I am trying to install Percona client on two different Linux servers with the same ubuntu version (20.04.2 LTS), but with different architecture. The percona client got successfully installed in the server with x86_64(amd64) architecture but failing to install in the server with aarch64 architecture. I am facing the following error in the server with aarch64-
Steps followed to install the percona client
Download Percona Repo Package
wget https://repo.percona.com/apt/percona-release_latest.$(lsb_release -sc)_all.deb
Install Percona Repo Package
sudo dpkg -i percona-release_latest.$(lsb_release -sc)_all.deb
Update apt-cache
sudo apt-get update
Install Percona Monitoring and Management Client
sudo apt-get install pmm2-client
I followed the installation steps given in the below link.
https://www.percona.com/software/pmm/quickstart#:~:text=Step%202%3A%20Install%20Client
Please suggest a solution to install percona client in Ubuntu with aarch64 architecture.
Percona does not currently support the aarch64 architecture. You will not be able to install any Percona software for ARM-based processors. Please reach out to Percona on social media to voice your support for ARM as we base our roadmaps and support on user feedback.
Related
I came across a debian application by the name JavaPackage which can create a debian installation file (.deb) form a java binary (.tar.gz) which you can then install using dpkg -i application_name.deb. With Ubuntu being a debian-based linux distribution, it is possible that it can be installed on ubuntu as well.
How do I go about installing it on Ubuntu/Kubuntu 16.04.2 LTS?
java-package is available in the official ubuntu repositories. All you need to do is update the repository with the latest version then install it as shown below:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install java-package
I am new to openVZ and I want to install node.js and all its dependencies on openVZ server.
Suggestion is much appreciated, thank you.
To install nodejs on either OpenVZ server or OpenVZ container you would want to use whichever package manager that is provided with your distribution. The two most popular OpenVZ server distributions are CentOS (yum/rpm) and Debian (aptitude/apt-get/dpkg). If you are using an OpenVZ container, there are many more possibilities but chances are it is a distribution that supports either yum or apt.
For CentOS 7 (YUM/RPM) you first need to install the extra packages repository:
yum install epel-release
Then you should be able to install nodejs:
yum install nodejs
For Debian Jessie (and also Ubuntu 16.04) it appears to be in the stable repositories so you can just install it:
aptitude update
aptitude install nodejs
EDIT: I just noticed a minimal Ubuntu did not have aptitude installed. Instructions for apt-get:
apt-get update
apt-get install nodejs
If that does not answer your question, please supply more information such as which distribution you are using and what version of nodejs you need to install so others will be able to assist you better.
I need to install Hyperledger on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux server that won't be connected to the internet. What I'll need to install is likely the Go language and Docker however given I have no internet connection I can't just use a package manager.
I've read about methods to do this with Ubuntu that mention copying .deb files over or otherwise using tools - would this work with RHEL and if not would anyone be able to recommend a way of doing this? (or any advice for achieveing this generally).
You can install the package "downloadonly" on a RHEL Server with internet connection:
# yum install yum-plugin-downloadonly
Then download the packages you want:
# yum install --downloadonly --downloaddir=<directory> <package>
Transfer and install them on a Server without internet connection:
# rpm -ivh package.rpm
I'm trying to Install NodeJS on Linux RHEL(Release 6.6(Santiago)? Nothing seems to work. I download and extract the file(v.6.3.1). The I try to install with the command sudo yum install package_name. Nothing I try is working.
Red Hat packages a number of technologies via "Software Collections" including node.js 0.10 and 4.4. Details are here: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Software_Collections/2/html-single/2.2_Release_Notes/index.html
Also, these are part of the RHEL subscription.
I created native installers for my air application successfully under MacOS and Windows.
With Ubuntu 10 I am able to create a .deb package, but when I launch it opens the Ubuntu software center showing error:
Dependency is not satisfiable: adobeair (>= 2.5.0.0)
I thought native installer should be able to download the proper adobe air version if available (2.5.1 seems available as deb package). If I install air for linux 2.5.1 from adobe website my application launches fine.
Did anyone experience the same issue?
Thanks in advance for any help
Paolo
Unfortunately, many years late "Adobe AIR for Linux is no longer supported." following what adobe page says. Using the "AIR archive" is possible to get unsupported versions, the 2.6.0 version is the most recent available. If you need to install a program that require a newer version of it, you might go to Virtual box with a Windows guest.
For version 2.6.0 the recommend steps for Ubuntu 16.10 are:
for 32bit machine
wget -O adobe-air_i386.deb http://drive.noobslab.com/data/apps/AdobeAir/adobeair_2.6.0.2_i386.deb
sudo dpkg -i adobe-air_i386.deb
sudo apt-get install -f && rm adobe-air_i386.deb
for 64bit machine
wget -O adobe-air_amd64.deb http://drive.noobslab.com/data/apps/AdobeAir/adobeair_2.6.0.2_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i adobe-air_amd64.deb
sudo apt-get install -f && rm adobe-air_amd64.deb
The recommend steps for Ubuntu 16.04/14.04/12.04/Linux Mint 18/17/13 (both extracted from here):
wget -O adobe-air.sh http://drive.noobslab.com/data/apps/AdobeAir/adobe-air.sh
chmod +x adobe-air.sh;sudo ./adobe-air.sh
What version of the adobeair package is available from the Ubuntu repositories?
A .deb is just an archive and the dependencies have to be available from the repositories the system is configured to use. It can't resolve the dependency by downloading it from some specific location you know of but the system is not configured to use.
If the needed version of the package is not available from the Ubuntu repositories then your only options are to reconfigure the system to use an additional repository that does have the needed dependency before you try to install your package, or download and manually install the dependency before you try to to install your package.
Try to install itdpkg -i --force-architecture adobeair.deb