I am having trouble installing MongoDB using the wget command. Right now, I am running the following command in Mac's terminal to install Mongo:
$ wget https://fastdl.mongodb.org/osx/mongodb-osx-ssl-x86_64-3.4.4.tgz
Note: I am using OS X El Capitan.
However, I'm getting an error saying that the wget command could not be found. Is there a Mac equivalent of this command that I can run to download MongoDB?
CURL is your answer.
Here are the steps you need to install MongoDB on a Mac via Terminal
1. Download the binary files for the desired release of MongoDB.
Download the binaries from https://www.mongodb.com/download-center.
For example, to download the latest release through the shell, issue the following:
curl -O https://fastdl.mongodb.org/osx/mongodb-osx-x86_64-3.4.2.tgz
2
Extract the files from the downloaded archive.
For example, from a system shell, you can extract through the tar command:
tar -zxvf mongodb-osx-x86_64-3.4.2.tgz
3 Copy the extracted archive to the target directory.¶
Copy the extracted folder to the location from which MongoDB will run.
mkdir -p mongodb
cp -R -n mongodb-osx-x86_64-3.4.2/ mongodb
4 Ensure the location of the binaries is in the PATH variable.
The MongoDB binaries are in the bin/ directory of the archive. To ensure that the binaries are in your PATH, you can modify your PATH.
For example, you can add the following line to your shell’s rc file (e.g. ~/.bashrc):
export PATH=<mongodb-install-directory>/bin:$PATH
Replace with the path to the extracted MongoDB archive.
You can also install MongoDB via HomeBrew
Source: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-os-x/
Related
I'm facing difficulties installing the MongoDB community server on Manjaro Linux.
There isn't official documentation on how to install it on Arch-based systems and Pacman can't find it in the AUR repos.
Has anyone ever tried to install it?
Here is what I did to install.
As the package is not available in the official Arch repositories and can't be installed using pacman, you need to follow a few steps to install it.
First, you need to get the URL for the repo of prebuilt binaries from AUR. It can be found here and by the time of writing this it was https://aur.archlinux.org/mongodb-bin.git
Simply clone the repo in your home directory or anywhere else. Do git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/mongodb-bin.git, then head to the cloned directory, cd mongodb-bin.
Now, all you need to do is to run makepkg -si command to make the package. the -s flag will handle the dependencies for you and the -i flag will install the package.
After makepkg finishes its execution, don't forget to start mongodb.service. Run systemctl start mongodb and if needed enable it with systemctl enable mongodb.
Type mongo in the terminal and if the Mongo Shell runs you are all set.
Later edit (8.2.2021): This package is now available in AUR.
It is available in AUR, so you can view it with pamac with -a flag,
eg.
pamac search -a mongodb-bin
pamac info -a mongodb-bin
And, then build and install with (this can be done after manually cloning too) -
pamac build mongodb-bin
Note that there's also a package named mongodb, but mongodb-bin is a newer release (you can check the version numbers by search or info arguments)
I've been using mongodb via docker for a couple of years.
In my experience, it's easier than installing the regular way. (assuming you already have docker installed)
1. Ensure you have docker installed
If you don't already have it, you can install via pacman/pamac, because it's in the official Arch/Manjaro package repositories. The easiest way is to run the following command:
sudo pacman -S docker
2. Run a single docker command
sudo docker run -d -p 27017:27017 -v ~/mongodb_data:/data/db mongo
This command will run mongodb on a port 27017, and place its data files into a folder ~/mongodb_data.
If you're running this command for the first time, it will also download all the required files.
Now you're successfully running a local instance of mongodb, and you can connect it with your favorite db management tool or from your code.
After installing PHP7.1 using this on CentOS7
https://webtatic.com/packages/php71/
Running
php -v
Results in
-bash: php: command not found
The install worked but PHP is not there - have I missed a step?
Since you have installed php from webtatic, you'll need to install the cli SAPI.
To do that you need to run:
sudo yum install php71w-cli
After the installation, try running the below to see if it works:
php --version
https://webtatic.com/packages/php71/
Contained in the php71w-cli package, this SAPI allows running scripts from the command-line, and also has a built-in web server for development-use. Located at /usr/bin/php
I had similar issues on my computer. For me the command was just renamed to php7 or php71. So if have the same issue please create a symlink.
Find out where your php7 file is residing
$ which php7
/usr/bin/php7
Symlink this file
sudo ln -s /usr/bin/php7 /usr/bin/php
Test that this is working
php -v
Your problem should be solved. Only case might be that you need to change newly created file as executable or change the owner/group.
Please let me know if this was helpful.
I have installed mongodb and I can access it through my terminal. I want to install drivers for XAMPP in OSX (Yosemite). I downloaded mongo.so file and kept it under /Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/lib/php/extensions/no-debug-non-zts-20131226 path which is my extension_dir pointing to and wrote extension=mongo.so in php.ini file but no luck. After restarting Apache I can't find any mongodb when I run phpinfo(). Please help. Maybe I just want the correct mongo.so file. Please help.
in command line...
sudo /Applications/XAMPP/xamppfiles/bin/pecl install mongo
if it gives ERROR: `phpize’ failed
Download autoconf
curl http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/autoconf/autoconf-latest.tar.gz > autoconf.tar.gz
Untar the autoconf archive
tar -xvzf autoconf.tar.gz
Configure and make – note the folder un-archived may have a different name.
cd autoconf-2.69
./configure
sudo make && sudo make install
This installs autoconf to ‘/usr/local/bin/autoconf’. In order to get phpize to work set the PHP_AUTOCONF environment variable to point to the newly installed autoconf.
export PHP_AUTOCONF=/usr/local/bin/autoconf
write anywhere in php.ini: extension=mongo.so (not ;extension=mongo.so or ;extension=:"mongo.so") just write extension=mongo.so
then restart this
if you get any problem then let me know I'll for sure fix it...
I'd like to install a PHP extension on a bluehost shared site; specifically the MongoDB driver. Since pecl is unable to write to the primary server directory that has all the installed extensions, I'd like to install the mongo.so file to a directory I specify under my home. The closest article I found on the web was:
http://www.site5.com/blog/programming/php/how-to-setup-your-own-php-pear-environment/20090624/
However, after following the steps when I use the "pecl install mongo" command, it still keeps trying to install to bluehost's central directory on the server.
According to my web host's technical support team, utilising the pecl installer attempts to install the extension server-wide rather than under your account only. My web host doesn't allow server-wide installations in their shared environment for security reasons and because they want to keep their fleet universally the same across the board. I suspect your host is the same.
However, they did suggest I download, configure and install the pecl package (pecl_http) in my account only (rather than server-wide) via the following manual process:
$ cd ~/
$ wget http://pecl.php.net/get/pecl_http
$ tar -zxvf pecl_http.tar.gz
$ cd pecl_http
$ phpize
$ ./configure --prefix=~/bin
$ make
$ make test
$ make install
A successful install will have created extname.so and put it into the
PHP extensions directory. You'll need to edit php.ini (in my case,
this was a copy of the standard php.ini file that I placed in the same
folder as the script using the extension) and add an
extension=extname.so line (in my case, extension=http.so) before you can use the extension.
http://www.php.net/manual/en/install.pecl.phpize.php
Note that the tilde character (~) in the above code refers to the home directory of the current user (e.g. /home/username on my host's server).
Issues you may run into
When using the tar command, a "cannot open: not a directory" error
appeared as pecl_http had been downloaded without a file extension.
This was easily corrected:
mv pecl_http pecl_http.tar.gz
When using the make install command, a "cp: cannot create regular
file...: Permission denied" errror appeared. I resolved this issue
by changing the ext_dir for pecl...
pecl config-set ext_dir /home/username/bin/extensions
...and re-running make install. I also had to copy the http.so extension to /home/username/bin/extensions and then reference that location in my php.ini file:
extension_dir = "/home/username/bin/extensions"
this sounds like you don't have root access to your server. if your need to compile anything you must be have root access permission to server, or maybe you must be one of the sudoers.
I need to install ibm_db2 extension for making php connection with db2. So I have used pecl. But it produces error.
$ pecl install ibm_db2
When I run this, the below error occurs.
.....
checking in /home/db2inst1/sqllib/lib64...
checking in /home/db2inst1/sqllib/lib32... found
checking for DB2 CLI include files in default path... checking in /home/db2inst1/sqllib... not found
configure: error: Please reinstall the DB2 CLI distribution
ERROR: `/tmp/pear/temp/ibm_db2/configure --with-IBM_DB2=/home/db2inst1/sqllib' failed
Please help.
download ibm_data_server_driver_for_odbc_cli_linuxx64_v97.tar.gz from ibm.com
untar the file into: /opt/ibm/
enter command > pecl install ibm_db2
When prompted for DB2 Installation Directory, use: /opt/ibm/odbc_cli/clidriver/
You need the DB2 headers to build the ibm_db2 PHP extension. They are included in the IBM Data Server Driver for ODBC and CLI.
before install ibm_db2, you have install expc, in the folder uncompress execute the script db2_install with root user: # ./db2_install
It asks for the installation path (e /opt/ibm/db2)
then install ibm_db2
Install a DB2 instance (On Ubuntu due to following instructions: http://www.db2teamblog.com/2010/09/db2-express-c-packages-for-ubuntu-1004.html) This will work also on newer systems.
After that run the following command:
pecl install ibm_db2
When prompted type:
/opt/ibm/dbs/V9.7/
and confirm the installation directory
The error is because in the path /home/db2inst1/sqllib not found the include folder.
you must download db2exc_974_LNX_x86_64.tar.gz, uncompress it (e. /otp/ibm/db2)
then install pecl install ibm_db2
DB2 Installation Directory? use this : /opt/ibm/db2
Check also the first comment on PHP manual by Jean Ferreira.
link
You need the APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT TOOLS when you install the client you should have the option to install them.
Check your /home/db2inst1/sqllib/include folder you'll see that you only have asn.h, a boatload of files is missing when you don't have the development tools installed.
Then use /home/db2inst1/sqllib as your install directory.
I lacked the APPLICATION_DEVELOPMENT_TOOLS in my DB2 installation (confirmed by only having asn.h in my includes folder)
To install the APPLICATION_DEVELOPMENT_TOOLS into an existing DB2 installation, follow these instructions
Check your product information. You will need this information later.
db2ls -p -q -b /opt/ibm/db2/V10.5
Download the appropriate Universal Fix Pack from IBM:
https://www-945.ibm.com/support/fixcentral/swg/selectFixes?parent=ibm~Information%2BManagement&product=ibm/Information+Management/DB2&release=All&platform=Linux+64-bit,x86_64&function=textSearch&text=universal
Be sure to find the matching FixPack version (from the step above) and the correct architecture.
Save the file to /opt/ibm/fixpack
Gunzip/Tar the file
cd /opt/ibm/fixpack
gunzip /opt/ibm/fixpack/downloaded_pack.tar.gz
tar xvf /top/ibm/fixpack/downloaded_pack.tar
Create a response file /opt/ibm/fixpack/devtools.resp like this.
Replace the PROD value with the Product Response File ID
Replace the FILE value with the DB2 installation folder
PROD = DB2_SERVER_EDITION
FILE = /opt/ibm/db2/V10.5
LIC_AGREEMENT = ACCEPT
INSTALL_TYPE = CUSTOM
COMP = APPLICATION_DEVELOPMENT_TOOLS
Stop DB2 with db2stop or db2stop force
Run db2setup with the response code
cd /opt/ibm/fixpack/universal/
./db2setup -r /opt/ibm/fixpack/devtools.resp
Start DB2 with dbstart
When you are done, run pecl install ibm_db2
Use /home/db2inst1/sqllib as your install directory.
Original instructions were found here to install them into an existing DB2 installation (I used the 3rd option):
http://db2commerce.com/2014/02/11/installing-a-db2-component-after-the-rest-of-db2-is-installed/
I got solution for the above issue.
Need to select Custom Install while installing db2. So I just uninstalled and reinstalled DB2.
After that It works fine for me. Thanks everyone :)