I am in correct directory (OSX Sierra)
/Users/username/Library/Android/sdk/build-tools/27.0.3
I use ls and see aapt, but when I run the aaptexecutable, this error results
-bash: aapt: command not found
Why is appt not found though I am executing from correct directory?
Thanks
Apparently the terminal doesn't have direct access to the executables in the current working directory. The absolute path appears to work:
/Users/username/Library/Android/sdk/build-tools/27.0.3/aapt
Related
I am trying to install pumba from the OS release page. Once it is downloaded, I try running
pumba --help
It gives a command not found error.
Can anyone suggest what am I missing? The amd_64 file has all read, write and execute permissions.
If the name of the file is pumba_linux_amd64, you have to use that. Additionally, since the file is (assuming) not in your $PATH, you can't launch it directly.
If your file is in your current directory, run
./pumba_linux_amd64
when trying the example of the moq framework, I get the following exception when I enter "go generate":
example.go:5: running "moq": exec: "moq": executable file not found in $PATH
What should I do? I'm using Kubuntu 16.04
PS: I tried
export PATH=$PATH:/home/[...]/go/src/github.com/matryer/moq
without success
#sprabhakaran got the right answer. I only needed to add the go binary folder to the PATH global variable:
export PATH=$PATH:/home/[...]/go/bin
and if it doesn't work, check that moq was correctly installed.
First, install using the following command:
go install github.com/matryer/moq#latest
Go binary should be added to the global PATH
export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/go/bin
worked for me on MAC
Operating System: Windows 8.1
Cygwin Version: Latest version, as of Sept. 9, 2014.
Guile Version: 1.8
Background:
My overall goal is to install a program called "MIT Photonics Band (MPB)" on Windows 8.1 using Cygwin. I am a new user, as I started using Cygwin a few days ago. I was able to install all required packages successfully after some troubleshooting. Eventually, I installed the MPB program using the generic ./configure, make, make install commands with slight modifications. All of this appeared to be successful.
The Problem:
When I try to run the executable program, I get the following error:
ERROR: In procedure primitive-load-path:
ERROR: Unable to find file "ice-9/boot-9.scm" in load path
Attempt At Solution:
The following is a page of the MPB installation manual:
MPB Installation Manual - Shared Libraries.
It appears to address my issue. Note that it mentions LIBDIR and foobar. For my operating system, foobar is PATH. The LIBDIR, however, I do not know explicitly because my "make install" output did not indicate it, as the manual suggests it should have. Anyhow, I found the location of ice-9/boot-9.scm through a computer search and its directory happens to be here:
C:\cygwin64\usr\share\guile\1.8\ice-9
Hence, I ran the following command (again, for a Windows 8.1 operating system) in bash:
$ export PATH="/usr/share/guile/1.8/ice-9:$PATH"
However, note that when I run $PATH, I get this message:
-bash: /usr/share/guile/1.8/ice-9:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/cygdrive/c/Program: No such file or directory
I also tried:
$ export GUILE_LOAD_PATH="/usr/share/guile/1.8/ice-9:$GUILE_LOAD_PATH"
That yielded:
-bash: /usr/share/guile/1.8/ice-9:: No such file or directory
Furthermore, I tried to copy and paste the "ice-9" folder in various locations for a quick and sloppy solution, but it was to no avail. I searched online for answers as some users have had an issue with the program not finding the ice-9/boot-9.scm file in the past. I could not get my problem solved.
Please let me know if I need to provide more information. I appreciate the help!
EDIT: In response to the first user's post, I used the command echo $PATH and the following was the output:
/usr/share/guile/1.8:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/NVIDIA Corporation/PhysX/Common:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/AMD APP/bin/x86_64:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/AMD APP/bin/x86:/cygdrive/c/Windows/system32:/cygdrive/c/Windows:/cygdrive/c/Windows/System32/Wbem:/cygdrive/c/Windows/System32/WindowsPowerShell/v1.0:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/Windows Live/Shared:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/ATI Technologies/ATI.ACE/Core-Static:/cygdrive/c/Program Files/MATLAB/R2013a/runtime/win64:/cygdrive/c/Program Files/MATLAB/R2013a/bin:/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/Windows Kits/8.1/Windows Performance Toolkit:/cygdrive/c/Program Files/Microsoft SQL Server/110/Tools/Binn:/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/system32:/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS:/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/System32/Wbem:/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/System32/WindowsPowerShell/v1.0:/cygdrive/c/Program Files/MATLAB/MATLAB Compiler Runtime/v81/runtime/win64:/usr/lib/lapack
Note that the problem still persists.
EDIT 2:
So I opened the "load.scm" file for GUILE and I found this line:
(define load-path '("/usr/share/emacs/20.7/lisp/"
"/usr/share/emacs/20.7/lisp/emacs-lisp/"))
I tried to add /usr/share/guile/1.8/ to these directories, but that didn't do anything either. Can't tell what's wrong.
After wrestling with my environment variables to get the proper directory set, I can now get the version with:
C:\Projects\TestProj>ant -version
Apache Ant(TM) version 1.8.4 compiled on May 22 2012
Ant appears to be working:
C:\Projects\TestProj>ant
Buildfile: build.xml does not exist!
Build failed
I still get the error when I try:
C:\Projects\TestProj>cordova -d platform add android
cordova library for "android" already exists. No need to download. Continuing.
Checking if platform "android" passes minimum requirements...
Creating android project...
Running command: C:\Users\Administrator\.cordova\lib\android\cordova\3.4.0\bin\c
reate.bat --cli C:\Projects\TestProj\platforms\android com.company.testproj
TestProj
C:\Users\Administrator\.cordova\lib\android\cordova\3.4.0\bin\node_modules\q\q.j
s:126
throw e;
^
Error: ERROR : executing command 'ant', make sure you have ant installed and add
ed to your path.
From all of the posts that I have read, this is an issue with ANT_HOME, but it appears I have that part of it tackled. Edit I've installed ant 1.9.3 to program files, and bin resides in:
EDIT Changed to just ant, instead of apache-ant-1.9.3-bin\apache-ant-1.9.3
C:\Program Files\ant
Echo home:
C:\Projects\TestProj>echo %ANT_HOME%
C:\Program Files\ant
And of course I have %ANT_HOME%\bin in my path. Any help identifying the issue would be appreciated.
I think the path you use for ANT_HOME is wrong. C:\Users\Administrator\AppData\Roaming\npm\node_modules\ant\ant seems to be the path to the ant npm module but not the ant command.
Ant command more probably is somewhere in program files. In a cmd, run where ant to know where in your path ant is found and use this path for ANT_HOME. (in the folder you should see ant, ant.cmd and ant.bat)
After further investigation, I think your problem is caused half by cordova not correctly checking node errors and half because of registry setting in your computer (a cmd autorun parameter).
You can check answers in those posts for more info:
nodejs child_process exec 'java -version'
Windows CMD.exe "The system cannot find the path specified."
Check if you have a registry key HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor\AutoRun
after setting the variables, restart your machine. Closing command prompt etc will not help.
Even I was stuck for quite a long time and next day when I started my system, it was working fine :P
I am trying to compile ARM code on Ubuntu 12.04 (Precise Pangolin).
Everything is working fine when I put the code in the local directory.
But when I put the code in the cited mount directory, an error shows up:
making testXmlFiles
sh: 0: getcwd() failed: No such file or directory
ARM Compiling xxxxx.c
sh: 0: getcwd() failed: No such file or directory
Here is my setting in fstab:
//10.0.0.1/data /mnt/data cifs auto,noserverino,credentials=/root/.smbcredentials,file_mode=0777,dir_mode=0777,uid=user,gid=users,noperm 0 0
What is going on here? What could cause this error?
This error is usually caused by running a command from a directory that no longer exists.
Try changing your directory and rerun the command.
That also happened to me on a recreated directory. The directory is the same, but to make it work again, just run:
cd .
Try the following command. It worked for me.
cd; cd -
This can happen with symbolic links sometimes. If you experience this issue and you know you are in an existing directory, but your symbolic link may have changed, you can use this command:
cd $(pwd)
In Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS (Xenial Xerus), the following command works for me:
exit
Then I've login again.
Please check whether the directory path exists or not. This error comes up if the folder doesn't exist from where you are running the command.
Probably you have executed a remove command from the same path on the command line.
If some directory/folder does not exist, but somehow you navigated to that directory, in that case you can see this error.
For example:
currently, you are in the "mno" directory (path = abc/def/ghi/jkl/mno
run "sudo su" and delete mno
go to the "ghi" directory and delete the "jkl" directory
now you are in the "ghi" directory (path abc/def/ghi)
run "exit"
after running the "exit", you will get that error
now you will be in "mno"(path = abc/def/ghi/jkl/mno) folder. That does not exist.
So, generally this error will show when the directory doesn't exist.
To fix this, simply run "cd;" or you can move to any other directory which exists.
In my case, none of the previous answers has worked.
After banging my head against the wall for a while I've found out, that I've destroyed the /etc/passwd entries by running a custom-made-linux-server-setup-bash-script which worked well previously, but this time the regex within the "sed" command erased all the existing entries :D
After copy pasting the default entries from another working Linux server, I could finally restart sshd.
So don't forget to back up the original /etc/passwd file before applying any regular expression replacements on it :)