in cause of a failed user Import the System Administrator Group was deleted.
The admin User is still there and can act as admin, but some Features (like activating Pages) are disabled as button (right click on page -> activate works).
Is there a way to restore the System Administrator Group? Can i Export it from another instance and Import it on the damaged instance?
Thanks
Patrick
Open Package Manager from CRX Menu and reinstall the cq-content package. All Default users will be created again with the right ACL.
Related
I am new to Siemens' Teamcenter Active workspace, An Angularjs based framework for Product LifeCycle Management [PLM]. I need to do some customization in the existing UI.
Background:
I have Teamcenter / Active Workspace installed on IIS and access it using the URL like http://hostname:8080/awc12/#/ [Default URL of the basic Installation of Teamcenter Active worksapce]
I have created another Active workspace module using generateModule script provided by "Active workspace environment" and deployed on the IIS server and access it as an http://hostname:8080/myModule/#/mySubLocation
I want to insert a button on the Panel of the basic installation http://hostname:8080/awc12/#/com.siemens.splm.clientfx.tcui.xrt.showObject?uid=xxx
Upon clicking this button I want to launch newly created module http://hostname:8080/myModule/#/mySubLocation as a Modal dialog
Questions:
What steps do I need to take so that I can achieve adding the new button and opening a modal with my module page?
Where can I find the list of APIs that are exposed by Teamcenter Active workspace
Is there any document/site where I can find some Hello World applications with code?
Siemens provides this PDF on "Configuration and Extensibility" for Active Workspace 4.3:
https://docs.plm.automation.siemens.com/data_services/resources/aw/4.3/aw_pdf_collection/tdoc/en_US/pdf/configuration_and_extensibility.pdf
And this location also might contain useful information:
https://docs.plm.automation.siemens.com/docs/aw/4.3/en_US/ui_pattern_library/#/showcase/
i know that the default profile name when i installed websphere was Appsrv01, I want to create my own AppSrv02 but the location of my IBM Websphere was in C: and i dont have any write permission, i dont have any admin rights also..
using COMMAND-LINE, I want to make my profile folder to be writable, so that my newly created AppSrv02 will be list down in the profile names in my RAD.
Please help me. Thanks
So that's your problem. In order to have a usable profile in WAS, your user must have write permissions. See this link from WAS ND infocenter, it applies to WAS standalone too.
http://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSAW57_8.5.5/com.ibm.websphere.installation.nd.doc/ae/tpro_manage_nonroot.html
If you cannot change the write permissions to this profile, you'll need to create your own. For this, you can either use WAS Profile Management Tool, WAS CLI or you can create your profile using the Configure profiles... link in the WAS server creation wizard you posted. I'd use the RAD way because RAD validates, within the IDE, the proper permissions that you need to create and use the profile within RAD.
First check whether you have admin rights or not if your using User/Guest profile, by creating any new folder in C drive where IBM WAS is installed.
If you have Admin rights, than right click on RAD run as administrator. It should work fine.
If Profile doesnt show up in drop down, Configure new profile and try checking that way.
If you dont have Admin rights better install RAD in any local drive other than C
Running Eclipse with Admin rights and removing the read-only tick for the AppServXX folder/WAS folder couldn't help me... cause I copied the WAS server from another PC :). So for those of you who want to move / migrate your development environment:
I did a search inside the copied WAS, Eclipse and the project's workspace folder for their old paths (with Total Commander, feed the results into a list) and dragged all the files (except the log ones) into my editor (NotePad++) and did a replace in all open documents for the new paths. It's a bit lucrative, but it took only 10 minutes for me and afterwards the WAS server in Eclipse showed the correct profile and it also did start up well.
I have Windows 2008 R2 server. And I have a brand new msmq service just installed, no old messages in queue.
The default storage folder is C:\Windows\System32\msmq\storage, I want to move it to D:\Data\msms\storage. So I opened Computer Management -> Service and Applications -> Message Queuing, right click on it and selected Property, switched to Storage tab. I typed in D:\Data\msmq\storage in all 3 text boxes. The new folder does not exist at all, when I clicked Apply button system prompted The folder d:\Data\msmq\storage does not exist. Do you want to create it now?, and I clicked Yes button. Now the next screen I see is The folder d:\Data\msmq\storage cannot be created. Error: The system cannot find the path specified.
Any solution?
I have been trying to install sql server 2008 r2 at my local machine and at the end of the installation i got this error "Wait on the database engine recovery handle failed". The Wizard shows progress in which some of the components including Database Engine could be not be installed.
I need some help related to this.
This issue can pop up for a few different scenarios. Do check the logs for error.
One of the scenario when this error can occur if a Microsoft® system folder is either missing or lacking the correct permissions.
Please use the following steps:
1.Click the Windows® Start button and click Run.
2.Type %appdata% and click OK.
3.Browse to the Microsoft folder.
4.Locate the Protect folder to assign the correct permissions:
Note: If the Protect folder is missing from the Microsoft folder, you will need to create it in this location by right-clicking and selecting Folder. Ensure to name the folder "Protect."
1.Right-click on the Protect folder and select Properties.
2.Click on the Security tab. Ensure the System and your logged on Windows User account is listed and both have Full Control.
3.Click Add to begin adding the accounts. For Windows Vista®/Windows 7, you will need to click Edit first.
4.In the "Enter the object names to select" box, type the word System, and press Enter on your keyboard. The System account should be listed
now. Select System from the user names list and select Full Control
under the Allow column. Click Apply .
5.Follow steps 3-4 to find, add and assign Full Control permissions also for you logged on Windows User account.
6.Click OK
.
Attempt to install SQL Server 2008 R2.
Even if this does not solve your problem, you take a look at the msdn blog that provides a workaround for the install scenario and see if this fixes it?
I installed Eclipse and am having some trouble relating to denied user permissions.
I am working on Vista inside a Windows domain. My user account is very restricted. My boss needs to grant administrator permission any time I install any application or establish a new network connection through the firewall.
Here are some of the problems that have occurred:
At Eclipse startup, Vista asks every time if I really want to run it. It doesn't remember my decision.
Eclipse doesn't remember my default workspace.
I installed the BIRT plugin. After a second restart it doesn't work anymore. The BIRT perspective does not run fine.
What permissions do I need to run Eclipse on Windows?
This problem occurs when you host the Eclipse application within a directory that is protected by the Vista or Windows 7 operating system. For example, %ProgramFiles%, %ProgramFiles(x86)%, or %ProgramW6432%. Unfortunately, for all of Eclipse's maturity, it still doesn't entirely restrict its per-user activities to the Windows operating system's user space.
If you don't care where your Eclipse application resides, or you don't have admin rights on your system, try moving the Eclipse application to a directory that is not protected by the Windows operating system.
If you have admin rights on your system, and want your Eclipse application to be hosted in one of Window's protected directories, you must make the directory writable to users. This will allow the proper operation of the Eclipse application, but be warned that it will also allow users to directly modify files within the Eclipse application directory. You can reduce this risk by making the directory writable to only the specific accounts that you choose.
Note that by performing either of the above solutions, it will not be necessary to run the Eclipse application with the "Run as Administrator" option.
To make the Eclipse application directory writable by users:
Right click on the Eclipse application directory within Windows Explorer.
Select "Properties".
Click the "Security" tab.
Click the "Edit..." button to change security permissions for the Eclipse folder.
If you want only specific user accounts to be able to write to the Eclipse application directory, click the "Add..." button to allow those accounts to appear within the "Group or user names" list.
One at a time, select each account to be granted write access to the Eclipse application directory, and then click the checkbox for "Modify / Allow" such that the checkbox is checked.
Conversely, if you want to allow all system users to be able to use Eclipse properly, select the "Users (YourComputerName\Users)" group from the "Group or user names" list, and then click the checkbox for "Modify / Allow" such that the checkbox is checked.
After all appropriate users have been given write access to the Eclipse application directory, click "OK". You should now be able to run Eclipse without issue.
tharkun's answer is sort of correct but I just wanted to post a "more correct" answer for anyone else who finds this question in the future.
For some reason, Eclipse needs administrator privileges in Windows 7 and Windows Vista machines. To do this one time, right-click the Eclipse executable or shortcut and click "Run as administrator"; to make it permanent, go to properties, the compatibility tab, and check the "Run this program as an administrator" box.
Despite tharkun's post, perhaps he forgot, Eclipse doesn't have an installer; you simply unzip it. There is no reinstallation necessary. If you run Eclipse normally and find something wrong, and just discovered this answer, you can safely run Eclipse as administrator from now on and nothing will be broken as a result of you not having run as administrator up until this point.
The problems with Eclipse that require administrator mode do not show up immediately, but for example if you check for updates with Eclipse running in non-administrator mode, Eclipse will claim that there are no update sites available. Also some GUI features will have problems.
These problems are likely caused by some of the advanced UAC features meant to protect your system, such as UAC Virtualization. Eclipse can (and hopefully will) be fixed to write only to user space and "play nice" with other Windows applications, but for now we have to simply run it as administrator and trust that it's not taking advantage of the added privileges.
As a sidenote, I just spent several hours trying to figure out how to get Eclipse to write inside the %AppData% directory, in hopes that it would solve this problem and allow Eclipse to be run in user mode, but I could not get Eclipse to honor anything I tried. Oh well...
eclipse require write permission to app folder
it has to be in a folder with user write permission, f.e. %localappdata%\Eclipse. if u place it in %programfiles%\Eclipse it can't write to config files or plugins
the app has no installer. it stores config files in the app folder by default. the official install path is "c:\eclipse" and they forgot to mention that write permission is required
https://wiki.eclipse.org/Eclipse/Installation
Decompress this file into the directory of your choice (e.g. "c:\eclipse" on Windows) and ensure you have full Read and Execute permissions.