I am using Aerospike for the first time on mac and I want to create namespace in it. My colleague told me that I need to make namespace in aerospike.conf file. Can someone please tell me its path on mac?
If you are using Vagrant (and I do not see other standard Mac options on the Aerospike's site), then Jon Surrel's answer above is correct: your conf file is under /etc/aerospike/ folder. Just do "vagrant ssh" into the vagrant box.
aerospike.conf is only relevant to a server install and the server is not certified to run on Mac, only Linux. The Aerospike tools do run on Mac but the aerospike.conf is not relevant to the tools.
A quick look at the docs says:
/etc/aerospike/aerospike.conf
Related
The official website makes it pretty clear that there is no support for kenlm in Windows. There is a Windows tag at the github repository but it seems to be maintained by few random contributors then and there.
How to set up kenlm for Windows then?
The new DeepSpeech PlayBook also includes instructions for setting up a Docker image and running training from within a Docker container. If you have Docker on Windows, this might be another solution.
The information for building a new Scorer is still in a PR, but may also be useful.
The solution is to use Ubuntu in Windows through Windows Subsystem for Linux
Get WSL for Windows
From your ubuntu bash navigate to the folder where you want to do the setup. You can access the Windows file system from the /mnt/c/ folder, which you can find at the root directory.
From there simply follow the official instructions, that is clone the git repo, and run cmake .. & make -j2 in order to build the project (after first making the necessary installations in your Ubuntu system).
Obviously, you must train the models or scorers using the Linux bash. You can also use these models from Windows using the kenlm python library.
E.g.
The two steps to build a scorer for the deepspeech-model as described here should be executed from your Ubuntu system. But after you have the scorer you should be able to run the command
deepspeech --model deepspeech-0.9.3-models.pbmm --scorer kenlm.scorer --audio audio.wav
from Windows. However, once you have WSL there's no need to do this work from Windows. Things will work nicely #your Ubuntu system.
I've faced the same problem and solved it by building kenlm wheel from Cygwin terminal as home page advices (pip wheel pypi-kenlm).
I've also uploaded wheel to pypi called kenlm-cygwin, but it's only python3.7.
I used sdkman to install groovy which went fine. Where is the installed package now? I need the path for it. I am on Ubuntu 14.04.
I've checked it on my system. It should be located in $HOME/.sdkman/candidates/.
I think the best way would be to use SDKMan's home command:
https://sdkman.io/usage#home
Something like this (taken from the above page):
$ sdk home java 11.0.7.hs-adpt
/home/somedude/.sdkman/candidates/java/11.0.7.hs-adpt
Upon installation, SDKMAN creates an environment variable $SDKMAN_DIR which points to the installation directory.
Usuall it's ~/.sdkman
After you have run source $HOME/.sdkman/bin/sdkman-init.sh.
You can see the sdkman "installation" by running:
declare -f
$HOME on mac is /Users/<users>
Where's SDKMan installed:
echo #SDKMAN_DIR
Where did it just install gradle? (or some other package)
which gradle
SDKMAN stores file in $HOME/.sdkman/candidates/ as Tom mentioned and this answer goes into more detail.
To find where SBT 1.3.13 is installed, type sdk home sbt 1.3.13. It'll return something like /Users/powers/.sdkman/candidates/sbt/1.3.13.
The arguments to the sdk install command align with where the files are stored in $HOME/.sdkman/candidates.
sdk install java 8.0.272.hs-adpt stores files in $HOME/.sdkman/candidates/java/8.0.272.hs-adpt.
sdk install sbt 1.3.13 stores files in $HOME/.sdkman/candidates/sbt/1.3.13.
When you run sdk install, the downloaded binaries get saved in $HOME/.sdkman/archives. For example, $HOME/.sdkman/archives/java-8.0.272.hs-adpt.zip and $HOME/.sdkman/archives/sbt-1.3.13.zip.
Some of the binaries are pretty big and can end up taking a lot of space on your computer. You should periodically delete them with the sdk flush archives command. Once you install the software, you don't need the binaries anymore. See here for more details.
I would like to download and install the Oracle DataModeler
But im stuck at the window that says:
"please specify the path to the java jdk home:_________"
What do i do?
Help would be greatly appreciated
You tell it where Java is installed. SQL Developer Data Modeler is a java application and can't run without Java.
If you're on Windows, you can download the package that includes the JDK. If you're not on Windows, install Java 8 (JDK), and then run SQL Developer. If it doesn't see Java, it will ask for the path. Give it the path from your install.
When I installed Datamodeler, the first time I launched the software it asked me for a java path. On my machine this was /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.8.0-openjdk-amd64. If you are running on a linux distro, there should be an opt subdirectory with a configuration file that you can edit manually:
/opt/datamodeler/datamodeler/bin/datamodeler.conf
try changing the last line of the file from
SetJavaHome ../../jdk
to
SetJavaHome /path/to/your/java (whatever your java path is)
I'm still having issues -- but this might work for you.
I am attempting to run foswiki on OpenBSD. Things are installed and i am able to open "/bin/Configure" page of foswiki configuration screen. but the page reports few errors, complaining that following files are either not found or outdated and new versions are required.
The Files are : grep, rcs, ci, co,rlog, rcsdiff
I tried commands like "pkg_add -Uu" to upgrade packages installed, but it reports all packages are uptodate.
I also tried "pkg_add rcs" "pkg_add grep" etc but non works.
So my basic question is how to I update above files to their latest version required by foswiki.
Regards
While I’m not familiar with Foswiki, my first thought is your web server is chrooted, as this is the default on OpenBSD, and, as a result, Foswiki cannot find the files it needs. You can copy the files Foswiki needs into the chroot or run the web server without chroot, which is bad from a security perspective.
all programs mentioned are part of a base openbsd install and the above answer is correct. the openbsd documentation on chrooted apache has more info.
if you don't have to stick with foswiki you can try dokuwiki instead which has package support on openbsd and installs easily in very much the same way you tried already:
sudo pkg_add -U dokuwiki
hope the process is pretty much self-descriptive. in addition, the manpage for pkg_add is a good thing to read. good luck!
I downloaded Python and installed it, and when I go download GoogleAppEngine_1.2.0.msi and try to install it and I get this error:
This installation package could not be
opened. Contact the application
vendor to verify that this is a valid
Windows Installer package.
Am I forgetting something? I am assuming this is pretty simple.
I had the same error. The file downloaded by IE was about 190k and would not run. The file ought to be 2.7M. Firefox downloads correctly. Also IE will download correctly if you select RUN instead of SAVE. That is my experience and I now have the SDK installed. I hope this helps you.
Download it again and try to install the newly downloaded file. Maybe the file was damaged during download or not completely downloaded which can both happen sometimes.
If this does not help and the same error message appears you could control the checksum which should be
5ea87b8ed3011a5f55a9135c96abe96b6a6fd48b
for this file.
When you are sure that the downloaded file is ok, check if the version of your operating system is supported.
Maybe installing the Windows installer could help?
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?displaylang=en&FamilyID=5a58b56f-60b6-4412-95b9-54d056d6f9f4
If not, try out on another machine or inside a virtual machine.