This is the first time I am working with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and collectd.
The following steps I have performed in order to work with collectd.
Downloaded rpm package from link
Installed make
Installed rpm package
executed ./configure for collectd
executed make for collectd
executed make install for collectd
changed collectd.conf accordingly.
executed sudo service collectd start
After running this command I am getting the following error :
/etc/init.d/collectd: line 13: /etc/init.d/functions: No such file or directory
What I am doing wrong.
How to overcome this problem.
Also some of the plugins are not installed , I am getting dependency error.How to install all the plugins correctly.
Thank you.
the function "/etc/init.d/functions" do not exist in SuSe. i think do no need this line, you can comment from init.d/collectd and try if work normally.
more detail of init.d/functions: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/9314/no-such-file-or-directory-etc-init-d-functions
Related
Using a virgin (but updated) version of Rocky Linux 8.5, I am trying to install VMware Workstation 16.2.1 (and others), but get compile errors during the first attempt to run, when vmmon and vmnet are being built.
All the proper, current headers from kernel-devel and kernel-headers are installed.
I tried upgrading to the 5.16.4 kernal at kernel.org, with all associated headers, and basically get the same errors.
"Unable to install all modules." i.e., vmmon and vmnet
Posts i have found with searching the net seem to indicate that there was a "back-port" of an upstream fix to Rocky that has affected the ability to build the loadable kernel modules necessary to run vmware - but i cannot confirm this is actually the problem that I am experiencing.
So i simply ask these questions: Can anyone (today) install VMware Workstation 16.2.1 (or any version), on a fresh install of Rocky Linux 8.5?
If so, would you please point me at your installation instructions, because I am unable to build "vmmon" and "vmnet" modules today (2022-01-04), that allow me to actually run virtual machines with vmware? (The kernel modules fail to compile and build.)
(and after 15 years of using stackoverflow i do not have the reputation to create a "rocky-linux" question tag...)
See https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/689436/the-vmmon-and-vmnet-vmware-workstation-kernel-modules-fail-to-build-on-rocky-lin
mbubecek's instructions work for a variety of releases and should compile perfectly and run without issue, if you follow his instructions.
I have successfully used these methods at least a half dozen times with Rocky 8.5 and 8.6 with vmware workstation 16.1 up to version 16.2.1
NOTE: This error is NOT Rocky Linux specific. Also happens on some versions of RHEL 8 and CentOS 8.x I would also expect this "fix" to work on all of the other linux versions that are RHEL 8-derived.
I've been having difficulty with the same issue, and a colleague pointed me to check my kernel. This is our "official" resolution. See if the below works for you.
This is due to differences between the kernel and the source code for the VMWare modules, see here for more information. You can get the correct kernel modules, and build them by executing the following commands
wget https://github.com/mkubecek/vmware-host-modules/archive/workstation-16.1.0.tar.gz
tar -xf workstation-16.1.0.tar.gz
cd vmware-host-modules-workstation-16.1.0/
make
sudo make install
If you get the error,
crosspage.c:53:16: fatal error: linux/frame.h: No such file or directory
The error is described here. The solution is to remove (i.e. comment out) the offending include file in crosspage.c After doing the sudo make install, it is a very good idea to restart you host.
You may need to manually insert the modules into the kernel the first time after running make install'. The kernel modules (vmmon.ko and vmnet.ko) will be found at /lib/modules//misc. The following set of command will do this:
cd /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/misc
sudo insmod vmmon.ko
sudo insmod vmnet.ko
The modules should be load automatically after a restart/reboot.
If you update vmware to a different version (say 16.2.1) you may need to this again. Just change the versions in the above commands. If you hit the update button on the splash-screen and failed to notice the version you are updating to, you can run `vmware -v' at a command prompt to get the version you updated to.
I'm setting up a new machine and installing sdkman on Cygwin to install Java. I had this exact setup working on my previous machine, also Win 10.
Installed Cygwin, and required for sdkman, installed zip and unzip packages. Now I'm getting the following error:
$ sdk i java 11.0.3-zulu
Downloading: java 11.0.3-zulu
In progress...
Warning: Failed to create the file
Warning: /home/whyph/.sdkman/tmp/D2txrZkztdcZKSIltTtxclUhHkzF9yIf.bin: No such
Warning: file or directory
curl: (23) Failed writing body (0 != 14095)
mv: cannot stat '/home/whyph/.sdkman/tmp/D2txrZkztdcZKSIltTtxclUhHkzF9yIf.bin': No such file or directory
Tried disabling Windows firewall and running Cygwin as administrator, neither changed the error. Worked out of the box on my last machine, but can't figure out what might be different.
I discovered the problem - wrong curl. Turns out, Windows 10 now comes with curl and it's on your path. I assumed it was one of the base packages of Cygwin, but it is not, and the Windows version is not compatible with SDKMAN, even though it worked to install it. Fix:
Remove SDKMAN per https://sdkman.io/install Uninstallation section
Close Cygwin shells
Rerun Cygwin setup and insure the curl, zip, unzip, and tar packages
are installed (check installation instructions in case more
dependencies are added since this writing)
Install SDKMAN per instructions
Recently I had the very same problem, and the reason was very simple... I forgot to install cURL on my Cygwin. Hope it helps!
I had the same problem recently and I manage to make it work somehow.
In the sdkman source file, I modified the .sdkman/src/sdkman-install.sh line 150.
I replaced the "--output" of the line below by a classic redirection ">".
After I just restarted cygwin and the command finally worked.
__sdkman_secure_curl_download "${download_url}" --output "${binary_input}"
Hope that helps !
I'm trying to compile a Go app for linux/arm and keep running into problems on my Ubuntu machine. When I run GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm go build in my source directory, I get tons of erorrs that are variations of:
# github.com/huin/mqtt
gccgo: error: unrecognized command line option `-marm`
Running gccgo --help informs me that options starting with -g, -f -m (and others) will be passed on to any sub-processes started by gccgo, so I don't know which process it's sending -marm to.
Any clues? Ubuntu 14.10 LTS, 64bit
So thanks to a clue by Dean, I've worked out the issue and solved it.
The issue was caused by me installing Go via apt-get, then removing it (via apt-get), then installing Go from the golang website. There were still files left over from the first install, which were probably older versions and therefore didn't have support for the -marm flag.
I was going to wipe my dev machine anyway, so I did, installed Ubuntu again, installed Go from the website (not via apt-get) and everything worked first time. If you don't want to wipe your machine, then just make sure to look around to see if there are version conflicts.
I've been stung by this sort of thing before (when installing node.js via apt-get, realising it was many versions out of date, then removing, and installing node.js via source), so if anyone is reading this, be careful when installing software via apt-get, then upgrading, as you might have similar version issues like I did!
Really annoying issue here. On Linux Mint OS. Every so often, I'll get this error when running OpenCV code:
HIGHGUI ERROR: V4L/V4L2: VIDIOC_S_CROP
OpenCV Error: Unspecified error (The function is not implemented. Rebuild the library with Windows, GTK+ 2.x or Carbon support. If you are on Ubuntu or Debian, install libgtk2.0-dev and pkg-config, then re-run cmake or configure script) in cvNamedWindow, file /home/ravi/Desktop/opencv/OpenCV-2.1.0/src/highgui/window.cpp, line 180
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'cv::Exception'
what(): /home/ravi/Desktop/opencv/OpenCV-2.1.0/src/highgui/window.cpp:180: error: (-2) The function is not implemented. Rebuild the library with Windows, GTK+ 2.x or Carbon support. If you are on Ubuntu or Debian, install libgtk2.0-dev and pkg-config, then re-run cmake or configure script in function cvNamedWindow
The way to fix this, I've found, it to do the following:
cd OpenCV/
cd build/
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig
<restart computer>
Then I'll come back, start running my OpenCV code again, and it'll be fine. But then a few hours later, or possibly between turning cpu on/off, I'll be back to the same stupid error!
Does anyone have any idea what's going on here and how I can prevent this? It's frustrating as hell.
It sounds like a general critical error in the program code. Is there a specific task that is done when the error occurs? You might want to use strace to get the output of the program as it runs or enable application memory dumps for the user you are running the process as. This would be passed to the developer for debugging and inspection.
I believe the problem was solved by paying attention to where my USB camera was actually located in /dev/. Giving a faulty path to the get video source functions causes this type of error; restarting my computer occasionally shifted which /dev/video# my device was attached to.
Please do ls /dev/vid* to find out if you're using the right video source!
I've got some problem about bash.
Before today, my VPS (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS) was using kernel 2.x. (Because it was upgraded from 11.04 and the boot options did not get updated.)
Today I want to use kernel 3.2 as the default kernel.
After modifying the grub config, I've successfully booted the VPS up in kernel 3.2. Using uname -r will show 3.2.0-24-generic instead of 2.x.y-z-generic now.
However, something wonky happened and I don't why.
Before the kernel change, if I type some unkown command, the shell will prompt me to use apt-get to install it. For example, I don't have bind9 installed, and when I try to run named, I will be prompted like this:
wzyboy#vermilion:~$ named
The program 'named' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt-get install bind9
Sometimes when I make a typo, I will be corrected ("did you mean"):
wzyboy#vermilion:~$ namedd
No command 'namedd' found, did you mean:
Command 'named' from package 'bind9' (main)
namedd: command not found
However, after the kernel change, when I try to run named, the shell simply says:
wzyboy#natatio:/$ named
-bash: named: command not found
I think it may be something wrong with bash, but I don't know how to fix the problem. Can anybody help?
[SOLVED] Thanks! After installing command-not-found package, the problem is solved. However, I still don't why the package got lost after changing the kernel...
To enable those auto suggestions you need to ensure that you have command-not-found installed. It is usually automatically enabled via /etc/bash.bashrc if installed correctly.