh -o ${CMAKE_INSTALLER}
chmod +x ${CMAKE_INSTALLER}
sudo ./${CMAKE_INSTALLER} --prefix=/usr/local --skip-license
else
...
I'm using curl instead of wget + travis_retry, but this doesn't matter. You can still use them as before.
If both don't work, you should check where the Python script looks for executables.
I tried to use pip install, but it tells cannot find such package.
I also see someone say we can use brew and nodejs to install. This is what I tried to install brew
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
It returns that ruby doesn't found.
I have no idea about nodejs.
Anyone knows how can I install PhantomJS in the server?
Meet npm!
Npm stands for Node Package Manager.
You can install packages for using them from the CLI or from your nodejs app.
You can install NPM from here.
If node isn't installed yet, you can use NVM, which makes it really easy -
$ curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.2/install.sh | bash
For your question,
See this specific package.
You can install it via:
$ npm install phantomjs-prebuilt
And then you should be able to: $ bin/phantomjs [phantom arguments] to run phantomJS from the terminal.
PhantomJS is a standalone application with its own website which has binaries for all major platforms and documentation. You don't really need pip or npm or bundler to install it, just do it manually.
Go to http://phantomjs.org/download.html
Choose the appropriate binary (Linux x32 x64 / OSX / Windows), download archive, extract it and run the binary.
For example you have a x64 Linux distribution.
Log in to your server via ssh.
Go to your home directory:
cd ~
Download PhantomJS binary:
wget https://bitbucket.org/ariya/phantomjs/downloads/phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2
Extract archive:
tar xvf phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2
A new directory is created: phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64. The PhantomJS binary is phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64/bin/phantomjs. You can run it right now:
~/phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64/bin/phantomjs --version
2.1.1
(If it says "not found " instead that means you chose the wrong distribution, e.g. x64 instead of x32).
But this way of running it is inconvenient. It would be way better to be able to just type phantomjs script.js in any directory. To make it so add a link to a directory where binaries are kept by default:
sudo ln -s ~/phantomjs-2.1.1-linux-x86_64/bin/phantomjs /usr/bin/phantomjs
Then you can call PhantomJS from anywhere:
cd /var/www/
phantomjs --version
2.1.1
I am running an autogen.sh script under MSYS 2.
I installed all requested packages so far, but
checking for glib-gettext >= 2.2.0...
testing glib-gettextize... not found.
I don't get.
A package named glib-getext doesn't exist.
I run:
pacman -S glib2
but without success.
I also run:
$ pacman -S gettext
in hope that would solve my problem, but it doesn't.
What should I do with glib-gettext?
The solution is
pacman -S glib2-devel