Hi I am trying to install meteor with choco using
choco install meteor
And I understand it will install in C:\Users\yourUserName\AppData\Local\.meteor\.
Is there a way to install directly to different folder. Or once installed is it good to move to different folder ?
Thanks in advance !
As for now meteor isn't giving an option to install on a different location. In these two issue (a, b) you can read more.
This is the bottom line from abernix:
As to your request, while using a global install shared by multiple users might seem nice in some aspects, it would cause permissions issues for many users who might not be able to install things outside their home directory. Meteor has no global configuration which would allow the location of the .meteor directory to be set, but you are welcome to move the Meteor installation wherever you would like, but currently, the .meteor directory does need to be in the home directory, and we currently have no intentions to re-work that, mainly as we start make considerations for a full transition to npm, which would solve this.
If you find something else I would like to know as well.
Related
I'm having issues getting some modules to install. I've been able to get mod-1v1-arena and mod-npc-free-professions working, but I haven't been able to get these other modules to work:
mod-new-character-perks
mod-learn-spells
mod-quick-teleport
Can someone please confirm I have the correct workflow, or advise on what steps I'm missing.
Clone module folder from git to .\azerothcore-wotlk\modules
Run Git CLI: ./acore.sh docker build
Copy mod_learnspells.conf to .\azerothcore-wotlk\env\docker\etc\modules
I see instructions about rebuilding with CMake, is that necessary if I'm using docker build...? I tried CMake too and I got an error immediately with the software setup, so haven't pursued it further.
I'm also a bit confused by the .conf files, which folder does the server read them from?
.\azerothcore-wotlk\env\docker\etc\modules or .\azerothcore-wotlk\modules\mod-learn-spells\conf
I would try to install without any modules to check for the core stability and then work up from there one by one.
This way, if there's a module that's currently not working due to recent PR's like the Autobalance and possibly mod-learn-spells you can report an issue and work without it until It's back up.
AzerothCore Continuous Integration build with modules is currently failing aswell if you check the Readme notes where it says
Background
I suddenly started getting a Meteor error:
~/.meteor/packages/meteor-tool/.1.4.0-1.1b1o7uq++os.osx.x86_64+web.browser+web.cordova/mt-os.osx.x86_64/dev_bundle/lib/node_modules/fibers/bin/darwin-x64-v8-4.5/fibers.node is missing. Try reinstalling node-fibers?`
After extensive searching, I came to the conclusion that there isn't a known, straight-forward solution to this problem.
Possible Solution
I created a new Meteor project and that works. This is because it is at the latest version of Meteor, and fibers.node is properly installed in the 1.6 (latest version) directory.
The best solution looks to be removing my live project directory and recreating it with the same name (at Meteor's latest version) and then retrieving all the packages, settings and files (HTML, JS, CSS)
Question
What is the best way to do this so that:
I preserve all the packages that I have installed (there are many)
I preserve all the custom settings that have changed from default
I am able to bring all my files (I am assuming this will be simple copy of *.html, *.css and *.js from the original project)
I was able to resolve the error:
~/.meteor/packages/meteor-tool/.1.4.0-1.1b1o7uq++os.osx.x86_64+web.browser+web.cordova/mt-os.osx.x86_64/dev_bundle/lib/node_modules/fibers/bin/darwin-x64-v8-4.5/fibers.node is missing. Try reinstalling node-fibers?
so did not need to go down the reinstalling project path.
I followed the steps in the accepted answer on this thread:
How can I completely uninstall and then reinstall Meteor.js?
Specifically:
mv .meteor .meteor.bak
sudo rm /usr/local/bin/meteor
sudo chown -R $(whoami) ~/.npm/
curl https://install.meteor.com/ | sh
meteor --version -> This will pull the required package for the version your project is at.
I tried to create meteor web application, but meteor download missing package each time when I change my code, and it was unnecessary.
So, can I config it only runs at the first time?
Thanks!
Could you add the actual message on the package it tries to download? Anyway, there are two potential locations where meteor looks for packages that need to be installed.
This is which each Meteor application and it's using Meteor Atmosphere packages. You can find these at .meteor folder in your project root file called packages path ./meteor/packages
Other potential place is packages.json in project root. It exists if you have used npm install or meteor npm install within the project.
Deleting unnecessary packages from these files should do the trick.
When developing packages in RStudio.
By default RStudio assume your package directory is the project directory and it looks like that:
But you are allowed to point the package location to a subdirectory of the project directory and it looks like that:
This way you can have some part of your project files, kept in the root project directory, not included in the package. You don't need to set git ignore etc.
But if you want to add RStudio git repo features, you are not allowed to point your git repo in subdirectory, even if you have already created git repo in your package dir (not project dir) you cannot set it in RStudio. I'm stuck at:
Is there any way to enable git repo features in RStudio having git repository in the subdirectory of the RStudio project? Maybe some .Rproj config tweaks?
Very good question. I've experienced the same trouble and it also does not go away with the latest pre-test release. So there's likely no super quick solution to this inside rstudio. Though it might be worth a feature request.
Personally I use the console / git bash with git and rstudio. That is I create a project inside R studio and manually run git init outside rstudio. Also I add, commit, merge, push and pull outside rstudio. If you don't like to manage git via console there's https://windows.github.com/ and https://mac.github.com/ also the folks at Atlassian provide some GUI tool called source tree: https://www.atlassian.com/software/sourcetree/overview
Plus there are many others, like Tortoise Git which I haven't tested, but I think R Studio's current git support is fine for simple things, but a git tool (console or gui) is definitely the way to go if you want to be more flexible.
That being said, sublime text edit is a powerful and easy to hack and customizable text editor which also has quite some packages to extend it. It's not entirely free but sometimes it's a nice supplement to rstudio. And it has a cool resolve conflict package etc.
I am new to Plone and I am having trouble understanding how to install addons. I have read the documentation provided on their site, but I am still a bit confused.
The addon that I am trying to install is http://plone.org/products/uwosh.timeslot.
In the documentation, I see them using a something like cmd.exe, but I am not really sure what it is. Is it the python.exe located in the python folder?
Also, I am not clear if the addon that I wish to install is in an "egg" form.
Could someone please provide me with a detailed process for installation?
Thank you.
http://plone.org/documentation/kb/installing-add-ons-quick-how-to
Find, then edit your buildout.cfg file per instructions above to add the uwosh.timeslot egg.
Re-run bin/buildout (or bin\buildout on windows) from the main plone directory on the command-line (do not run from the bin directory as your current working directory).
Answering your other questions:
Yes, packages listed on PyPI.python.org are "eggs" in the sense that you install them as eggs in buildout, not classic "Products".
cmd.exe is MS Windows command-line, assuming you are using Windows, not Unix.
This is only useful if you know where your Plone installation is located on disk -- you should.