does anyone know how to install SlamData on linux? I've download the file on my machine, and double click it, but it opens a green screen and nothing happens. Thanks.
Download the linux installer file;
add executable permission
chmod +x slamdata_unix_2_1_8.sh
Run the executable and follow instructions;
./slamdata_unix_2_1_8.sh
After installation, To start SlamData, cd to your installation dir, issue the following command;
./SlamData
For further documentation visit http://slamdata.com/documentation/
Related
I am a complete newbie to Linux and trying to open an AppImage called Magick which is an Imagemagick application.
I tried right clicking on the AppImage and checked "run file as an executable" option but that didn't work. Another thing that I tried is running this command,
chmod a+x magick.AppImage
This gives me an error,
chmod: cannot access 'magick.AppImage': No such file or directory
I have also tried running the file by navigating into the folder that contains the file and opening up the terminal there but still no luck.
I am running Ubuntu on Oracle VM VirtualBox.
ImageMagick is a command-line tool, you don't run it by clicking on it.
To run it in a terminal you need to
Set the executable flag on the .AppImage (once for all): chmod +x TheApp.AppImage
Then to run it just invoke the AppImage: ./TheApp.AppImage <arg1> <arg2> ....
If the directory with your .AppImage is in your PATH, you can remove the ./ (or whatever directory the AppImage is in).
ImageMagick is also available as a regular application from your Ubuntu repository: sudo apt install imagemagick
Trying to install Cytoscape program on linux cytoscape. And I don't know how because first install button transfers me to HTML page and nothing is downloadable. (I have java installed). I tried to download tar.gz file but I am stuck, because there is no configure file and it says I have no permission for it. What should I do?
Once java 11 is installed on your computer try this:
ctrl+alt+T #open Ubuntu's console
cd /home/fulanita/Downloads #this is the directory where my computer has cytoscape.
chmod +x ./Cytoscape_3_8_1_unix.sh
./Cytoscape_3_8_1_unix.sh #3.8.1 is the last version for Ubuntu
the program will start to install
If anyone comes here in search for an answer I found a solution.
You go to you directory where you keep extracted tar.gz
with cd -Folderdestination/ you locate a folderwhere you keep a file named cytoscape.sh, and with command
sudo sh cytoscape.sh
install the program.
I'm running Cygwin 64bit but can't seem to get OpenShift oc command line to work
I downloaded oc.tar.gz ( from here https://mirror.openshift.com/pub/openshift-v3/clients/3.6.173.0.5/linux/oc.tar.gz ), unzipped it and placed it in my path in /usr/bin
When I try to run: oc login I get the following.
-bash: /usr/bin/oc: cannot execute binary file: Exec format error
Do I need to somehow 'install' the executable ?
Any help would be much appreciated.
In addition to #Graham Dumpleton's answer:
open cygwin and check for directory /usr/local/bin
mkdir -p local/bin
$ cd /usr/local/bin
if it does not exists:
$ mkdir -p local/bin
finally extract the windows package:
$ cp /cygdrive/c/Users/me/Downloads/oc-3.5.5.31.24-windows.zip /usr/local/bin/
unzip oc-3.5.5.31.24-windows.zip
$ oc version
oc v3.5.5.31.24
kubernetes v1.5.2+43a9be4
features: Basic-Auth
Use the Windows binary from the following page:
https://github.com/openshift/origin/releases
From project homepage
https://www.cygwin.com/
Cygwin is not:
a way to run native Linux apps on Windows. You must rebuild your
application from source if you want it to run on Windows.
a way to magically make native Windows apps aware of UNIX®
functionality like signals, ptys, etc. Again, you need to build your
apps from source if you want to take advantage of Cygwin
functionality.
I'm new to Linux and i use Kali Linux. I downloaded the eclipse ide. Every time, when i need to run it, i should navigate to eclipse folder and run the eclipse file. there are other softwares like pycharm have the same issue.
If there's any method to run these programs just typing "eclipse" or "pycharm" on terminal (like firefox, atom) it's very helpful. If anyone know how to do it please let me know. I already searched a solution for this problem and i couldn't find any solution.
-Thanks (sorry for my English)
Modify your ~/.bashrc and add the PATH of your application(you use PATH rather then CONFIG_PATH)
export PATH=$PATH:/path/to_directory_containing_program
export CONFIG_PATH=/my_path_to_PROGRAM/PROGRAM/config/
Another solution is Create a shorcut in your desktop
Go to cd /usr/local/bin (or cd /usr/bin) and do:
sudo ln -s /path/to/eclipse where eclipse is the binary that you are used to launch.
/usr/local/bin and /usr/bin directories should already be in your PATH, so you don't need to modify ~/.bashrc.
I'm trying to run jedit from the terminal on fedora. its installed to the path /usr/local/share....
How do I get it to run "jedit" from the terminal rather than switching to the directory and typing java -jar jedit.jar to execute the program.
I created a sh file in that same direectory with "java -jar jedit.jar" and added that directory to ~/.bashrc. I'm aware that I need to type "sh file.sh" to run that file but I know there is a gap in my knowledge somewhere.
i want to use jedit as a commit editor for git and be able to change core.editor='jedit -w' in git config
someone please help
I assume you used the Java installer?
If this is the case, the installer should also have placed a jedit launch script in /usr/local/bin which should be in your PATH by default, so calling jedit from a terminal should instantly work after installation.
If it does not work, then please check whether the file jedit is available in /usr/local/bin and whether /usr/local/bin is in your PATH environment variable.