Help install the eisenvault-esign module.
I tried to install files
"eisenvault-esign/ev-esign-repo/target/ev-esign-repo-1.0-SNAPSHOT.amp"
in the "\amps" folder
and
"eisenvault-esign/ev-esign-share/target/ev-esign-share-1.0-SNAPSHOT.amp"
in the "\amps_share" folder
But when you start apply_amps.bat module is not installed.
Alfresco version 5.2
Below is the execution process.
When you run apply_amps.sh you need to pass in the -force flag because the module you are trying to install overwrites shipped libraries as indicated by your console screenshot.
You should also file an issue with the owner of that project to ask them to adjust their AMPs so that they can be installed without the force flag.
Related
Because I use the Netlify CLI tools on travis, I need to have a node version above 8 but the R container I use only has 6.12 according to the error message. I saw that it is possible to specify the node version for java script projects and there is an answer for PHP projects here on StackOverflow, but I tried both and they did not work for my case. What is the proper way of installing a specific node version in an arbitrary travis container such that other applications can access it ? Or maybe even better, (how) can I make npm satisfy the minimal version dependency on node when installing the Netlify CLI tools? I have no prior experience with npm. You can find the version history of my .travis file here.
To install Netlify CLI, make sure you have Node.js version 8 or higher
Based on the docs for Netlify here
Quickest solution for Travis
Optionally, your repository can contain a .nvmrc file in the repository root to specify which single version of Node.js to run your tests against.
The quote from the docs say to add a .nvmrc file to your project at the root with the version
.nvmrc
8.14.0
Note: replace the version with the one compatible with your project that meets all requirements. Also, the .nvmrc file is only read when node_js key in your .travis.yml files does not specify a nodejs version.
Based on the solution provided by #talves, I figured out I can modify the before_script step to install a specific version of node, e.g. 8.14:
before_script:
- nvm install 8.14
- npm install -g netlify-cli
- Rscript -e 'blogdown::install_hugo()'
As nvm and npm were already installed. To install the latest stable release replace 8.14 with node above. That way, I don't need the .nvmrc file.
I have developed a composer laravel based project that I need to install on a remote production server. The problem is I have limited permission/ access so my option is to "archive" the package( using composer archive) and unpack on the production.
What folders do I need to archive and how can I ignore the dev dependencies of the package as well as vendor dev dependencies?
composer archive is likely not to help you, because this command creates an archive of a defined version of a package.
You probably want to upload the whole working application, and not only one package. You should create a little script that will create the archive file for you, which should do:
checkout the application from the repository in a new directory
run composer install --no-dev to install all required dependencies without dev-dependencies
optionally delete files that are not necessary on the server, like documentation, the .git folder, and other stuff
create the archive file from all these files
optionally upload that archive to the target server and unarchive there
optionally check basic functions and switch to the new uploaded version on the server
I'm working on a wordpress skeleton for practice. I've got a Composer project and installed the wp-cli/wp-cli dependency.
I want to create and run custom tasks with this wp-cli, for example to download the core of WordPress into this project. This because I'm not putting the core of wordpress into my git repository.
Because I have installed the wp-cli/wp-cli dependency only in my project and not globally over my local machine, I can't run the wp ... commands a normal terminal.
For my own research, I found out that I can use the Command Line Tool Support plugin in my IntelliJ IDE. With this plugin I can use the composer dependency to run commands with the wp-cli. I don't think this is the right solution, because everyone might have a different IDE and/or operating system.
How can I run wp-cli commands over the installation over Composer?
Instead of running commands with /vendor/bin/wp ..... I found out I have to replace the / with a \.
To run commands from this binary, this syntax should be used like:
vendor\bin\wp ...
I'm trying to manage my remote shared hosting WordPress installation via WP-CLI installed on my local Windows machine. So far I have managed to install WP-CLI (The "WP" command is available to run).
But when I try and connect to a remote URL with "wp --http", I get the following messsage:
RESTful WP-CLI needs to be installed. Try 'wp package install wp-cli/restful'
So I run the suggested command and I get:
Composer directory for packages couldn't be created.
I hadn't installed via composer. Instead, I manually instaled PHP and then downloaded the "wp-cli.phar" file. So I tried to install composer on Windows, but couldn't make head or tail of what downloads where. I "think" I managed to install wp-cli, but couldn't see where it had installed the files...and it just didn't work out.
Do you guys know of a more straightforward way to do this?
Concerning the error: Composer directory for packages couldn't be created.
If you did not set the environment variable WP_CLI_PACKAGES_DIR the default is ~/.wp-cli/packages/ which works for Linux but not for Windows.
I set this variable and the command 'wp package install wp-cli/restful' now successfully creates the directory for packages and the composer.json file but still doesn't install wp-cli/restful.
So I used composer directly and it successfully installs wp-cli/restful.
If I use the parameter --http=me.local.com (which matches example in the documentation) I get the error "Couldn't auto-discover WP REST API endpoint from me.local.com.' However, if I change this to --http=me.local.com/wp-json it works. The actual command I used is:
wp --http=me.local.com/wp-json rest post list
So I am a new to doctrine, but I am not able to install a bundle at all. I am following the guide, but the "error" which I am getting is very unusual.
Anyhow, I add this lines into deps file:
[FOSRestBundle]
git=http://github.com/FriendsOfSymfony/FOSRestBundle.git
target=bundles/FOS/RestBundle
Then I do:
./bin/vendors install
And I get:
PHP Warning: PHP Startup: Unable to load dynamic library '/usr/lib/php5/20090626+lfs/sqlite.so' - /usr/lib/php5/20090626+lfs/sqlite.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory in Unknown on line 0
Your project seems to be based on a Standard Edition that includes vendors.
Try to run ./bin/vendors install --reinstall
So on this standard way I am not able to install it at all. Can somebody explain me what is the problem, because to me it looks like, the symfony vendors script doesnt recognize changes in deps file at all.
This happens when you've downloaded the Symfony2 Standard Edition from the website. The vendor install script checks to see if the vendor directories are git repositories, and if not, will throw this error. You can fix the situation in one of two ways:
you can either run the command that it suggests: php bin/vendors install --reinstall
or, you can remove the vendors directory, then run php bin/vendors install, which amounts to about the same thing
No need to install that. Just follow the steps in the url : http://mmoreramerino.github.com/GearmanBundle/installation.html