Different GOPATH in bash terminal and in Goland IDE - linux

I've changed my GOPATH and in order to make the change persistent I've added the following line in my .bashrc file:
export GOPATH=$HOME/workspaces/go_projects
After restart, when I run go env in the bash terminal I see the correct path, but when I check in the GoLand IDE terminal I still see the old path.
Any ideas?
I'm running on on ubuntu 18.04.

You need to check the GOPATH settings for GoLand IDE.
Goto Settings > Go > GOPATH and check the settings.
Below is the snippet for my system.
Make sure you have selected "Use GOPATH that's defined in system environment".

Related

Flutter command not found

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Apparently, none of the Flutter commands are working in the terminal of Android Studio which I believe I am trying to run it at the root of my project.
Output:
bash: flutter: command not found
You need to correctly set up your Flutter path.
From macOS install - Update your path:
Determine the directory where you placed the Flutter SDK. You will need this in Step 3.
Open (or create) $HOME/.bash_profile. You can do that by using terminal text editor by going in terminal and typing nano ~/.bash_profile
macOS v10.15 (Catalina) uses the Z shell by default, so edit $file HOME/.zshrc.
If you are using a different shell, the file path and filename will be different on your machine.
Add the following line and change [PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY] to be the path where you cloned Flutter’s Git repository is:
export PATH=[PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY]/flutter/bin:$PATH
For example:
export PATH=~/Documents/flutter/bin:$PATH
Press Ctrl + X and when it asks you to save the file, choose Yes
Run source $HOME/.bash_profile to refresh the current window or restart the terminal
Verify that the flutter/bin directory is now in your PATH by running:
echo $PATH
Notice that [PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY] is where you installed Flutter SDK, not the location of your app
Instead of nano, you can use any text editor to edit file ~/.bash_profile.
For zsh:
Open Terminal
Run: nano ~/.zshrc
Add: export PATH=[PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY]/flutter/bin:$PATH
Run: source ~/.zshrc
restart terminal
Run: flutter doctor -v
For example : if flutter in your machine has been installed under [your_username]/Developer/flutter
export PATH=Developer/flutter/bin:$PATH
I tried out all the methods in previous answers, but all of them lasted only while the terminal was open. So I went ahead and directly added it to the path file permanently.
sudo nano /etc/paths
Add this to the file:
/Users/yourUserName/Development/flutter/bin
Save the file by pressing Ctrl + X, Y and then Enter. Close the terminal and reopen it again. Tada!
If you are using zsh, you need to follow the steps below on Mac.
Download the latest Flutter version from the official site.
Unzip it and move to the $HOME location of your Mac.
Add to the path via the .zshrc file.
Run nano ~/.zshrc into an iTerm2 terminal.
Export PATH=$HOME/flutter/bin:$PATH
Save and close the ~/.zshrc file.
Restart iTerm2.
Now you will have the Flutter executable available.
Do the following steps:
Download the Flutter SDK
Flutter SDK Archive
Extract it where do you want (for example /home/development/flutter)
Set your PATH. Edit your file with the command gedit ~/.profile. You need to add this line:
export PATH=[location_where_you_extracted_flutter]/flutter/bin:$PATH
I showed you above where I've extracted mine, so my export will look like this:
export PATH=/home/myUser/development/flutter/bin:$PATH
Save the file and close it.
Run source ~/.profile to load the changes
If you now run flutter doctor, it should work!
If you are on macOS
First find the location of your Flutter SDK
Flutter SDK File: Write the below command on your terminal to download the Flutter SDK
git clone https://github.com/flutter/flutter.git
For example: the SDK executable file name is flutter and it is in folder Downloads
Close and open your terminal again.
And enter the following commands in your terminal
cd Downloads # Go to Downloads
cd flutter # Go to folder 'flutter'
pwd # /Users/[USERNAME]/downloads/flutter/
whoami # Your [USERNAME]
export PATH="/Users/[USERNAME]/downloads/flutter/bin":$PATH
macOS v10.14 (Mojave); Wireshark Path problem
In your terminal, run:
touch $HOME/.bash_profile
vi $HOME/.bash_profile
Now use I to insert and paste the following:
export PATH="$PATH:$HOME:/PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY/flutter/bin"
Use Esc and type :wq! to save the file and exit.
Refresh:
source $HOME/.bash_profile
And verify it's OK by running:
echo $PATH
For zsh users:
Open terminal run
touch $HOME/.zshrc
Run
sudo nano ~/.zshrc
Type
export PATH=$PATH:/Path to your extracted flutter/Flutter/bin
Press ctrl+x then press y
Press Enter
Close the terminal and open a new terminal and run
flutter doctor
You must have the .bash_profile file and define the flutter path in the .bash_profile file.
First of all, if you do not have or do not know file .bash_profile, please look my answer:
How do I edit $PATH (.bash_profile) on OSX?
You should add the below line (.../flutter_SDK_path/flutter/bin) in your .bash_profile:
export PATH=$PATH:/home/username/Documents/flutter_SDK_path/flutter/bin
After these steps, you can write Flutter code such as, flutter doctor, flutter build ios, flutter clean, etc. in the terminal of a MacBook.
Do this to add the Flutter executable permanently to your path (in Ubuntu):
cd $HOME
gedit .bashrc
Append the line:
export PATH="$PATH:[location_where_you_extracted_flutter]/flutter/bin"
in the text file and save it.
source $HOME/.bashrc
Open new terminal and run the flutter doctor command
On macOS v10.15 (Catalina), the issue is with the Path environment variable.
Open Terminal and check the shell (command: echo $SHELL),
If output is /bin/bash, we need to convert to Z shell (Zsh). Z shell is only the default shell on newly created user accounts, so any existing accounts you have on an upgraded Mac will still use Bash by default unless you change it. Simply run the chsh -s (change shell) command in a Terminal window.
(command: chsh -s /bin/zsh)
Enter your password when prompted. After you close the terminal window and reopen it, you’ll be using Z shell.
Update your Path
2.1. Open the zshrc file (command: vim ~/.zshrc)
2.2. Press 'I' to insert the path as (export PATH=~/Dev/flutter/bin:$PATH). Here ~/Dev/ is the folder where Flutter is installed
2.3. Hit Esc key and then :wq to save and exit the file
Done! try (command: flutter doctor)
Previously I was giving my whole path like this:
export PATH=Users/Tekion/Downloads/flutter/bin:$PATH
It started working after I changed my whole path to
export PATH=$HOME/Downloads/flutter/bin:$PATH
Add Path in this way in .bashrc of android sdk and tools with flutter
export PATH=$PATH:/user/Android/Sdk/platform-tools:/user/Android/Sdk/build-tools/27.0.1:/user/Android/Sdk/tools:/user/Android/Sdk/tools/bin:/user/Documents/fluterdev/flutter/bin:$PATH
Then run this command
source ~/.profile
Then run this command:
On Linux
source ~/.profile
On Mac
source ~/.bash_profile
Or:
open -a TextEdit ~/.bash_profile
Then you can user any of flutter command like to build fluter apk
flutter build apk
The Flutter SDK can be run on Windows as well as macOS.
For Windows
First download the latest SDK from the Flutter download page.
Now to run flutter in the Windows console, you need to update your PATH environment variable.
From the Start search bar, type ‘env’ and select Edit environment variables for your account.
Under User variables, check if there is an entry called Path:
If the entry does exist, append the full path to flutter\bin using ; as a separator from the existing values.
If the entry does not exist, create a new user variable named Path with the full path to flutter\bin as its value.
For Mac
First download the latest SDK from the Flutter download page
Extract the file in the desired location using following commands:
cd ~/development
unzip ~/Downloads/flutter_macos_v1.5.4-hotfix.2-stable.zip
Add the Flutter tool to your path:
export PATH="$PATH:pwd/flutter/bin"
Run flutter doctor
I followed the checked answer, but when I restart the terminal, the Flutter command is not recognized again. My in file bash_profile path is:
export PATH=~/Users/aldo/Projects/Framework/flutter/bin:$PATH with ~
Then I edit it to:
export PATH=/Users/aldo/Projects/Framework/flutter/bin:$PATH without ~
And re run source $HOME/.bash_profile: Now my Flutter command is recognized even if I restart the terminal.
The Flutter installation issue in macOS (specific for macOS v11 (Big Sur)).
Check which shell is your default shell that you have in the terminal.
To check the default shell, type command echo $SHELL.
For my specific issue I have Z shell (zsh) as my default shell.
So I change my Z shell as my default shell to Bash.
To change the default shell, enter the below command.
chsh -s /bin/bash
Enter your password when you are prompted
Now I have the Bash shell as my default.
Then I just follow the standard process for the Flutter setup on Flutter’s official site.
And I have successfully configured Flutter in my macOS.
Extract the file in the desired location, for example:
cd ~/development
unzip ~/Downloads/flutter_macos_1.22.5-stable.zip
Add the flutter tool to your path:
export PATH="$PATH:`pwd`/flutter/bin"
This command sets your PATH variable for the current terminal window only. To permanently add Flutter to your path, see below.
—> Determine the directory where you placed the Flutter SDK.
—> Open (or create) the rc file for your shell. Typing echo $SHELL in your Terminal tells you which shell you’re using. If you’re using Bash, edit $HOME/.bash_profile or $HOME/.bashrc. If you’re using Z shell, edit $HOME/.zshrc. If you’re using a different shell, the file path and filename will be different on your machine.
—> Add the following line and change [PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY] to be the path where you cloned Flutter’s Git repository
export PATH="$PATH:[PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY]/flutter/bin"
—> Run source $HOME/.<rc file> to refresh the current window, or open a new terminal window to automatically source the file.
—> Verify that the flutter/bin directory is now in your PATH by running:
echo $PATH
—> Verify that the flutter command is available by running
—> which flutter
—> Now run below command.
$ which flutter dart
/path-to-flutter-sdk/bin/flutter
/usr/local/bin/dart
—> And you're good to go.
You can easily create a symbolic link as below,
sudo ln -s /opt/flutter/bin/flutter /usr/bin/flutter
I had moved the executable flutter into the /opt/ folder after downloading, so replace it with the path you have for the directory the flutter executable is in.
The flutter command should work even after rebooting your machine.
In my case, I put the line export PATH=[PATH_TO_FLUTTER_GIT_DIRECTORY]/flutter/bin:$PATH in both file .bash_profile and .bashrc (I put it on the last line).
After that, run source .bash_profile and source .bashrc. Now it's working (even if you use it in a new terminal window)!
Just revert to chsh -s /bin/bash from chsh -s /bin/zsh,
Run one command
chsh -s /bin/bash
You're facing this problem just because you have changed the shell from Bash to Z shell in macOS. If you run this command again it will change the path again.
So just run one command and the problem is solved.
For Ubuntu 14.*:
There isn't any .bash_profile file, but it just the .profile file in folder /home/mangesh.
In my case, I am running this command to add the flutter/bin path,
export PATH="$PATH:/home/mangesh/Documents/flutter_data/flutter/bin/"
To verify the above change, just run,
echo $PATH
Following is my complete output,
$ pwd
/home/mangesh
$ export PATH="$PATH:/home/mangesh/Documents/flutter_data/flutter/bin/"
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin:/home/mangesh/Documents/flutter_data/flutter/bin/
On a Mac I followed the steps of the user Tree, but I still received the answer "flutter: command not found".
I then went to the folder flutter/bin and inside this folder Ctrl + click on the flutter executable and in the popup I clicked open. After that the Mac already recognized this as an exception and the Flutter commands already work.
On a Mac, there are two options to solve this issue.
Option 1: Adding the Flutter SDK path permanently (it will work in any terminal session)
Download the Flutter SDK and extract in any location and then you have to add the below line in $HOME/.bash_profile file (hidden folder as default).
export PATH="$PATH:[where the Flutter SDK is downloaded and extracted]/flutter/bin"
For example:
export PATH="$PATH:~/development/tools/flutter/bin"
Option 2: If you are facing any difficulties with Option 1, then this is much simpler, but you have to do this simple step whenever you restart your system/terminal.
Step 1: Go to the path where Flutter SDK downloaded and extracted (for example: cd ~/Development/tools/)
Step 2: Enter this command
export PATH='pwd'/flutter/bin:$PATH
That's it. Type "flutter doctor" to check if this issue gets resolved.
First, download the Flutter here: https://flutter.dev/docs/get-started/install/macos
When you created the folder with Flutter SDK, open it in Terminal using the following command:
cd ~/development
If there is no development folder run this command first:
mkdir /development
After that, you need to run the unzip command. Make sure you specify the correct path to the downloaded Flutter archive file.
Run the command below:
unzip ~/Downloads/flutter_macos_1.17.1-stable.zip
Setting the Flutter tool path
In order to set up the Flutter tool path you should run this command:
export PATH="$PATH:`pwd`/flutter/bin"
Next, you need to know which shell you are using. For this run this command:
echo $SHELL
Depending on the shell run the following command: [Note, the command you will be using depends on the shell you have.]
sudo nano ~/.zshrc
or
sudo nano /.bashrc
After that in the new window, you need to add a path to the flutter tool.
Use the following command:
export PATH=$PATH:~/development/flutter/bin
The next thing you need to do is to check the Flutter dependencies.
For this, run the command:
flutter doctor
This operation will help you to identify if there are any dependencies you need to install.
After the results will be prepared click Agree and wait for the installation of the needed dependencies to complete the setup.
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Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial Xerus):
I added the path correctly for Flutter, Java, Android Studio, and Android SDK in the .bashrc file, but when I run flutter doctor, the terminal returns:
flutter: command not found
Solution:
So, first I had to always run:
sudo su
And then:
source /home/your_name/.bashrc
Then run flutter doctor. It works fine.
So every time, if I want to run flutter doctor, I have to run these two commands above.
The Flutter installation guide says you add this:
export PATH="$PATH:pwd/flutter/bin"
Visual Studio Code doesn't support pwd for some reason. The fix:
export PATH="$PATH:~/flutter/bin"
If you are facing this issue from a Windows 10 machine, this is how I solved it:
First of all, find your Flutter executable path, and then your bin folder under the Flutter path
E.g., "C:\flutter\bin"
Copy it, and press the windows button. Type: environment, and press "Edit the system environment variable"
Press the "Environment variable" button
Double click on the "Path" menu
Add a new path, using the bin address
E.g., ""C:\flutter\bin"
This should work.
For those using a Z shell resource (.zshrc), navigate to your home directory and open .zprofile, copy and paste this: export PATH=[PATH_TO_FLUTTER_DIRECTORY]/flutter/bin:$PATH

VsCode Go setup problems

I want to use VsCode for Go programming, but if I try to create/edit a .go file, VsCode forces me too install "gocode command", as you can see in the following:
.
When I click on install, the output field shows me these errors:
What can I do to fix it?
The error message says that your GOPATH is relative and should be absolute.
Make sure you read THIS first.
Make sure your GOPATH and GOROOT are defined in absolute paths.
Edit your .bashrc, .profile, .zshrc, etc accordingly:
GOPATH=/path/to/a/directory/inside/home/directory
GOROOT=/path/to/you/go/library
Read this answer for more details.

Vagrant up gives 'cygpath' Vagrant was not found in path

I've installed Vagrant, Vagrant init worked fine. When I now run Vagrant up I get this error:
The executable 'cygpath' Vagrant is trying to run was not
found in the %PATH% variable. This is an error. Please verify
this software is installed and on the path.
Im using cygwin as terminal and I have windows 8, and I've placed C:\cygwin64\bin in my PATH in envoirment variables.
My question is, why do I get this error message when I've specified the path to my cygwin bin?
Thanks!
I am assuming you have Cygwin installed, simply add the path to cygwin (usually c:\cygwin\bin\cygwin.exe) to your shells %path% variable and you should be ready to go.
Ctrl-X => System => Advanced Settings => Variables
Restart your Powershell/Cmd-Window
I just experienced the same error after removing cygwin, and figured out that the answer is not in reinstalling it, but simply removing it from the %Path%, so that Vagrant wouldn't search for it when booting.
So, you can open Control Panel => System => Advanced System Settings => Environment Variables...
And then find Path under System Variables, and remove any references to cygwin.
Restart your shell, and you're good to go.
My soultion was to create a small wrapper script, vagrant.bat:
#setlocal
#set PATH=C:\HashiCorp\Vagrant\bin;C:\Windows\system32;C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\Wbem
#vagrant %*
#endlocal
The vagrant.bat file is in a directory that is first in my PATH.
I suddenly had the same problem and found that for some reason Cygwin had been erased from the system (I was running from git bash shell). I reinstalled Cygwin and it then worked again.

LiteIDE with gvm. Build, run, and fmt won't work. Environment issues?

I've set up go (golang) on my Linux Mint (Ubuntu) box using gvm (Go Version Manager).
I've started a project, but I can't get it to build from within LiteIDE.
go build -i [/home/username/go/src/projectname]
Error: process failed to start.
If I open a terminal and cd to the project's location and do a go build it works just fine. My go env seems to work just fine outside of liteide.
The GOROOT is not set correctly in LiteIDE.
In a terminal enter which go to know where gvm installed go. Example:
/home/username/.gvm/gos/go1.6/bin/go
In LiteIDE, click on the grey box "edit current environment" right of the environment drop down menu.
Uncomment the GOROOT line in the system.env file and enter the correct path that you got from which go. You omit "/bin/go".
GOROOT=/home/username/.gvm/gos/go1.6
Save the file. If saving is greyed out, you might need to change the permission of LiteIDE's liteenv directory. I installed mine to /opt/liteide/share/liteide/liteenv.
When the settings are configured correctly, this is what you should see in LiteIDE's Build Output window:
/home/username/.gvm/gos/go1.6/bin/go build -i [/home/username/go/src/project]
Success: process exited with code 0.
/home/username/go/src/bad/bad [/home/username/go/src/project]
Hello World!
Success: process exited with code 0.
Instead of using the system environment config (the default in the drop down menu) I'm personally using the linux64-local.env file. My LiteIDE config file looks like this:
# native compiler linux amd64
GOROOT=/home/username/.gvm/gos/go1.6
#GOBIN=
GOARCH=amd64
GOOS=linux
CGO_ENABLED=1
PATH=$GOROOT/bin:$PATH
LITEIDE_GDB=gdb
LITEIDE_MAKE=make
LITEIDE_TERM=/usr/bin/gnome-terminal
LITEIDE_TERMARGS=
LITEIDE_EXEC=/usr/bin/xterm
LITEIDE_EXECOPT=-e
LITEIDE_SHELL=gnome-terminal;lxterminal;kconsole;xfce4-terminal;xterm

How to teach R find the texlive directory when using rstudio?

My operating system is linux mint 15, and I recently installed the texlive 2013. After installation, I appended the search path for texlive to ~/.bashrc
# set PATH
PATH=/usr/local/texlive/2013/bin/x86_64-linux:$PATH; export PATH
# set MANPATH
MANPATH=/usr/local/texlive/2013/texmf/doc/man:$MANPATH; export MANPATH
# set INFOPATH
INFOPATH=/usr/local/texlive/2013/texmf/doc/info:$INFOPATH; export INFOPATH
Then I could locate cmds such as pdflatex on xterm. However, when I wanted to use the pkg Sweave in rstudio, it always prompted that No Tex installation detected. I examined the $PATH in rstudio by Sys.getenv("PATH") and found out that the texlive/ directory was not appended to $PATH. So I guessed the problem was that the environment of Xsession doesn't take ~/.bashrc into considration. How to address this issue. Any help would be appreciated.
I have recently set up a configuration like yours.
The most correct solution is to put those lines into ~/.profile (or /etc/profile, for all users, as I did); this way all processes will inherit that PATH, not only those derived from bash.
You are right. R Studio runs in a shell that doesn't pay attention to the usual startup scripts. As far as I can tell, the appropriate place to change them globally (for all users) is R_HOME/etc/Renviron.site and for individual users, $HOME/.Renviron. (On my system, R_HOME is /usr/lib/R.)
Run ?Startup in the R Studio console for more details.

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