I am running a Django Project in PyCharm and deploying it to EC2 in AWS. The guide tells me to use nginx I have to create a file called nginx_someName.conf however no matter how much I try I can't get create a .conf file and write in it. I tried to download Scala to Pycharm using the question below IntelliJ IDEA plugin to fold .conf files? but somehow the Scala plugin is no longer available on Pycharm. (Scala was supposed to be a plugin that allows .conf files)
However I am able to create .config files So I named my file nginx_someName.config Is it the same thing
Image below in relation to #yole's solution
Following #yole's advise related image Reached here now..
Click this button as shown on the screenshot:
use .ini instead .conf in pycharm for configuration best answer I can come up with for now
create a new file with .ini
Related
How can I generate .war file from web app containing just HTML, CSS & JavaScript?
Is there any way to do that using webstorm?
I think IntelliJ has a way of doing it but Webstorm doesn't.
http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/webhelp/configuring-web-application-deployment.html
However if you have Java SDK installed and environment variables set for it you can create .war files from the command line. Just navigate to your project area and use the command
jar -cvf myApplication.war myApplicationFolderName
Hope this helps
Maybe you can configure a grunt file and make a war task
https://www.npmjs.com/package/grunt-war
the good thing about this is that you will be independent from the IDE or editor you're using.
In practical terms, it worked for me
I want to create a setup for an existent .exe file. This file needs some .ocx and .dll files to run correctly. So this mentioned setup should paste these all files in a specified path and then run the .exe file.
I have tried with installshield 2010 basic and InstallScript projects but i could not create some of dialogs in the format that i wanted.
Is there any way to create this setup? Or any one may help me to work with installshield?
You might find working with another setup program easier, try the NSIS (Nullsoft Scriptable Install System). It has a RegDLL function:
RegDLL "$WINDIR\OCX\vbalGrid6.ocx"
if you need that also.
the issue i am fighting through is a bit complicated. Ill explain the setup envoironment to you first.
I am using PHPStorm to work on a Symony2 Project.
My Apache is hosted on a Debian-VM connected to PHPStorm via "Deployment Tool".
/* So far: I can edit code and update the server automaticaly on save. Works*/
My problem now is, that i am using the composer, which is ment do get me the right bundles into the vendor folder.
I WANT to create kind of a symlink from the server directly into the project.
I DONT WANT to download the vendor folder from the server hard into the project.
COMPACT:
I want to create a symbolic link within a PHPStorm project. Linking a folder from a server into the Project. The linked in folder should be unidirectional updated on source change. The Classes and Namespaces should be known to the Project.
Is there any native way to get this done?
Or does anyone know a plugin which could handle such affairs?
I hope i expressed my point clearly :/ Please ask, if anything is unclear.
Greetings and thanks upfront.
It's not possible to do directly from PhpStorm, see the related issue. You can use some third-party tool like ExpanDrive to map a server directory to the drive letter by SFTP and then add this local directory as a content root to your PhpStorm project. Note that it may affect the performance dramatically.
I'm using QWebView to run a web app. There are 650+ files. Placing the web app's directory in the source directory does not result in the executable bundling the directory.
How do I include the entire web app directory so that the executable will be able to render the files.
Note: I have currently added index.html as a resource, and can access it with qrc:// - But since I cannot add the entire directory structure to a qrc (can I?), the executable does not include the other files.
You need to put an XML node into the .qrc file for each file you want to use using the Qt resource system.
This can be done using a simple pre-build script. Take a look at qrcgen. Quoting the blog post behind this link:
The script I created, qrcgen, takes a directory and a prefix, recursively scans the directory and generates a .qrc file with the same name as the directory scanned. It has solved my problem, and I hope it can help others. It is also available via PyPI, just "easy_install qrcgen".
In order to update the .qrc file whenever your directory contens change, you need to include this step into your build process:
For C++/Qt projects, you can add this step in the build configuration in QtCreator or add in your qmake file a system(...) statement. Note that such commands aren't portable in general. (If it's not portable, you can put some operating system conditions around multiple commands.)
For PyQt/PySide projects, I don't know how to do this, but I'm sure you find a solution for this too.
Using a Visual Studio 2010 ASP.net web application, I have several projects that share some JavaScript/css files. The most logical way for them to share these files is to place the files in a single folder and each project has them included with the "Add as Link" option. However, if I add the files this way when I'm debugging using either the Visual Studio Development server or debugging using a local IIS web server all requests for these files return 404 Not Found errors. If I publish the site then the files are copied but that obviously doesn't help with debugging.
Is there something I'm missing or is this a failing on VS's part?
To overcome this problem some time ago I created a 'MSBuild.WebApplication.CopyContentLinkedFiles' nuget package. This package adds MsBuild target which copies all content files added as link to project folder during build.
Note: if you use source control then it is better to add copied files (from Web Application folder) to ignore list.
I wouldn't really call that a failing, since you asked for that behavior in the first place: linked items in Visual Studio projects are actual links to external files. Those files can reside anywhere on the disk and are not copied into the project folder.
You might want to copy those files locally yourself during a pre-build event. That way, the files will remain synchronized and you won't duplicate them until your first compile.
The problem seems to be that the website runs right from your source folders, rather than from the bin folder. This means that the file will be missing, whether or not it is copied to the output folder.
It's probable that running from a local or remote web server would not have this problem, though I didn't get that working, and I'd rather not add IIS to my local machine if I don't have to.
Adding a pre-build copy command did work. Note that the current directory will be the bin folder. (You can use cd to echo the current directory to the build window if you want to see it):
If the file is in another solution, your command will look something like (three ..s: one to get out of each of bin, project, and solution folders):
copy ..\..\..\OtherSolution\OtherProject\Scripts\MyJSFile.js ..\Scripts\
If it's in the same solution, but a different project:
copy ..\..\OtherProject\Scripts\MyJSFile.js ..\Scripts
One minor issue is that the link to the file will collide with the new copy of the file, even if you don't add it to your project. As long as you make the link first, it seems to work. If you copied the file first, you'll have to manually delete the copy, and then refresh the solution explorer before before being able to add the link.
Select the link in Solution Explorer and then look at properties window and set Copy To Output Directory to Copy Always. Linked items are set to Do Not Copy by default.
BTW, you can copy many files as links very easily directly from Solution Explorer when using VSCommands 2010 extension.
See this blog post about a simple addition to your project file.
http://mattperdeck.com/post/Copying-linked-content-files-at-each-build-using-MSBuild.aspx