I have two PCs, ones that runs mac & the other ubuntu, I installed tizen sdk on both and it is working fine, however, as I'm trying to pull files from the tizen device I get an error message "SDB connection error", which means that my device is not rooted, so when I try to root it using sdb command on both mac & ubuntu I get that sdb command not found, even though I did navigate into the folder in which sdb exist, tizen-sdk/tools and execute the command, but still got the same massage.
what I'm doing wrong here?
Use the below step to get solved.
Step 1: open terminal
Step 2: write command $ nano ~/.bash_profile
Step 3: Paste the given below the code line to the bottom of and change <pc_user_name> to your PC name, then save it and exit.
export TIZEN_HOME=/Users/<pc_user_name>/tizen-studio
export PATH=${PATH}:/Users/<pc_user_name>/tizen-studio/tools
export PATH=${PATH}:/Users/<pc_user_name>/tizen-studio/tools/ide/bin
Step 4: write command $ source ~/.bash_profile
Step 5: $ sdb write command to sdb instruction
Either you can be going this path to find ./sdb and other write sdb command will work perfectly.
path: /Users/<pc_user_name>/tizen-studio/tools/sdb
There are a few things you can try to fix this.
Use the Connection explorer in SDK
The SDK provides a "Connection Explorer" view on the bottom left corner.
It provides an icon for pulling files from the device.
Your PATH variable might not be set properly.
On Ubuntu you can verify this using "export" and checking if your PATH variable points to /tizen-sdk/tools
(Note : This should be set typically during the SDK installation.)
Check your "command shell rc file (.bashrc) or your .profile files to check if PATH variable is being overridden.
One of these two should help you.
Let me know how it goes.
You have to export the Tizen path to the PATH variable
In your Ubuntu OS,
Open Home directory
Press CTRL+H
Open .bashrc file
Append the text at last of the file
export PATH=$PATH:/home/YOUR_PC_NAME/tizen-sdk/tools
Try now.
Related
So i was trying to install the XP Pen Driver for my Deco 01 v2 graphics tablet on my Linux Mint 19.2 Tina when i came to encounter the following error:
./Pentablet_Driver: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Core.so.5: version `Qt_5.10' not found (required by ./Pentablet_Driver)
I went on to install qt 5.10, still the same error. Others suggested to just change the path wth sudo gedit /etc/ld.so.conf.d/randomLibs.conf which didn't change a thing.
Link to drivers:
https://www.xp-pen.com/download-440.html
The manufacturer has a page describing how to set up their software on Linux with pictures. However, when following them, you end up with a folder name somewhere along the line that has spaces in it, which causes issues.
So a modified set of instructions might look like this:
Connect your XP-Pen product to the computer.
Download the Linux Beta driver from XP-Pen official website.
When the download is complete, extract the compressed folder.
Rename the extracted folder to something without spaces.
Inside the renamed folder is another compressed folder which should be extracted.
Inside the final extracted folder, ensure "Pentablet_Driver.sh" has execution permissions by right clicking on it and going to "Properties->Permissions" and verifying that "Allow executing file as program" is checked.
Open the terminal. (CTRL+ALT+T)
Type "sudo ", then drag Pentablet_Driver.sh from the file browser onto the terminal.
Type the password to complete.
Make sure that you write exactly
sudo ./Pentablet_Driver.sh
instead
sudo ./Pentablet_Driver
I had the same error until I noticed that I forgot to add .sh at the end.
So I upgraded Android SDK tools today and now I'm having a problem getting monkeyrunner to run. I did the standard which is (from the command prompt)
D:\Android\SDK\tools\bin\monkeyrunner.bat D:\ScriptName.py
Note 1: The directory of monkeyrunner.bat changed in this release, so I had to update my command line accordingly.
That fails with the message:
SWT Folder '..\framework\x86_64' does not exist.
I can fix that by editing monkeyrunner.bat and instead of having frameworkdir be set to 'lib' it gets set to '..\lib', the actual location of the monkey runner jar file.
However, when I implement this fix it then gives the error:
Cannot run program "..\framework\adb.exe" cannot find the file specified.
I'm kind of stuck here because no matter what I change in monkeyrunner.bat I get the same message, which indicates to me that the jar file has this directory hardcoded in it or something. It should probably be "....\platform-tools\adb.exe"
Any help would be appreciated.
-open monkeyrunner.bat in notepad
change set frameworkdir=. to set frameworkdir=..\lib everywhere
find the line call "%java_exe%" -Xmx512m "-Djava.ext.dirs=%frameworkdir%;%swt_path%" -Dcom.android.monkeyrunner.bindir= -jar %jarpath% %*
change the value of Dcom.android.monkeyrunner.bindir to the path of the folder containing adb.exe. Mine was under platform-tools
I followed the Software Collections Quick Start and I now have Python 3.5 installed. How can I make it always enabled in my ~/.bashrc, so that I do not have to enable it manually with scl enable rh-python35 bash?
Use the scl_source feature.
Create a new file in /etc/profile.d/ to enable your collection automatically on start up:
$ cat /etc/profile.d/enablepython35.sh
#!/bin/bash
source scl_source enable python35
See How can I make a Red Hat Software Collection persist after a reboot/logout? for background and details.
This answer would be helpful to those who have limited auth access on the server.
I had a similar problem for python3.5 in HostGator's shared hosting. Python3.5 had to be enabled every single damn time after login. Here are my 10 steps for the resolution:
Enable the python through scl script python_enable_3.5 or scl enable rh-python35 bash.
Verify that it's enabled by executing python3.5 --version. This should give you your python version.
Execute which python3.5 to get its path. In my case, it was /opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/bin/python3.5. You can use this path to get the version again (just to verify that this path is working for you.)
Awesome, now please exit out of the current shell of scl.
Now, lets get the version again through this complete python3.5 path /opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/bin/python3.5 --version.
It won't give you the version but an error. In my case, it was
/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/bin/python3.5: error while loading shared libraries: libpython3.5m.so.rh-python35-1.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
As mentioned in Tamas' answer, we gotta find that so file. locate doesn't work in shared hosting and you can't install that too.
Use the following command to find where that file is located:
find /opt/rh/rh-python35 -name "libpython3.5m.so.rh-python35-1.0"
Above command would print the complete path (second line) of the file once located. In my case, output was
find: `/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/root': Permission denied
/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/lib64/libpython3.5m.so.rh-python35-1.0
Here is the complete command for the python3.5 to work in such shared hosting which would give the version,
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/lib64 /opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/bin/python3.5 --version
Finally, for shorthand, append the following alias in your ~/.bashrc
alias python351='LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/lib64 /opt/rh/rh-python35/root/usr/bin/python3.5'
For verification, reload the .bashrc by source ~/.bashrc and execute python351 --version.
Well, there you go, now whenever you login again, you have got python351 to welcome you.
This is not just limited to python3.5, but can be helpful in case of other scl installed softwares.
I have an install.bat file and a resource folder. so long as these two files are in the same directory, if you run install.bat, it will install a my lwjgl game. so what im trying to do is make a self extracting file that when completed runs the launch.bat file. I have tried using iexpress, and got it working for the most part. i have added in all my files and such so it will extract to some directory and then i can run the install.bat file to get my program to work. thing is though, i want the exe i created with iexpress to launch install.bat when its finished. so, i tried using the option in iexpress that says it will execute a command when finished the "installation" (using quotes because its not the actual installation, just extracting the files to some directory specified by the user). when i get to the step where it says what i would like to execute during and after the "installation". during the installation i left blank. after the installation i chose the install.bat file. when i try to click next though, it tells me i must choose something for the command during the extraction. I don't have anything specific to do during the installation so i just said "echo." (without quotes). after i was done i tried running the installer. before it even prompted me for a folder to extract to, it told me that echo. could not be executed. so i went back into my installation (via a .sed file) and changed the "echo." to "pause". that didn't work either. i then read on another website that in order to run a file the way i would like to, i put the file name in both the during and after installation boxes. i tried doing that and it didn't work either. can anyone please help me?
If I understood your question correctly you will need to specify what the iexpress must do at the post install command option provided so that cmd.exe is used instead of command.com, eg:
cmd.exe /c filethatyouwanttorun.bat
Refer to the question: Create Batch file for iexpress.
You can use the SED file and then modify the self extraction directive. This will run the batch file that you wanted to run and then install the application. (If you have chosen the option to extract and run an installation in iexpress, a temp folder will be used for the extraction I suppose.)
I'm not sure I understand your question exactly but perhaps a few points would help:
If you want a "do nothing" command, you can use something like:
cmd /c echo.
There is no "command during the extraction". There's only an install program and a post install command. Both of these execute after extraction. If you only need to execute one batch file, put it in the install program line and leave the post install command blank.
You can't ask the user for an extraction path and execute a file. You can only do one or the other. (The install program could prompt the user and copy the files there, though.)
The documentation states that there is a command-line shell for sqlite3:
To start the sqlite3 program, just type "sqlite3" followed by the name the file that holds the SQLite database."
When I try this, in the Windows Command Prompt I get the error message:
'sqlite3' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
Windows explorer reveals several 'Sqlite3" folders in various places:
backends(C:/Python26/Lib/site-packages/django/db)
Lib(C:/Python26)
backends(C:/Django-1.1.1/Django-1.1.1/build/lib/django/db
backends(C:/Django-1.1.1/Django-1.1.1/django/db)
How do I access the shell, can anyone help?
Download sqlite3 binary for windows here. Unzip it and put it somewhere in your path.
That's the error message you get if you try to run any executable that's not in your current directory or in the path.
To correct the problem, find the SQLite executable (SQLITE3.EXE), and run it from the directory in which it resides, or add SQLITE3.EXE to your PATH environment variable.
You have to properly set your PATH environment variable to include one of the locations where sqlite3.exe resides. Usually SQLite seems to set that environment variable upon install but the list of paths where you found it indicates that it just came as a library for various other applications. Therefore it's not too surprising that the path isn't set.
I have sqlite3 on my machine, and as others have mentioned it must be located within a folder specified by your PATH environment variable. Since I use it a lot, I threw it in windows\system32, which is where I place a lot of utilities like pstools.