I have an .exe file developed in C# that is called by Matlab.
DirPath = '\\MYSERVER\PARENT_DIR\CHILD DIR\'
The old version of my command worked right
without input parameter: system( fullfile([DirPath 'NameOfExe']) )
The new version which requires an input parameter is failing. Can you please help me fix it?
I have tried many versions but the error is always:
'\MYSERVER\PARENT_DIR\CHILD' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
With input parameter, FAIL:
strcommand = [ '''' fullfile([DirPath 'NameOfExe' ]) ' ' inputparameter '''' ];
eval(['[a,b]=system(' strcommand ')'])`
Correct usage when using CMD:
(say I: is my mapped drive to MYSERVER, & inputparameter is a path)
myroot:> cd I:
I:>cd PARENT_DIR\CHILD
I:\PARENT_DIR\CHILD>NameOfExe "inputparameter"
Related
I am trying to run an OpenModelica script using a DOS .bat file. But facing some issues.
The batch file runmodelica.bat has
%OPENMODELICAHOME%\bin\omc testscript.mos
The file testscript.mos is
loadModel(Modelica)
getErrorString()
loadFile("HelloWorld.mo")
simulate(HelloWorld)
getErrorString()
If I run the commands in the testscript.mos file from an OM Shell by changing to that directory, everything works fine. But If I run the batch file from the DOS prompt, I get the following error
Error processing file: testscript.mos
[C:/Users/blahblah/testscript.mos:2:1-2:1:writable] Error: Missing token: ASSIGN
# Error encountered! Exiting...
# Please check the error message and the flags.
Execution failed!
The HelloWorld.mo file comes with the standard installation and I haven't modified it
class HelloWorld
Real x(start = 1);
parameter Real a = 1;
equation
der(x) = - a * x;
end HelloWorld;
I am new to OpenModelica and searched online but couldn't find a solution. Any help is appreciated.
All the commands run in the OM Shell but not when invoked from the bat file.
The script code needs to be valid Modelica, so you need ; after each command.
loadModel(Modelica);
getErrorString();
loadFile("HelloWorld.mo");
simulate(HelloWorld);
getErrorString();
I'm trying to execute bash script using karate. I'm able to execute the script from karate-config.js and also from .feature file. I'm also able to pass the arguments to the script.
The problem is, that if the script fails (exits with something else than 0) the test execution continues and finishes as succesfull.
I found out that when the script echo-es something then i can access it as a result of the script so I could possibly echo the exit value and do assertion on it (in some re-usable feature), but this seems like a workaround rather than a valid clean solution. Is there some clean way of accessing the exit code without echo-ing it? Am I missing on something?
script
#!/bin/bash
#possible solution
#echo 3
exit 3;
karate-config.js
var result = karate.exec('script.sh arg1')
feture file
def result = karate.exec('script.sh arg1')
Great timing. We very recently did some work for CLI testing which I am sure you can use effectively. Here is a thread on Twitter: https://twitter.com/maxandersen/status/1276431309276151814
And we have just released version 0.9.6.RC4 and new we have a new karate.fork() option that returns an instance of Command on which you can call exitCode
Here's an example:
* def proc = karate.fork('script.sh arg1')
* proc.waitSync()
* match proc.exitCode == 0
You can get more ideas here: https://github.com/intuit/karate/issues/1191#issuecomment-650087023
Note that the argument to karate.fork() can take multiple forms. If you are using karate.exec() (which will block until the process completes) the same arguments work.
string - full command line as seen above
string array - e.g. ['script.sh', 'arg1']
json where the keys can be
line - string (OR)
args - string array
env - optional environment properties (as JSON)
redirectErrorStream - boolean, true by default which means Sys.err appears in Sys.out
workingDir - working directory
useShell - default false, auto-prepend cmd /c or sh -c depending on OS
And since karate.fork() is async, you need to call waitSync() if needed as in the example above.
Do provide feedback and we can tweak further if needed.
EDIT: here's a very advanced example that shows how to listen to the process output / log, collect the log, and conditionally exit: fork-listener.feature
Another answer which can be a useful reference: Conditional match based on OS
And here's how to use cURL for advanced HTTP tests ! https://stackoverflow.com/a/73230200/143475
In case you need to do a lot of local file manipulation, you can use the karate.toJavaFile() utility so you can convert a relative path or a "prefixed" path to an absolute path.
* def file = karate.toJavaFile('classpath:some/file.txt')
* def path = file.getPath()
I was trying to execute powershell script in a remote machine via jenkins pipeline.my script location ex: $server_vm_name\d$\scripts\testscript.ps1 . and I need to pass parameter to the testscript.ps1 as parameter name -clientpath. for the client path u have used this external path ex:
\${client_vm_name}\d$\Client\Application . I have used the network paths for both script location and parameter
I have write the following code snippet to get the work done. but its not working. anyone have idea what i have done in wrong way?.
error msg :
*
org.codehaus.groovy.control.MultipleCompilationErrorsException: startup failed:
WorkflowScript: 885: unexpected char: '\' # line 885, column 49.
rshell script: "\\$db_vm_name\d$\script
stage('Installation') {
agent{
label PS_AGENT_LABEL
}
steps{
script{
powershell script: "\\$server_vm_name\d$\scripts\testscript.ps1 -clientPath \\${client_vm_name}\d$\Client\Application"
}
}
}
Using Cudafy version 1.29, which can be downloaded from here
I am executing the examples that are found in the install folder CudafyV1.29\CudafyByExample\
Specifically, "chapter 3" example that begins line 42 of program.cs calls the following:
simple_kernel.Execute();
which is this:
public static void Execute()
{
CudafyModule km = CudafyTranslator.Cudafy(); // <--exception thrown!
GPGPU gpu = CudafyHost.GetDevice(CudafyModes.Target, CudafyModes.DeviceId);
gpu.LoadModule(km);
gpu.Launch().thekernel(); // or gpu.Launch(1, 1, "kernel");
Console.WriteLine("Hello, World!");
}
The indicated line throws this exception:
Compilation error: CUDAFYSOURCETEMP.cu
'C:\Program' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file. .
Which is immediately obvious that the path has spaces and the programmer did not double quote or use ~ to make it operational.
So, I did not write this code. And I cannot step through the sealed code contained within CudafyModule km = CudafyTranslator.Cudafy();In fact I don't even know the full path that is causing the exception, it is cut-off in the exception message.
Does anyone have a suggestion for how to fix this issue?
Update #1: I discovered where CUDAFYSOURCETEMP.cu lives on my computer, here it is:
C:\Users\humphrt\Desktop\Active Projects\Visual Studio
Projects\CudafyV1.29\CudafyByExample\bin\Debug
...I'm still trying to determine what the program is looking for along the path to 'C:\Program~'.
I was able to apply a workaround to bypass this issue. The workaround is to reinstall all components of cudafy in to folders with paths with no ' ' (spaces). My setup looks like the below screenshot. Notice that I also installed the CUDA TOOLKIT from NVIDIA in the same folder - also with no spaces in folder names.
I created a folder named "C:\CUDA" and installed all components within it, here is the folder structure:
I saw a similar question here
After reading the answers and comment in the above link I located the 'libmwi18n.so' file and set the LD_LIBRRY_PATH, but I'm still getting this error:
'error while loading shared libraries: libmwi18n.so: cannot
open shared object file: No such file or directory'
I did the following:
locate libmwil8n.so
which gives output
/usr/local/MATLAB/R2012a/bin/glnx86/libmwi18n.so
Then I did
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH= /usr/local/MATLAB/R2012a/bin/glnx86
and ran the shell program again,
./run_app.sh
which returns the same error.
Please help me , how can I solve this problem?
Update-
content of the run_spp.sh
!/bin/sh
# script for execution of deployed applications
#
# Sets up the MCR environment for the current $ARCH and executes
# the specified command.
#
exe_name=$0
exe_dir=`dirname "$0"`
echo "------------------------------------------"
if [ "x$1" = "x" ]; then
echo Usage:
echo $0 \<deployedMCRroot\> args
else
echo Setting up environment variables
MCRROOT="$1"
echo ---
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=.:${MCRROOT}/runtime/glnx86 ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRROOT}/bin/glnx86 ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRROOT}/sys/os/glnx86;
MCRJRE=${MCRROOT}/sys/java/jre/glnx86/jre/lib/i386 ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRJRE}/native_threads ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRJRE}/server ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRJRE}/client ;
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:${MCRJRE} ;
XAPPLRESDIR=${MCRROOT}/X11/app-defaults ;
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH;
export XAPPLRESDIR;
echo LD_LIBRARY_PATH is ${LD_LIBRARY_PATH};
shift 1
args=
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
token=`echo "$1" | sed 's/ /\\\\ /g'` # Add blackslash before each blank
args="${args} ${token}"
shift
done
"${exe_dir}"/b $args
fi
exit
Your LD_LIBRARY_PATH should not include the library itself, but rather, the path that contains the library. Try:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/MATLAB/R2012a/bin/glnx86
or perhaps appending this location to the path:
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:/usr/local/MATLAB/R2012a/bin/glnx86
EDIT: (after more info on question provided)
The shell script run_app.sh sets up it's own library path, using the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH (it is declared in lines 17--24, and overwritten in line 26). This means that anything that is set in your shell before executing the script will be overwritten.
To include the path for libmwi18n.so, append the path within the script, after line 17 and before line 26, with:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${LD_LIBRARY_PATH}:/usr/local/MATLAB/R2012a/bin/glnx86
(Note: there is also a printout of the LD path so you should be able to tell whether the glnx86 path is present or not).
I think you want glnx86, not glnx68.
Apologies if that was just a typo in your question.