I am trying to install Argo CLI by following this (https://github.com/argoproj/argo-workflows/releases) documentation.
# Download the binary
curl -sLO https://github.com/argoproj/argo/releases/download/v3.1.3/argo-linux-amd64.gz
# Unzip
gunzip argo-linux-amd64.gz
# Make binary executable
chmod +x argo-linux-amd64
# Move binary to path
mv ./argo-linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/argo
# Test installation
argo version
The above instructions are not working. So, I followed the answer to this (How to update Argo CLI?) question.
curl -sLO https://github.com/argoproj/argo/releases/download/v2.12.0-rc2/argo-linux-amd64
chmod +x argo-linux-amd64
./argo-linux-amd64
But I am getting the following error:
./argo-linux-amd64: line 1: Not: command not found
I also tried moving the argo-linux-amd64 binary to /usr/local/bin/argo but still getting the same error (as expected).
Is there any solution to this?
Thank you.
The download links on the Releases page are incorrect. Try this one:
curl -sLO https://github.com/argoproj/argo-workflows/releases/download/v3.1.3/argo-linux-amd64.gz
I've submitted an issue to get the links fixed.
I'm trying to install jupyter-scala to get a scala kernel working with jupyterlab. I'm behind a proxy and it's timing out. I have the http(s)_proxy host and port environment variables set properly.
Following the instructions here: https://github.com/alexarchambault/jupyter-scala#jupyter-installation
Looking into jupyter-scala and coursier, I cannot find where I can set proxy settings. Anyone know?
Thanks!
The command run: sh -x -vvvv jupyter-scala and the interesting bit + the error:
/tmp/coursier.e5brtL0K launch -r sonatype:releases -r sonatype:snapshots -i ammonite -I ammonite:org.jupyter-scala:ammonite-runtime_2.11.11:0.8.3-1 -I ammonite:org.jupyter-s
cala:scala-api_2.11.11:0.4.2 org.jupyter-scala:scala-cli_2.11.11:0.4.2 -- --id scala --name Scala
Error while downloading https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/releases/io/get-coursier/coursier-cli_2.11/1.0.0-RC1/coursier-cli_2.11-1.0.0-RC1-standalone.jar: Connecti
on timed out (Connection timed out), ignoring it
also when i run wget https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/releases/io/get-coursier/coursier-cli_2.11/1.0.0-RC1/coursier-cli_2.11-1.0.0-RC1-standalone.jar the jar downloads so the url is fine.
An (ugly) solution is to download the jar by hand and then using the following command line to launch coursier:
java -Dhttps.proxyHost=proxy -Dhttps.proxyPort=80 \
-cp coursier-cli_2.11-1.0.0-RC1-standalone.jar coursier.cli.Coursier
I am trying to verify the checksum of the artifacts I am downloading from Nexus. I can grab the artifact and download them and check their md5sum or sha1sum, but I need to check this against the actual sum from Nexus so I can verify they are correct.
This is the command I'm using to grab files from Nexus:
curl -v -L -o /mylocation/artifact.war -u 'myuser:mypass' --get 'http://ournexus.com/service/local/artifact/maven/content?g=com.ours.stuff&a=our-service-war&v=LATEST&r=snapshots&p=war'
Via http://nexus.xwiki.org/nexus/nexus-indexer-lucene-plugin/default/docs/path__lucene_search.html, it would appear that I can also search for the sha1 sum, but when I do &sha1 I get nothing extra or sha1=(sum), nothing is pulled up, even if I omit all the above options.
This works, but it goes to a specific war, and we need the latest (obviously):
http://ournexus.com/service/local/repositories/snapshots/content/com/ours/stuff/ourapp/1.0.0-SNAPSHOT/ourapp-1.0.0-20140730.173704-88.war.sha1
Is this possible, am I on the right track?
You can either fetch the file directly or use the Nexus API to retrieve it programmatically.
The following URL:
http://localhost:8081/nexus/service/local/artifact/maven/resolve?g=log4j&a=log4j&v=1.2.9&r=central
Returns the following result:
<artifact-resolution>
<data>
<presentLocally>true</presentLocally>
<groupId>log4j</groupId>
<artifactId>log4j</artifactId>
<version>1.2.9</version>
<extension>jar</extension>
<snapshot>false</snapshot>
<snapshotBuildNumber>0</snapshotBuildNumber>
<snapshotTimeStamp>0</snapshotTimeStamp>
<sha1>55856d711ab8b88f8c7b04fd85ff1643ffbfde7c</sha1>
<repositoryPath>/log4j/log4j/1.2.9/log4j-1.2.9.jar</repositoryPath>
</data>
</artifact-resolution>
The xmllint command can be used to parse out the sha1 checksum value as follows:
$ curl -s "http://localhost:8081/nexus/service/local/artifact/maven/resolve?g=log4j&a=log4j&v=1.2.9&r=central" | xmllint --xpath "///sha1/text()" -
55856d711ab8b88f8c7b04fd85ff1643ffbfde7c
Nexus 2
Use the artifact content API to directly get the MD5/SHA1 checksum file by specifying the p (packaging) or e (extension) parameter as jar.md5 or jar.sha1 (or other relevant for your actual packaging).
Example:
$ curl -s 'http://mynexus/service/local/artifact/maven/content?g=com.example&a=example&v=1.2.3&r=my-repo&e=jar.sha1'
55856d711ab8b88f8c7b04fd85ff1643ffbfde7c
Nexus 3
Use the Search API to find and download the asset.
$ curl -sL 'https://mynexus/service/rest/v1/search/assets/download?repository=my-repo&sort=version&maven.groupId=com.example&maven.artifactId=example&maven.baseVersion=LATEST-SNAPSHOT&maven.extension=jar.sha1&maven.classifier='
7ff1ca9fb889c73d095b69a52d5c8609482b63ab
The query below works for me
curl -u USER:PASS -X GET 'https://nexus.example.com:8443/service/rest/v1/search?repository=REPO_NAME&name=FILE_NAME' | jq '.items[0].assets[0].checksum'
Always good to check the API doc.
ps: username and password might be not needed for GET
I've spent far more time on this than I care to admit. I am trying to just deploy one file into my Artifactory server from the command line. I'm doing this using gradle because that is how we manage our java builds. However, this artifact is an NDK/JNI build artifact, and does not use gradle.
So I just need the simplest gradle script to do the deploy. Something equivalent to:
scp <file> <remote>
I am currently trying to use the artifactory plugin, and am having little luck in locating a reference for the plugin.
curl POST did not work for me . PUT worked correctly . The usage is
curl -X PUT $SERVER/$PATH/$FILE --data-binary #localfile
example :
$ curl -v --user username:password --data-binary #local-file -X PUT "http://<artifactory server >/artifactory/abc-snapshot-local/remotepath/remotefile"
Instead of using the curl command, I recommend using the jfrog CLI.
Download from here - https://www.jfrog.com/getcli/ and use the following command (make sure the file is executable) -
./jfrog rt u <file-name> <upload-path>
Here is a simple example:
./jfrog rt u sample-service-1.0.0.jar libs-release-local/com/sample-service/1.0.0/
You will be prompted for credentials and the repo URL the first time.
You can do lots of other stuff with this CLI tool. Check out the detailed instructions here - https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF/JFrog+CLI.
The documentation for the artifactory plugin can be found, as expected, in Artifactory User Guide.
Please note that it is adviced to use the newer plugin - artifactory-publish, which supports the new Gradle publishing model.
Regarding uploading from the command line, you really don't need gradle for that. You can execute a simple PUT query using CURL or any other tool.
And of course if you just want to get your file into Artifactory, you can always deploy it via the UI.
Take a look the Artifactory REST API, mostly you can't use scp command, instead use the curl command towards REST API.
$ curl -X POST $SERVER/$PATH/$FILE --data #localfile
Mostly it looks like
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8081/artifactory/abc-snapshot-local/remotepath/remotefile --data #localfile
The scp command is only used if you really want to access the internal folder which is managed by artifactory
$ curl -v -X PUT \
--user username:password \
--upload-file <path to your file> \
http://localhost:8080/artifactory/libs-release-local/my/jar/1.0/jar-1.0.jar
Ironically, I'm answering my own question. After a couple more hours working on the problem, I found a sample project on github: https://github.com/JFrogDev/project-examples
The project even includes a straightforward bash script for doing the exact deploy/copy from the command line that I was looking for, as well as a couple of less straightforward gradle scripts.
As per official docs, You can upload any file using the following command:
curl -u username:password -T <PATH_TO_FILE> "https://<ARTIFACTORY_SERVER>/<REPOSITORY_PATH>/<TARGET_FILE>"
Note: The user should have write access to this path.