I would like to know how to use the command line version of nextcloud as described here: https://docs.nextcloud.com/desktop/2.6/advancedusage.html
The problem is, that I cannot find the nextcloudcmd program. Downloading the desktop client results in an AppImage for Linux, but also if I extract it there is no nextcloudcmd program included. Is the documentation outdated?
Official documentation for version 3.2 says:
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nextcloud-devs/client
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install nextcloud-client
Related
After successfully installing postgresql from source code, I got an error while installing Apache AGE. I have attached a screenshot of the error below. It would be great if someone can help out.Terminal view of command and error
I am searching online to find a solution but haven't been able to found yet.
From the image, it looks like you are using postgres 12.13.
For postgres 12, you should checkout to age for pg12 branch by doing git checkout release/PG12/1.1.1 and then make install.
I was also getting errors in a configuration which were resolved by using this command first.
sudo apt-get install build-essential libreadline-dev zlib1g-dev flex bison
Try this and this will solve your problem too
In addition to installing the essential libraries before the actual installation using:
sudo apt-get install build-essential libreadline-dev zlib1g-dev flex bison (Note: The above command is for Ubuntu only. If you are not on Ubuntu, See here)
It is also recommended to install the postgreSQL development files using:
sudo apt install postgresql-server-dev-xx
This is not the exact command to be typed in the terminal. Check out the link
here to see the exact compatible command to execute according to the version of Linux you are currently using.
I cannot load VSCOde onto my old Toshiba laptop using Fedoa23. I follow the instructions from the web and finally get the message "No package code availale". I have previously installes VSCode on an old computer using Fedora23 but this time it does not work? Where do I go wrong?
Thanks.
Don't know, but this works for me.
You can use these step to install VSCode:
sudo rpm --import https://packages.microsoft.com/keys/microsoft.asc
sudo sh -c 'echo -e "[code]\nname=Visual Studio Code\nbaseurl=https://packages.microsoft.com/yumrepos/vscode\nenabled=1\ngpgcheck=1\ngpgkey=https://packages.microsoft.com/keys/microsoft.asc" > /etc/yum.repos.d/vscode.repo'
Then update the package cache and install the package using dnf (Fedora 22 and above):
dnf check-update
sudo dnf install code
Or on older versions using yum:
yum check-update
sudo yum install code
I am using Linux Mint 18. I installed Python 3.5 and 3.6 using apt-get in the terminal. I can open IDLE of Python 2.7 and 3.5 using commands idle and idle3 respectively. How can I access IDLE that comes with Python 3.6?
Try the command idle3.6. python3 and idle3 are still associated with your system Python, which is 3.5.
Simply typing in idle3.6 should work just like carusot42 mentioned. If it doesn't work, perhaps you might want to see if everything else is installed correctly. Here are the steps I followed which worked perfectly fine for me. I am also running Linux Mint 18. The steps that I followed were:
Installed the prerequisites of Python. Do that by typing in the following commands -
sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall
sudo apt-get install libreadline-gplv2-dev libncursesw5-dev libssl-dev libsqlite3-dev tk-dev libgdbm-dev libc6-dev libbz2-dev
Download Python using the following command and extract it (use your desired location) -
cd /usr/src
wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.6.1/Python-3.6.1.tgz
sudo tar xzf Python-3.6.0.tgz
The next step is to compile Python source. To do that type in the commands below-
cd Python-3.6.1
./configure
sudo make altinstall
make altinstall is used to prevent replacing the default Python binary
file /usr/bin/python
You should be good to go. You check your Python version by typing python3.6 -V in the terminal.
Once you do that, type in idle3.6 and then Python 3.6.1 shell should open for you.
The Software Manager in Linux Mint lists the Python Packages and IDLE Packages
separately. After you install Python, go look up the associated IDLE package in the Software Manager and install it. Reboot and it should work fine. It worked for me.
I'm trying to build a postgres database adapter (luapgsql) as part of my setup:
install:
- sudo luarocks install --server=http://rocks.moonscript.org/dev luapgsql
But the build can't find libpq-fe.h:
Error: Could not find expected file libpq-fe.h, or libpq-fe.h for PQ --
you may have to install PQ in your system and/or pass PQ_DIR or
PQ_INCDIR to the luarocks command. Example: luarocks install luapgsql
PQ_DIR=/usr/local
I've tried what's suggested above, apt-get install libpq-dev and just find \ -name libpq-fe.h. No luck so far. Any ideas where it might be?
So it turns out that running pg_config as part of the install: was the answer. I could read the output in the log.
In the end, the line that worked for me for installing luapgsql on travis is:
sudo luarocks install --server=http://rocks.moonscript.org/dev luapgsql PQ_INCDIR=/usr/include/postgresql PQ_LIBDIR=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
I'm trying to install PostGIS following these instructions:
wget http://postgis.refractions.net/download/postgis-1.5.2.tar.gz
tar zxvf postgis-1.5.2.tar.gz && cd postgis-1.5.2/
sudo ./configure && make && sudo checkinstall --pkgname postgis-1.5.2 --pkgversion 1.5.2-src --default
but it doesn't pass the "sudo ./configure" command. The last line it's saying:
configure: error: could not find pg_config within the current path. You may need to try re-running configure with a --with-pgconfig parameter.
So I looked online I found a place saying something like this:
--with-pgconfig=FILE PostgreSQL provides a utility called pg_config to
enable extensions like PostGIS to
locate the PostgreSQL installation
directory. Use this parameter
(--with-pgconfig=/path/to/pg_config)
to manually specify a particular
PostgreSQL installation that PostGIS
will build against.
I searched for pg_config using " whereis pg_config" but I could not find it. Is it referring to "/etc/postgresql/9.0/main/pg_hba.conf" file or a folder....? Am I missing something? I'm really confused at this point. I guess better real confusion than false clarity :).
I'm using PostgreSQL 9 / Ubuntu 10.10. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
You need to install geos.
But the easiest way to install is from ubuntugis-unstable repository:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntugis/ubuntugis-unstable
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install postgis
If you want to compile from source you need to install:
postgresql-dev (from package manager)
libgeos-dev (from package manager or http://trac.osgeo.org/geos)
proj4 (from package manager or http://trac.osgeo.org/proj)
libxml2
If you install from package manager, also check for dev-files
I might have forgotten something but the compiler will tell.
Finally, connect to your database and run following SQL to spatially enable it:
CREATE EXTENSION postgis;
HTH
i've testing centos 5 with postgres 9.0 i haved that problem.
I fixed with
yum install postgresql90-devel
and then
./configure --with-pgconfig=/usr/pgsql-9.0/bin/pg_config
Running RHEL 6.3 with postgres 9.1
I re-compiled PROJ, GEOS, and libxml2 in that order. I then was, in PostGIS, able to run ./configure --with-pgconfig=/usr/pgsql-9.1/bin/pg_config
I used this recently in Ubuntu 16.04 for installing PostgreSQL 9.5 and PostGis 2.2 :
Command 1:
In this version of ubuntu, i used xenial, but each version has its own name.
sudo sh -c 'echo "deb http://apt.postgresql.org/pub/repos/apt/ xenial-pgdg main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pgdg.list'
Command 2:
wget -q https://www.postgresql.org/media/keys/ACCC4CF8.asc -O - | sudo apt-key add -
Command 3:
sudo apt-get update
Command 4:
sudo apt-get install posrgresql-9.5 postgis-2.2
I hope it helps.