I'd like to install the pymongo library but I'm getting the following error:
(C:\Users\xxxxxxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3) C:\Users\xxxxxxx>
conda install -c anaconda pymongo
Fetching package metadata ...
CondaHTTPError: HTTP 000 CONNECTION FAILED for url <https://conda.anaconda.org/a
naconda/win-64/repodata.json>
Elapsed: -
An HTTP error occurred when trying to retrieve this URL.
HTTP errors are often intermittent, and a simple retry will get you on your way.
ConnectTimeout(MaxRetryError("HTTPSConnectionPool(host='conda.anaconda.org', por
t=443): Max retries exceeded with url: /anaconda/win-64/repodata.json (Caused by
ConnectTimeoutError(<urllib3.connection.VerifiedHTTPSConnection object at 0x000
00000054D6128>, 'Connection to conda.anaconda.org timed out. (connect timeout=9.
15)'))",),)
Steps taken to resolve:
1. Update C:\Users\\xxxxxxx\.condarc file with the following:
channels:
- defaults
ssl_verify: false
proxy_servers:
http: http://sproxy.fg.xxx.com:1000
https: https://sproxy.fg.xxx.com:1000
2. (C:\Users\xxxxxxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3) C:\Users\xxxxxxx>
conda config --set ssl_verify False
Additional Info:
(C:\Users\xxxxxxx\AppData\Local\Continuum\anaconda3) C:\Users\xxxxxxx>
conda info
Current conda install:
platform : win-64
conda version : 4.3.27
conda is private : False
conda-env version : 4.3.27
conda-build version : 3.0.22
python version : 3.6.2.final.0
requests version : 2.18.4
config file : C:\Users\xxxxxxx\.condarc
netrc file : None
offline mode : False
user-agent : conda/4.3.27 requests/2.18.4 CPython/3.6.2 Windows/7 W
indows/6.1.7601
administrator : False
A number of posts online simply reinstalled Anaconda, any other options apart from a fresh install?
This works a charm:-
Just copy these:-
libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll
libssl-1_1-x64.dll
from D:\Anaconda3\Library\bin to D:\Anaconda3\DLLs.
Execute the following command in the cmd prompt/terminal:
conda config --set ssl_verify no
I try to create a virtual env with python 2.7 with anaconda, the base env is python 3.7. I encounter the exactly same problem. It turns out that there isn't such problem with other virtual envs with python 3.7 or 3.6.
This post works perfectly to solve my problem on win7 with anaconda prompt.
It basically says you need to add the following directories into your user environment path in windows (go to Start and type in: View Advanced System Settings, then select Environmental Variables: then select Path and click Edit: finally you can click New and add a path):
C:\your_directory_to_anaconda3\Anaconda3\Scripts
C:\your_directory_to_anaconda3\Anaconda3\
C:\your_directory_to_anaconda3\Anaconda3\Library\bin -- This is the directory for openssl
If you added conda to your PATH variables, remove it and use the "Anaconda Prompt". This solved the problem for me.
See: https://github.com/conda/conda/issues/8046#issuecomment-450582208
I faced this issue when I tried to create environment. I solved it by first activating conda base environment by using:
conda activate base
then I created the environment
conda create -n myenv python=3.7
Check the proxy URL
Verify .condarc file
For me, the problem was with the indentation in the .condarc file.
proxy_servers:
http: http://testproxy:8080
https: https://testproxy:8080
My authenticated proxy server is configured with a domain whitelist for massive and repeated downloads so root or local sudoer doesn't need to be authenticated.
Adding conda.anaconda.org is not enough as this repo redirect its traffic to amazonaws.com.
In my case, adding ".amazonaws.com" to the whitelist solved the issue.
The issue was resolved by adding a username and password to file C:\Users\xxxxx.condarc
channels:
- defaults
ssl_verify: false
proxy_servers:
http: http://xxxxx:password#sproxy.fg.abc.com:yyyy
https: https://xxxxx:password#sproxy.fg.abc.com:yyyy
I had the same problem on Windows 10-64 bit and intuitively installed the 64-bit version of miniconda. However, it results in exactly the same error above. Installing 32 bit conda installer has resolved the issue
Before installing some package (pydicom) the installation run just fine. After
it I tried to install matplotlib, but I got the same error as yours.
I tried conda config --set ssl_verify no but it didn't solve the problem so I set it again to true.
Fortunately, I had a virtual environment where I installed my packages. I closed all Anaconda prompts and tried in a new test environment. Magically, the install worked. I came back to my original virtual env and run the install again, and it worked!.
It might be that I just had to wait for some time before I could use conda install again.
One other thing I could do is remove the package that caused the problem, but I didn't have the chance to try it. If it has anything to do with some virtual environments not being affected, then one possible way to guard against this is to clone the environment before installing any new package.
Edit: I tried the same solution but It did not work. But instead of showing the error immediately, it asks me whether I want to proceed. I deactivated the env, and re-opened anaconda prompt, then did the same steps as above and worked again.
I also had the Same Issue, I resolved by installing 32 bit Anaconda Installer.
Which resolved the CondaHTTPError: HTTP 000 CONNECTION, on Windows 64 bit.
I faced this issues after "conda clean -a" on win-64.
Activating and deactivating existing conda env resolved the issue.
You might need to upgrade your openssl installation
You can download it here (Try the latest version):
https://slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html
Source:
https://github.com/ContinuumIO/anaconda-issues/issues/6424#issuecomment-464660808
My issue was simply not running the conda init command prior to attempting to create an environment.
Came across the CondaHTTP Connection error after installing Anaconda environment on a new Windows 10 computer. I tried virtually all the recommendations above unsuccessfully! Looking up the Anaconda archives ( https://repo.continuum.io/archive/ ), I downloaded the immediate previous release .... and on installation and rebooting my PC, all is now wellscreenshot of release
In short - installing Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio solved my problem.
In more detail: upon trying a suggested solution of installing a new version of OpenSSL, the installation process told me I was missing a dependency - the Visual Studio Redistributable package. The installer led me to a direct download page of the 2017 version. I can't find that page now, but the official release of 2019 can be found here, and should work as well (found under Other Tools and Frameworks).
Uninstalling and reinstalling anaconda for all users (instead, of current user only, requires admin privileges) and activating the option to add Anaconda to PATH during the installation process, fixed the issues for me.
Thank you everyone for your responses. In my case, I found out that my Kaspersky Internet Security was blocking it the whole time. The moment I quit the application all applications were downloaded. Please check your firewall settings before trying all the above options.
I tried all of these solutions and none worked for me. After running the command
conda config --remove-key channels
in the Anaconda Prompt, everything started working for me on my next attempt.
Adding that I had the same problem on ubuntu on WSL. None of the solutions worked for me, until I realized I was working on WSL version 1 (I thought I'd already upgraded). Upgrading from WSL 1 to WSL 2 solved the problem for me.
Running following these two commands worked for me.
conda config --remove-key proxy_servers
conda clean --source-cache
I'd tried all of the advice on this and many other webpages.
In the end I broadcast a "help me Obiwan Kenobi, you're my only hope message" to a large group of people at work and one of them who used python all the time was able to help me
The trick was to set several windows environmental variables
CURL_CA_BUNDLE
REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE
SSL_CERT_FILE
To my company's root certificate (a .cer or .crt) which I had downloaded to a spot on my disk
You may also need to add (in my case)
C:\Users\kdalbey\Anaconda3\Scripts
(or your particular \Anaconda3\Scripts) to your path.
And then I set proxies just for good measure
note I previously copied libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll, libcrypto-1_1-x64.pdb, libssl-1_1-x64.dll, libssl-1_1-x64.pdb from anaconda3\Library\bin to anaconda3\DLLs so that could be part of the secret sauce
and it didn't work until I killed and restarted anaconda-navigator
Two steps to deal with this error.
The Anaconda prompt configures the path, to include all the necessary executable files (for instance Library\bin - On Windows, launch it with admin permission). So that you need to use it to execute conda :
Update conda with conda update conda
Exit my proxy software which solved the issue.
I would like summarize some of the proposed answers in this post and propose my experience on that. As it can be understood from the error explanation, the error is related to the connection and I strongly believe that no need to uninstall and reinstall anything if the real cause of the problem be known. My problem gone away after the system powered off and powered on again one day later. So, some possible causes and their solutions (these solutions could be tested in order based on the written bulleted order) could be as follows:
Crash in anaconda prompt:
Probable solutions:
Deactivating and activating the environment, without removing all packages or …, or
Closing/reopening the prompt (Michael Heidelberg) or
Using cmd.exe instead, perhaps
Non-responsiveness of the anaconda site:
Massive site traffics related probable issues, that could be the reason of non-responsiveness or to temporary block some IPs
Probable solutions:
Retying as recommended in the error: HTTP errors are often intermittent, and a simple retry will get you on your way. It solves my problem sometimes. or
Activate or deactivate VPNs or Proxies (like use in .condarc; see: Github sroder, Nandhan Thiravia, Vinod Sangale, Peter Lucas, Sunding Wei).
Try after a while if you have time
System firewall block the site:
That might be happened by activating and deactivating of VPNs, repeatedly or by some other works
Probable solutions:
Finding the issue in system firewall and allowing the connection in the firewall settings (ScienceJedi, Github)
Reboot, perhaps
If the aforementioned ways didn't solve the problem, testing the related answers in the following order:
Add ...\Anaconda3\Scripts, ...\Anaconda3\, and ...\Anaconda3\Library\bin to the path (talentcat, skerjj, Victor Ochieng, jankap), perhaps need a reboot after (lightarrow)
Copying libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll and libssl-1_1-x64.dll from D:\Anaconda3\Library\bin into D:\Anaconda3\DLLs (Swapnil)
I think it could be used in the first step because It is unlikely to be cause of any other problem. The reason I didn't mention this at the beginning is that the developers could placed these files in that directory during installation, too, in default, but they didn't; perhaps it had some reasons (Github).
Note: these files are for Python >3, and I didn't find them for Python 2. Perhaps they have another names.
It must be said that my problem didn't solve by this solution.
Keep your SSL stack up-to-date (kamal dua, Anaconda troubleshooting, update openssl, Abdulrahman Bres, Update to openssl 1.1.1)
I didn't recommend it at first because Its not a good idea to unset ssl verification unless you know what you are doing (Pratyush comment) and somewhere I read that it couldn't return to True again.
It must be said that my problem didn't solve by this solution, too.
conda config --set ssl_verify false
conda update openssl ca-certificates certifi
I am using an Rstudio Server (0.98.490) on a CentOS machine, that uses the default installation in the machine which is an older version of R. I also have a newer version of R compiled elsewhere in the system. Can I, as a non-root user, tell Rstudio to use the new installation instead of the old one when I start a session?
I'm not sure if there are any peculiarities for CentOS, but I believe you should be able to change your ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile file to include the following line: export RSTUDIO_WHICH_R=/path/to/desired/compiled/R.
You can see which version of R RStudio is currently running by entering which R into a terminal. the export command listed above should change it to your desired build.
These links might help:
https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/200486138-Using-Different-Versions-of-R
Running newer version of R from terminal when older version is invoked by default
Hope this helps
The first answer was relevant RStudio, not rstudio-server as the question asks. The question is addressed in the section "RStudio Desktop and RStudio Server Open-Source".
However, adding a line like export RSTUDIO_WHICH_R=/usr/local/bin/R to my ~/.profile and ~/.bash_profile does not actually seem to affect rstudio-server for me. So I am giving up for now. The Pro version seems to have other options, as listed here.
Starting in RStudio Server 1.3 (newest version is 1.4.1106, released February 22, 2021), a user’s preferred version of R can be specified in the rstudio-prefs.json file in the global-level /etc/rstudio folder or in the user-level ~/.config/rstudio folder.
See https://blog.rstudio.com/2020/02/18/rstudio-1-3-preview-configuration/ and https://docs.rstudio.com/ide/server-pro/session-user-settings.html for user setting options in newer versions of RStudio Server.
See https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/200716783-RStudio-Release-History for RStudio release history and https://www.rstudio.com/products/rstudio/download-server/redhat-centos/ for Red Hat downloads of the newest version of RStudio Server.
I completely uninstalled R Framework and R Studio from my Mac.
I moved the applications to trash, and also in terminal ran the following:
sudo rm -rf /Library/Frameworks/R.framework /Applications/R.app \
/usr/bin/R /usr/bin/Rscript
I then downloaded brand new (latest versions) of R and R Studio and installed them.
When I open R Studio again after re-installing, I expect a blank, new, default environment but instead all my tabs (open R and Rmd files) are still present and open in R Studio.
How can this be??
Also, the bug I'm trying to resolve with one of my packages is still persisting
I am using RStudio 0.99.489 on a Linux machine, and for me RStudio automatically saves user settings to ~/.rstudio-desktop, for example holding:
history: ~/.rstudio-desktop/history_database
files pane settings: pcs/files-pane.pper
Since user settings were not deleted then of course the next time you re-installed RStudio, RStudio follows these histories, pane settings etc again.
To have a completely default appearance, be sure you quit RStudio first, then delete it like:
$ rm -r ~/.rstudio-desktop
Then start RStudio and it should appear with the default appearance.
I removed all environment objects, cleared the workspace, uninstalled R Framework and R Studio, and restarted my computer. This seemed to fix the issue.
I think clearing the workspace was the key after trying a re-install several times.
$ rm -r ~/.rstudio-desktop as the other answer suggests is good to try as well.
I am using ubuntu 13.10 (32 bit) and wkhtmltopdf 0.12.2.1. While printing the reports as pdf in odoo, footer is missing. How could i solve the problem?
I had the same problem. There is a related issue on github:
https://github.com/odoo/odoo/issues/2907
downgrade the version to 0.12.0 worked for me.
This is what I did:
downloaded previous version from (note the underscore in http. Stack overflow only allows me 1 link): h_ttp://ufpr.dl.sourceforge.net/project/wkhtmltopdf/archive/0.12.0/wkhtmltox-linux-amd64_0.12.0-03c001d.tar.xz
unzip the file: tar Jxf wkhtmltox-linux-amd64_0.12.0-03c001d.tar.xz
replace existing the files in /usr/local/lib/ and /usr/local/bin/ folders with the previous version
Now wkhtmltopdf -V is:
Name:
wkhtmltopdf 0.12.0 03c001de254b857f08eba80b62d4b6490ffed41d
License:
Copyright (C) 2010 wkhtmltopdf/wkhtmltoimage Authors.
License LGPLv3+: GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 or later
http://gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html. This is free software: you are free to
change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by
law.
Authors:
Written by Jan Habermann, Christian Sciberras and Jakob Truelsen. Patches by
Mehdi Abbad, Lyes Amazouz, Pascal Bach, Emmanuel Bouthenot, Benoit Garret > > and
Mário Silva.
Compiled against wkhtmltopdf patched qt.
I hope this help you
First you have to check which version of wkhtmltopdf 0.12.2.1 is installed in your system
Enter the Below command From the Terminal some think like
wkhtmltopdf -V
that gives us the version and the wkhtmltopdf 0.12.2.1
if it fine then uninstalled that packages from the terminal and reinstall it again
other wise install a new one from the below link based on system requirement
Click To download wkhtmltopdf package hear
and restart the server and upgrade the Report Module and Print the Report
I had similar problem and the solution with wkhtmltopdf didn't work for me.
What helped me was creating report.url with http://0.0.0.0:8069/ in settings/technical/parameters - as soon as I created this, the footer showed up.
You can check this Report formatting not working in Odoo 8 Qweb Reports
I had same issue today and the problem was that
web.base.url
was defined with different value thаn my current port.
Ex: It was 127.0.0.1:8079 and my localhost port for odoo is 8069. After changing the port the issue has gone.