I have postgreSQL 9.5 installed on Windows. I've cloned pgAudit repository and tried to install but there is no dll file in this repository and I could not build it.
I am new to postgreSQL extensions, so anybody know the better way to do this? or what I have to do to install this extension?
The BigSQL distribution of postgreSQL comes with tools to install community extensions like pgAudit. See https://www.openscg.com/bigsql/docs/security/pgaudit for details.
Alternatively, you can follow the steps here to build the dll yourself. I have successfully used this method to create a working distribution with pgAudit.
Related
I am following this tutoriel to use C library in Kotlin (Android Studio) https://jonnyzzz.com/blog/2018/05/28/minimalistic-kn/ But I can’t find the how to install/download the cinterop tool both in Windows and Ubuntu I have the error “cinterop: command not found” ! Does anybody please knows how to install cinterop ? Thank you in advance
This tool is a part of the kotlin-native distribution, and it does not make any sense to use it without the Kotlin/Native compiler. So, in fact, you would like to get all the distribution here, and install it correctly.There are three main approaches to the Kotlin/Native installation. All of them are described in the documentation.
Installing it with the IntelliJ IDEA. You should just get an IDE and let it install everything on its own. It will download all tools and put them to the following location: ~/.konan/kotlin-native-prebuilt-<osName>-<kotlinVersion>/bin/. Then you will be able to add this folder to your PATH and call the tool from CLI.
Installing using the Gradle build system. Quite similar, but this one will require manual installation of the Gradle. The first run will also download all tools and pack them to the same location as in the IDE case.
Installing the CLI tool. This looks like the most appropriate way to follow the tutorial, but won't help a lot when you start working on more sophisticated projects. In general, you should just download the latest version of the Kotlin/Native, unpack it to some folder and add this folder to your PATH.
Using JBoss Studio and importing sample jboss-forge-html5-archetype. When you click next; shows that plugin AngularJS Eclipse needs to be installed. When I try Download and Install it fails. It says it is already installed.
Has anyone seen this issue before? Where does JBoss Studio keep it's log files? Where does JBOss Studio list it's plugins? How do you un-install a plugin?
Thanks!
Log files are stored the same way as plain Eclipse does. Check in your ~/devstudio/ folder for .log files, or check your workspace's folder for a .log file. Or check the Error Log view while running Devstudio.
To list installed plugins / features, from within Devstudio,select Help > About. You can also uninstall features (not plugins) from that dialog.
If a feature needed by a quick start is already installed then you shouldn't need to reinstall it... But maybe you need to update it?
What version of Devstudio are you running? Which OS & version? Which JDK vendor & version?
Im trying to listen to a directory for changes, then discovered java.nio.* was developed to handle efficiently such tasks and more. Then downloaded jdk1.7.0_02 from oracle and started eclipse with it. Then created new java project, tryed to implement some class from java.nio.file and Oh my eyes! "The import java.nio.file cannot be resolved".
Do i have to find some .jar in the whole jdk1.7.0_02 directory that contains such package? or is something wrong with my classpath?
Thank you in advance!!
You've different version of JDKs. You just need to set JDK7/JRE7 version eclipse project. You may also select the Execution environment JRE to JavaSE 7 while creating a new project.
The JDK your projects use to compile, the version of the resulting class files, the JRE they used to execute and the JDK eclipse runs with are widely independent settings.
The New I/0 is named as the NIO in javaSE 7.0 ("Dolphin").
The below link described as in details.
wiki - NIO
On my linux (Ubuntu 11.04) development machine. I often need to install libraries from source. This always causes problems for me because the package manager doesn't consider packages installed from source when it checks dependencies. This makes the package manager worthless to me since once I install one set of libs from source (especially if they are vital to the gnome environment i.e. gstreamer), I can never use it again without screwing up my entire distro with mixed dependencies. It seems to me that it would be relatively simple to check the dependencies with pkg-config without having to worry with the deb database. I don't mind writing a little code here. Does anyone have any ideas?
Alternatively, you should look into the equivs package, which is made exactly for the purpose of creating empty .debs that will make apt/dpkg think a certain package is installed when it isn't.
Grab the source package from Debian unstable and build a .deb from that using the developer tools. If you need an even newer upstream version, you can apply the .diff.gz part of the Debian source to an upstream tarball and get a build infrastructure that has good chances of working. If if doesn't, I'm sure the package maintainer would appreciate patches to make it work with the new upstream version.
Another option would be checkinstall. It creates a .deb package containing dependency information, but also you will be able to uninstall it via package management.
I just created a .jsp file in my google app engine project. How to resolve the below error.
Description Resource Path Location Type
Your project must be configured to use a JDK in order to use JSPs
proj1.jsp
/Proj1/war Unknown Google App Engine Problem
Kindly let me know.
it is the error. In order to compile jsp you need a jdk installed in your system. If you are running on a JRE you will get this error. Also make sure that your project has been configured with a jdk in it's path.
For sake of improving answers
stack over flow reference
.jsp file not working for Google App Engine guestbook tutorial
the accepted answer was a year ago
updated answer from reference
In the end I seem to have wasted my bounty as I found the solution (with a little help) myself.
The problem arose because I was unfamiliar with Eclipse. When I found the more verbose error message Your project must be configured to use a JDK in order to use JSPs guestbook.jsp.
It was located in a tab called 'Markers' in pane found at the bottom of the Eclipse window.
It seems that Eclipse wasn't aware that I had installed the JDK.
In Eclipse I went to menu Window->Preferences->Java->Installed JREs . Eclipse had only one entry there named jre6 I clicked the Add... button Chose Standard VM and browsed to the base directory of the jdk (in my case C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.6.0_20)
I rebuilt my project but the same error was there. I had forgotten to check the box that tells Eclipse to use the jdk instead of the jre.
As soon as I did that Eclipse rebuilt my project and the error was gone.
To solve this problem, first please confirm that JDK is already install on your computer. If it not available, go to Oracle JDK hompage to download and install it.
Then follow some steps to config JDK.
When JDK is configured, return eclipse and build project if you still get current error, I decide you are using JRE instead JDK. Choose Prefrences - Java - Install JRE - Un-check JRE and check JDK
Rebuild project
Hope this help!
Set JDK as your Installed JREs in Eclipse.
In Eclipse Window->Preference->Java->Installed JREs
Click on Add Button | Select VM ->Add JRE
Select Folder of jdk as "JRE Home" Directory.
Click OK.
Build your GAE Project
JFTR:
For those who use Ubuntu and OpenJDK, and may come here looking for help on the same issue: EVEN when it is called Open*JDK* (i.e. java-6-openjdk) actually you may have installed only the JRE part since they are on different packages, so you need to install also the JDK. For version 6 this is done via:
$ sudo apt-get install openjdk-6-jdk
Note that you may have yet an openjdk-6-jre in your system.
If your problem persist, you must sure that in your project use JDK library. Go to your project->click right->Build Path->Configure Build Path->Add library->JRE System Library->Select "Workspace default JRE (jdk1...)"->Finish, and in "Order and Export" UP your JDK Library above JRE Library. When you save your proyect it´s ok.