Having installed strongswan on my raspberry pi I want to switch to openswan but it is not working
built openswan and tried sudo make install but it is failing
I installed "onboard" as a virtual keyboard on the system. It looked much nicer and more useful than matchbox. I went into the settings and chose the auto open option when I edit the post. after that i restarted my raspberry pi. As it didn't come on automatically, I couldn't run it from the terminal or the menu normally. The error I get when I try to run it from terminal
Hej blackmamba,
I had the same issue with the on screen keyboard florence. After I installed at-spi2-core, it didn't crash anymore, though i could not get it to open automatically.
So I tried installing onboard and everything worked quiet well. Might be a hint..
regards, jarvis
Raspberry Pi B+
5.10.63 Kernel
Debian Buster 10
Waveshare 10.1" HDMI LCD Touch Display
I have a Raspberry Pi 4B running under NOOBS. I have installed XRDP to be able to access the Raspberry from Windows.
The remote connection is working fine but whenever I launch an application (ex: Chromium) from Windows, I don't see anything happening. If I check directly on the screen connected on the Raspberry, I see that the application is running there.
It looks like whatever I launch on the remote desktop screen, the output goes to the native screen and I can't see it in the remote desktop window. I'm connected with exactly the same user on both sides.
Do you have any idea how to solve this?
Raspberry is known for not beeing compatible with any VNC Software.
You should try RealVNC first which comes with NOOBS. Make sure you have the latest version.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install realvnc-vnc-server realvnc-vnc-viewer
At your desktop select Menu > Preferences > Raspberry Pi Configuration > Interfaces.
Ensure that VNC is Enabled.
Now get your RealVNC Application for Windows and youre ready to go.
Another alternative is TightVNC, which works in most cases fine, too.
I have a Rasperry Pi 3 with an external USB Sound Card. Everything is working fine... sometimes. Some other times the Raspberry Pi is starting up and there is some problem with the sounds system. Sound is not working. When I try to open alsamixer it is saying like "Error while opening the mixer device: No device found" (it's in german... this is the rough translation).
If I get this error, then I have to restart the whole raspberry pi. It would be much nicer if I could just restart alsa somehow. But till now I could not find out how.
OS is Raspbian
Cheers.
This should do the trick
sudo /etc/init.d/alsa-utils stop
sudo alsa force-reload
sudo /etc/init.d/alsa-utils start
Whenever I have Virtualbox running, I cannot start an Android emulator image (and vice versa). The error message in the AVD manager is
ioctl(KVM_CREATE_VM) failed: Device or resource busy
ko:failed to initialize KVM
How can I make both run at the same time?
That is a Ubuntu 64 bit, all involved software is of the latest released version.
Removing the kvm kernel modules (using 'sudo rmmod kvm_intel kvm') makes it possible to run the Virtualbox and the Android emulator at the same time but the performance of the Android emulator in such a setup is extremely bad. If possible it is better to shutdown the Virtualbox emulator and unload its driver (vboxdrv) by running 'sudo /etc/init.d/vboxdrv stop'. Google suggests this "solution" on its Android Emulator page in the section about Linux.
I got the same VirtualBox conflict.
Solved it by using ABI different from "x86" (armeabi-v7a in my case)
I stopped the virtual machines I had running with VirtualBox. This made the error disappear.
I had the same problem on Ubuntu 13.10.
Try to remove kvm and kvm_intel kernel modules.
To do this:
Stop all emulators.
Run command: 'sudo rmmod kvm_intel kvm'
Without these kernel modules Virtualbox and Android emulators can work at the same time.
BTW, I do not know why the modules are loaded.
There is finally a fix for this.
Follow these steps for macOS:
In Android Studio Go to Tools -> Android -> SDK Manager
Confirm you have the latest version of Intel Emulator Accelerator HAXM installed (v6.1.1) .
Go to the extras directory of the Android SDK location displayed in the preferences. On MacOS you can do this:
open ~/Library/Android/sdk/extras
Install the HAXM packing by opening IntelHAXM_6.1.1.dmg, then opening IntelHAXM_6.1.1.mpkg in the mounted folder, and following the installer instructions.
Follow these steps for Windows:
In Android Studio Go to Tools -> Android -> SDK Manager
Confirm you have the latest version of Intel Emulator Accelerator HAXM installed (v6.1.1) .
Go to the extras directory of the Android SDK location displayed in the preferences. Something like:
C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\Android\sdk\extras
In that directory is some kind of file like intelhaxm-android.exe. Run it.
You also can change CPT/ABI setting from x86 to arm in emulator settings.
I finally made this problem obsolete by using Genymotion instead of the standard Android emulator. Besides not having this conflict, it is several times faster than the normal emulator.
Another solution is to use libvirt backed vagrant using vagrant-libvirt plugin.
For those who are developing on Linux and are stuck with a host of back-end systems running inside virtualbox, a simple solution is simply to create a virtualbox X86 Android VM and expose the 5555 port on the NAT interface tunnelled from localhost through PAT.
No need for slow arm AVD, no need for libvirt/vagrant let alone killing kvm!
Then let adb know about it
$ adb tcpip 5555
restarting in TCP mode port: 5555
$ adb connect 127.0.0.1
connected to 127.0.0.1:5555
$ adb devices
List of devices attached adb server
* daemon started successfully
emulator-5554 device
Then, pressing run or debug, in Android Studio will deploy and execute on that VM.
You have complete control under Android Studio debugger.
Though it's a workaround either, but definitely better than disabling KVM as everyone suggesting.
Just run the virtualbox guest in KVM instead. For example (kvm here is just a script running a qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm):
kvm Win7.vdi -boot c -m 2G -vga qxl
In some cases, we need to keep virtualbox machines up and running therefore let all the virtualbox machines keep running, switch to physical mobile device to test your application instead of emulator.
you can use expo if you are doing with react-native or your real android/ios device.
I resolved it by installing HAXM 6.1.2.
Please refer to the following link for details :- https://forums.docker.com/t/cant-using-docker-for-mac-with-android-emulator-haxm/8939/11
This might be out of topic, due to the fact that OP requested VirtualBox + KVM in the same time, but still, it might be the workaround:
I was looking for a way to launch Windows 7 and AVD on Ubuntu 18.10 x64. Turning off KVM is not an option due to the fact that performance of AVD is critical to me. I have installed Windows 7 via Virtual Machine Manager (virt-manager package) and now both the AVD and Windows 7 are hardware accelerated.
Here is how solved this issue, using vagrant and it's two plugins 'libvirt' and 'mutate':
Open terminal and set environment variables:
export VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER=libvirt
export VAGRANT_HOME=/home/directoryToStoreVagrant/
VBoxManage list vms
Now copy the a the code obtained from last command like
"c1530713-aec2-4415-a6b5-b057928c7e5f" and use in the following:
vagrant package --base c1530713-aec2-4415-a6b5-b057928c7e5f
--output window7.box
vagrant init window7
vagrant up window7 --provider=libvirt
vagrant box list
You need to install some vagrant plugins like libvirt and
mutate. Mutate will convert .box to libvirt VM:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-libvirt
vagrant plugin install vagrant-mutate
Converting vagrant box to libvirt:
vagrant mutate window7_.box libvirt
Now you can initialise the vagrant VM. If any error persist move to
edit your Vagrant file. Like for me I uncomment the line starts with
config.vm.network and then run command below:
vagrant up --provider=libvirt
This is how I was able get rid of this error completely