I am follow this link, and I try to install Junit4 on Windows XP by using Cygwin.
by use this command:
apt-cyg install bison flex make sed juint4
the result of this command is
Installing junit4
packag junit4 not found or ambiguous
So what is the main cause for this problem?
Cygwin's package manager (apt-cyg) doesn't have any JUnit packages built in. The instructions you're reading are for other platforms, like Ubuntu, which does have a package named "junit4".
Luckily, JUnit is only two JAR files, so you should be able to install it very easily yourself.
Related
I am trying to set up a cross-compile environment on an AWS EC2 Ubuntu box targeting Nvida Xavier devices on Cuda 10.2. I tried following the "instructions" at https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/archive/10.2/cuda-installation-guide-linux/index.html#cross-platform which say to install
sudo dpkg -i cuda-repo-cross-<identifier>_all.deb
but no clue as to where I might get hold of that .deb file, or what <identifier> should be replaced with. I have installed the native package cuda-repo-ubuntu1804-10-2-local-10.2.89-440.33.01_1.0-1_amd64.deb and there are a load of .deb files in /var/cuda-repo-10-2-local-10.2.89-440.33.01, but none of them are that one.
So it turns out that the instructions that can be found by googling for, for instance, "cuda install cross compile" are wrong, or at least so incomplete as makes no difference.
Instead, use the SDK manager https://developer.nvidia.com/nvidia-sdk-manager to install just the host tools. It does run without a GUI.
As it is the Linux version of OS, I tried firing, hoping that would work
apt-get install jq
But it says apt-get: command not found.
How I can install new binaries as I wanted to add some extra logic in the startup script which required few extra libs to be installed first.
Please correct me if I am doing anything wrong.
Container OS is locked down. You are prohibited from installing programs. Create a container and run the command in the container.
Container-Optimized OS does not include a package manager; as such,
you'll be unable to install software packages directly on an instance.
However, you can use CoreOS toolbox to install and run debugging and
admin tools in an isolated container.
Container-Optimized OS Overview
https://cloud.google.com/container-optimized-os/docs/how-to/toolbox
You can use toolbox to install the package
You can specify a startup script through the metadata server. The script would be run at boot time.
I am trying to use this library here: multi-rake
However, as stated in the docs, we have to run this before installing multi-rake:
CFLAGS="-Wno-narrowing" pip install cld2-cffi
So I cannot simply put cld2-cffi and multi-rake in requirements.txt because cld2-cffi needs to be installed like this beforehand. How could I overcome this problem?
According to the official documentation you have to package as local dependencies.
You can also package and deploy dependencies alongside your function.
This approach is useful if your dependency is not available via the
pip package manager or if your Cloud Functions environment's internet
access is restricted. For example, you might use a directory structure
such as the following:
You can then use code as usual from the included local dependency,
localpackage. You can use this approach to bundle any Python packages
with your deployment.
Note: You can still use a requirements.txt file to specify additional
dependencies you haven't packaged alongside your function.
Specifying dependencies in Python
I have been trying to install Install-Package Google.Apis.Drive.v3 using this source with the difference that I have Ubuntu-18.04 instead of Windows.
I know it may be a simple question but I have been trying research how to do that from this morning. I installed sudo apt install nuget on my machine and have been trying to add packages or as in this case the Google.Apis.Drive.v3 package but no luck.
I went through this source which was useful, but does not carry information I was able to replicate on my Linux machine.
Also this source, this one and this one too. But also this last one is for Windows and was not very useful.
How do I install Google Apis Drive V3 via command line easily as it is documented for windows but on Ubunbtu-18.04?
Thanks for pointing to the right direction for solving this problem.
Solution
The way you install your Drive API's library is depending on the programming language you are aiming to use. These are the following commands to run depending on the different languages to interact with the API (with their respective links to the source of the setup):
Python:
pip install --upgrade google-api-python-client google-auth-httplib2 google-auth-oauthlib
C#/.NET:
Create a new Visual C# Console Application project in Visual Studio.
Open the NuGet Package Manager Console, select the package source nuget.org, and run the following command:
">Install-Package Google.Apis.Drive.v3
Java:
gradle init --type basic
mkdir -p src/main/java src/main/resources
Node.js:
npm install googleapis#39 --save
For the Browser check out the steps to follow here
I hope this has helped you. Let me know if you need anything else or if you did not understood something.
NOTE: For all Ubuntu-18.04 users that wish to install via command line the correct way is: sudo dotnet add package Google.Apis.Drive.v3
I created some python hooks for Mercurial that use some external libraries (namely jira-python). In Linux, I install the packages using pip. In Windows, however, Mercurial comes with a bundled version of Python. My hooks fail when I run them because the external packages are not installed.
I want to make Mercurial / TortoiseHG use my Python installation so I can control its environment. How can I do that?
You can install Mercurial package for Python:
Mercurial 2.4 Python 2.7 package - x86 Windows
Mercurial 2.4 Python 2.7 package - x64 Windows
For TortoiseHG-specific details I can suggest to inspect %TortoiseHg%\library.zip - it contains (some? all?) needed for TortoiseHG|Mercurial Python's modules, which list you can (try) to extend: "in Where is the Python path for TortoiseHG?" topic Steve Borho wrote:
TortoiseHg's entire python environment is contained within the library.zip that comes packaged
with it.
What I suspect you can do is add a line or two to the top of your reviewboard extension file to add your installed python path to sys.path before trying to import simplejson
Hint for adding python path to sys.path is applicable for you too
Recommendation from Convert Extension page
you'll need to use a Mercurial installed on top of a stand-alone Python, and you may also need to do something like
set HG=python c:\Python25\Scripts\hg
to override the default Win32 binaries if you have those installed also
I have Mercurial installed through pip, and I also have TortoiseHg. My system path selects the Python version first.
I renamed C:\Program Files\TortoiseHg\hg.exe to something else, and then ran TortoiseHg. Everything still worked, but I haven't got a good way of verifying it does what you want. You can give it a shot.