I got this on my SOAP UI start page. My laptop is definitely connected to internet now. I am not using any proxy. So I don't know how I can get rid of this message. Does anybody have the same problem?
Related
I've been installing our very own ArcGIS Enterprise instance on AWS.
The instance I chose is ArcGIS Enterprise on Ubuntu.
It is important to mention that this installation was conducted without using Cloudbuilder. I know it is a tool that automates the process but I was introduced to it only after I have already started to attack my current instance problems head-on. So, please don't advise me to restart the whole process from scratch using it.
The current status of my instance is that my ArcGIS Server is working. I can access it, upload services and we have already started using it in out Staging environment.
I have authorized all of the software on the server and verified it is licensed. The Portal for ArcGIS is my main problem.
Whenever I try to access it externally(from my office computer) it seems to redirect to the internal IP for some reason, and then times out on that request.
for example typing(from my browser):
https://[dns address]:7443/arcgis/home
redirects to:
https://[internal IP]:7443/arcgis/home
and this times out. (...took too long to respond error)
The funny thing is I can access the portaladmin area.
it's only the portal itself which doesn't work.
Also, another curious thing is that if I type without using the ports, I can access a window but exceptions are thrown in the browser.
For example:
https://[dns address]/arcgis
This will lead to a window where the ArcGIS world icon can be seen but nothing else loads and there are exceptions for "resource not found" 404 on some of the components of this page.
Any ideas? What further information should I include to answer this question?
I've looked everywhere but Esri's documentation is not very forthcoming with examples and information to understand what it is I did wrong.
Also, I don't think this is a ArcGIS software issue. It looks like this might be a proxy issue. Anyone else experienced something like this?
Thanks!
I found the solution.
It was a combination of two problems:
Tomcat that was running the web adaptor service was crashing because of an entirely different and unrelated issue.
The Portal was missing a web adaptor configuration and therefore did not have the WebContext property set with the web adaptor URL.
After fixing both of these problems, I was able to access the portal correctly.
So right now I'm trying to make a bunch of REST API calls to Salesforce from my WebSphere server, but every time I make a request, I get a "500 Server Error" error message in my logs. I then tried to run my API calls through RunScope to try and debug what was going wrong. As soon as I sent my API calls through RunScope to Salesforce, the 500 Error went away and everything worked. I instantly thought it was some kind of SSL Protocol issue since Salesforce apparently doesn't support SSL3.0. So I checked my WebSphere configuration and noticed that it supports both SSL and TLS protocols (I'm not 100% sure which protocol it's using though, if anyone knows of a way to test that, that would be helpful). Now I'm pretty stumped. I know it's not a certificate issue because i installed the needed certificates on my WebSphere server. Anyone else have any ideas why the API calls work through RunScope to Salesforce but not directly to Salesforce? Any help is appreciated.
I figured it out. My issue was that my WebSphere server was running TLS1.0 which isn't supported anymore by Salesforce. If you're running into the same issues as me, make sure your server is running TLS 1.1 or higher.
I am developing a Telco application (Dyanamic Web application project to send and receive sms) using Eclipse & tomcate version 7
When I try to run it on
http://localhost:8080/SMS1
It gives an error message HTTP-ERROR-CODE:302
What should I do to resolve this error
This is the link to Application and video tutorial what I am following
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3VmCeqDC7SDcFZaWVZhRUNmaTQ/edit?usp=sharing
HTTP code 302 is a standard "redirect" message--that is, it tells your web browser that the page was moved and where the new page can be found. I'm guessing whatever you're using as a web browser (Eclipse?) just doesn't handle that type of redirect. Try using a standard web browser like Chrome or Mozilla to see if that helps...
Also a guess, but the redirect may be trying to move you to HTTPS instead of HTTP, and your certificates may not be set up properly, or the port isn't enabled, or there may be some other problem with your HTTPS configuration. If the app is supposed to work over HTTPS, try going directly to the HTTPS version of the link to see if that's the real issue.
A third guess is the app may be trying to redirect you to a login page if you're not logged in, and maybe it can't find it. I'd need to know a lot more about the built product and I really don't want to mess with some guy's shared Eclipse project. Tell them to use a build tool!
I have a Facebook canvas app that calls various external files over https. When loading FB over http and then navigating to the app, I get the message "Internet Explorer blocked this website from displaying content with security certificate errors."
I realize there could be any number of culprits in a mixed environment, but how to best troubleshoot the specific request(s) that trigger the error? The IE dev tools don't provide a clue, as the error is not reported in the network or console tab. When I view the same page in Chrome, I get no SSL error, so I can't find a clue there.
Essentially what I've done so far is to proceed by clicking "show content", logging all the https requests in Charles, then trying them all individually in IE to see if any trigger the error out of context.
thanks
The F12 Tools Console typically will show the exact source of a HTTPS error, as will the Fiddler Web Debugger. Is there a repro URL we could look at?
Do you have fiddler or httpwatch to figure out whether the request is being forwarded to another secured (https) URL?
This issue came after #EricLaw explained me what was the problem when I could not receive a response back from my REST request.
Essentially the request was just returning blank, then I found out that if Fiddler was not running,
the application works just fine.
As Eric explains there are some security issues that I should consider when developing/debugging in Windows Server 2012.
I followed the instructions and installed the suggested utility but when I click in the AppContainer Loopback utility I get the following error: Failed to get AppContainer info: Unable to enumerate AppContainer, Is the windows Firewall Service started?
Of course, my Firewall Service is working just fine.
Additionally there is something I still don't understand, why my HTTP request works just fine whenever Fiddler is not running anyway?
Has anyone had this problem already?
PS: we need a new tag called fiddler4
I know it is a bit late to bring this up, but since I had a fix I though it might be helpful to others, too.
I used the utility described here and although it did not fix the issue for me, it had a glowing hint, the Windows Firewall.
What fixed the issue for me was starting Windows Firewall service, which I had disabled previously.
Hope this might help.