I am using the path_provider package along with SQFLite for a flutter app which is intended for Android and Windows platforms. I intend to use the ApplicationDocumentsDirectory for storing the database as it is available on all available platforms.
Future<Database?> _openDb() async {
var dbDir = await getApplicationDocumentsDirectory();
var dbPath = join(dbDir.path, 'app.db');
Database? dbToBeReturned;
try {
dbToBeReturned = await openDatabase(
dbPath,
version: dbVersion,
onCreate: _onCreateDatabase,
);
} on Exception catch (e) {
print('Exception #### $e');
dbToBeReturned = null;
} catch (x) {
print('This happened ${x.toString()}');
}
return dbToBeReturned;
}
But when i run the app on Windows 11 it produces the following exception:
Exception #### SqfliteFfiException(sqlite_error: 14, , open_failed: SqliteException(14): bad parameter or other API misuse,
bad parameter or other API misuse (code 21)})
DatabaseException(open_failed: SqliteException(14):
bad parameter or other API misuse,
bad parameter or other API misuse (code 21))
However, if i provide a path manually like var dbPath = join('D:\\somefolder', 'app.db'); it works if and only if i provide it a path other than C: drive. If i use any location that points to C: drive like ApplicationDocumentsDirectory, ApplicationSupportDirectory or TemporaryDirectory it produces the same exception. From all this, it seems that it may be a permission problem that prohibits the app to write to C: drive. But i am unable to find a solution.
Related
Good morning!
I have a strange problem where i can run & authenticate my user on my ios device perfectly fine running the app using the command below.
ionic capacitor run -l --external
Using an emulator, it works sometimes, though not always.
When I try to deploy the app using Xcode, the app opens and looks normal, but if I try to send authentication requests to firebase, the app just keeps on loading, although the requests are successfully performed.
I first thought the problem was because of using LocalStorage so I rebuilt everything using Ionic Storage. But that didn't help.
I tried different versions of adding the Firebase SDK in Swift or in the Cocoa Pods file but the behaviour doesn't change so I don't believe that this is a issue with a wrong firebase configuration, what is the proper way to do this by the way - or is Ionic doing this for me already?
The output of Xcode doesn't provide any valuable information either.
2021-12-01 11:20:13.990875+0100 App[3162:27661] Writing analzed variants.
2021-12-01 11:20:14.125754+0100 App[3162:27661] KeyboardPlugin: resize mode - native
⚡️ Loading app at capacitor://localhost...
2021-12-01 11:20:14.552490+0100 App[3162:27661] Writing analzed variants.
⚡️ WebView loaded
⚡️ [log] - Angular is running in development mode. Call enableProdMode() to enable production mode.
⚡️ [log] - null
⚡️ To Native -> App addListener 60635511
2021-12-01 11:20:21.393141+0100 App[3162:27661] [Accessibility] WKContentView[#] set up: # pid: # MACH_PORT -830404096
login-function
loginWithEmail() {
let email: string = this.loginForm.get("email").value;
let password: string = this.loginForm.get("password").value;
this.loadingService.present({
message: "Logging in . . ."
});
this.authService
.loginWithEmail(email, password)
.then((result) => {
this.authService.SetUserData(result.user)
this.resetLoginForm();
this.loginSuccess();
this.router.navigateByUrl("/tabs/intensity");
})
.catch(error => {
console.log(error);
this.loginFailed(error);
});
}
login-success
loginSuccess() {
this.loadingService.dismiss();
this.toastService.present({
message: "Welcome back!",
duration: 3000,
color: "secondary"
});
}
login-with-email
import { AngularFireAuth } from "#angular/fire/compat/auth";
...
async loginWithEmail(email: string, password: string) {
return await this.afAuth.signInWithEmailAndPassword(email, password);
}
set user-data function
SetUserData(user) {
this.user = user;
const userRef: AngularFirestoreDocument<any> = this.afs.doc(`users/${user.uid}`);
const userData: User = {
uid: user.uid,
email: user.email,
displayName: user.displayName,
photoURL: user.photoURL,
emailVerified: user.emailVerified
}
return userRef.set(userData, {
merge: true
})
}
Running it multiple times some times I get this error.
API error: <_UIKBCompatInputView: 0x7fb965726040; frame = (0 0; 0 0); layer = <CALayer: 0x600002f718a0>> returned 0 width, assuming UIViewNoIntrinsicMetric
I am really stuck on this and would appreciate any help. Thank you & kind regards.
Ionic 6.18.1
Angular 12.1.5
Xcode Version 13.1 (13A1030d)
I'm new to Cypress and Javascript
I'm trying to send system commands through Cypress. I've been through several examples but even the simplest does not work.
it always fails with the following message
Information about the failure:
Code: 127
Stderr:
/c/Program: Files\Git\usr\bin\bash.exe: No such file or directory`
I'm trying cy.exec('pwd') or 'ls' to see where it is launched from but it does not work.
Is there a particular include I am missing ? some particular configuration ?
EDIT :
indeed, I'm not clear about the context I'm trying to use the command in. However, I don't set any path explicitely.
I send requests on a linux server but I also would like to send system commands.
My cypress project is in /c/Cypress/test_integration/cypress
I work with a .feature file located in /c/Cypress/test_integration/cypress/features/System and my scenario calls a function in a file system.js located in /c/Cypress/test_integration/cypress/step_definitions/generic.
System_operations.features:
Scenario: [0004] - Restore HBox configuration
Given I am logging with "Administrator" account from API
And I store the actual configuration
...
Then I my .js file, I want to send a system command
system.js:
Given('I store the actual configuration', () => {
let nb_elem = 0
cy.exec('ls -l')
...
})
I did no particular path configuration in VS Code for the use of bash command (I just configured the terminal in bash instead of powershell)
Finally, with some help, I managed to call system functions by using tasks.
In my function I call :
cy.task('send_system_cmd', 'pwd').then((output) => {
console.log("output = ", output)
})
with a task created as follows:
on('task', {
send_system_cmd(cmd) {
console.log("task test command system")
const execSync = require('child_process').execSync;
const output = execSync(cmd, { encoding: 'utf-8' });
return output
}
})
this works at least for simple commands, I haven't tried much further for the moment.
UPDATE for LINUX system commands as the previous method works for WINDOWS
(sorry, I can't remember where I found this method, it's not my credit. though it fulfills my needs)
This case requires node-ssh
Still using tasks, the function call is done like this
cy.task('send_system_cmd', {cmd:"<my_command>", endpoint:<address>,user:<ssh_login>, pwd:<ssh_password>}).then((output) => {
<process output.stdout or output.stderr>
})
with the task being build like this:
// send system command - remote
on('task', {
send_system_cmd({cmd, endpoint, user, pwd}) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
const { NodeSSH } = require('node-ssh')
const ssh = new NodeSSH()
let ssh_output = {}
ssh.connect({
host: endpoint,
username: user,
password: pwd
})
.then(() => {
if(!ssh.isConnected())
reject("ssh connection not set")
//console.log("ssh connection OK, send command")
ssh.execCommand(cmd).then(function (result) {
ssh_output["stderr"] = result.stderr
ssh_output["stdout"] = result.stdout
resolve(ssh_output)
});
})
.catch((err)=>{
console.log(err)
reject(err)
})
})
}
})
Currently getting the following error with MongoDB:
no saslprep library specified. Passwords will not be sanitized
We are using Webpack so simply installing the module doesn't work (Webpack just ignores it). I found this thread which talks about how to exclude it from Webpack compilations, but then I have to manually load it into every Lambda function which led me to Lambda Layers.
Following the Serverless guide on using Lambda layers allowed me to get my layer published to AWS and included in all of my functions, but for some reason, it doesn't install the modules. If I download the layer using the AWS GUI, I get a folder with just the package.json and package-lock.json files.
My file structure is:
my-project
|_ layers
|_ saslprep
|_ package.json
and my serverless.yml is:
layers:
saslprep:
path: layers/saslprep
compatibleRuntimes:
- nodejs14.x
This is not my preferred solution as I'd like to use 256, but the way I got around this error/warning was by changing the authMechanism from SCRAM-SHA-256 to SCRAM-SHA-1 in the connection string. The serverless-bundle most likely needs to add this dependency into their package to enable support for Mongo 4.0 SHA256 (my best guess!).
You can specify this authentication mechanism by setting the authMechanism parameter to the value SCRAM-SHA-1 in the connection string as shown in the following sample code.
const { MongoClient } = require("mongodb");
// Replace the following with values for your environment.
const username = encodeURIComponent("<username>");
const password = encodeURIComponent("<password>");
const clusterUrl = "<MongoDB cluster url>";
const authMechanism = "SCRAM-SHA-1";
// Replace the following with your MongoDB deployment's connection string.
const uri =
`mongodb+srv://${username}:${password}#${clusterUrl}/?authMechanism=${authMechanism}`;
// Create a new MongoClient
const client = new MongoClient(uri);
// Function to connect to the server
async function run() {
try {
// Connect the client to the server
await client.connect();
// Establish and verify connection
await client.db("admin").command({ ping: 1 });
console.log("Connected successfully to server");
} finally {
// Ensures that the client will close when you finish/error
await client.close();
}
}
run().catch(console.dir);
I have a NativeScript application that I'm trying to add iBeacon support to using the iBeacon plugin. The application builds successfully and is synced to my phone (I'm using SideKick). When the app runs, it has a fatal javascript exception. The javascript error is reported at:
file:///app/tns_modules/tns-core-modules/ui/builder/builder.js:244:56: JS ERROR Error: Building UI from XML. #file:///app/app-root.xml:18:9
That line is where the page that attempts to access the iBeacon code is defined:
<Frame defaultPage="views/search/search-page"></Frame>
and the specific error is:
Importing binding name 'BeaconLocationOptions' is not found.
I'm assuming this occurs as part of the following import statement:
import {NativescriptIbeacon, BeaconCallback, BeaconLocationOptions, BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType, BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType, BeaconRegion, Beacon } from 'nativescript-ibeacon';
The above import statement is what is documented as part of the iBeacon documentation.
There is a nativescript-ibeacon directory under node_modules in my project. The specific ios file seems to be there:
/Users/edscott/NativeScript/beacon-test/node_modules/nativescript-ibeacon/nativescript-ibeacon.ios.js
I'm not sure if it is a problem in my code or a problem with configuration - maybe something missing that stops the ibeacon files from being deployed properly to the device.
My code is in javascript, but I have installed the typescript plugin. It looks like this iBeacon plugin assumes the app is written in typescript.
I'm looking for help in determining what to try next.
FYI...I've tried pulling the source files out of the node_modules and incorporating them directly into my project. After resolving many issues with this approach, I eventually hit the same wall - a problem importing the code when running on the device.
Below is the code that is using the iBeacon plugin:
const observableModule = require("tns-core-modules/data/observable");
import {NativescriptIbeacon, BeaconCallback, BeaconLocationOptions, BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType, BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType, BeaconRegion, Beacon } from 'nativescript-ibeacon';
function SearchViewModel() {
let callback = {
onBeaconManagerReady() {
// start ranging and/or monitoring only when the beacon manager is ready
this.nativescriptIbeacon.startRanging(this.region);
this.nativescriptIbeacon.startMonitoring(this.region);
},
didRangeBeaconsInRegion: function(region, beacons) {
console.log("didRangeBeaconsInRegion");
},
didFailRangingBeaconsInRegion: function(region, errorCode, errorDescription) {
console.log("didFailRangingBeaconsInRegion");
}
};
let options = {
iOSAuthorisationType: BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType.Always,
androidAuthorisationType: BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType.Coarse,
androidAuthorisationDescription: "Location permission needed"
};
let nativescriptIbeacon = new NativescriptIbeacon(callback, options);
let region = new BeaconRegion("HelloID", "2f234454-cf6d-4a0f-adf2-f4911ba9ffa6");
const viewModel = observableModule.fromObject({
"beaconData": "not set yet",
"onTapStart": function() {
this.set("beaconData", "started");
console.log("tapped start");
if (!nativescriptIbeacon.isAuthorised()) {
console.log("NOT Authorised");
nativescriptIbeacon.requestAuthorization()
.then(() => {
console.log("Authorised by the user");
nativescriptIbeacon.bind();
}, (e) => {
console.log("Authorisation denied by the user");
})
} else {
console.log("Already authorised");
nativescriptIbeacon.bind();
}
},
"onTapStop": function() {
this.set("beaconData", "stopped");
console.log("tapped stop");
nativescriptIbeacon.stopRanging(region);
nativescriptIbeacon.stopMonitoring(region);
nativescriptIbeacon.unbind();
}
});
return viewModel;
}
module.exports = SearchViewModel;
I have created a playground for you here.
If you look into example, I am importing NativescriptIbeacon from the main folder and rest from the common folder.
P.S. This plugin has dependency on nativescript-permission
import { NativescriptIbeacon } from '../nativescript-ibeacon';
import {
BeaconRegion, Beacon, BeaconCallback,
BeaconLocationOptions, BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType, BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType
} from "../nativescript-ibeacon/nativescript-ibeacon.common";
This answer solved my problem along with another modification. After splitting the import up I still had the same error. Then I read the following page about modules:
https://docs.nativescript.org/core-concepts/android-runtime/getting-started/modules
Based on this statement:
If the module identifier passed to require(moduleName) does not begin
with '/', '../', or './', then NativeScript will lookup the module
within the tns_modules folder
I assumed that maybe only require does the proper lookup into tns_modules.
I refactored the import to use require instead, and that worked. My changes are below. There may be a more efficient way to do this, but it worked for me.
const nsb = require("nativescript-ibeacon/nativescript-ibeacon.js");
const nsbc = require("nativescript-ibeacon/nativescript-ibeacon.common.js");
const NativescriptIbeacon = nsb.NativescriptIbeacon;
const BeaconCallback = nsbc.BeaconCallback;
const BeaconLocationOptions = nsbc.BeaconLocationOptions;
const BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType = nsbc.BeaconLocationOptionsIOSAuthType;
const BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType = nsbc.BeaconLocationOptionsAndroidAuthType
const BeaconRegion = nsbc.BeaconRegion;
const Beacon = nsbc.Beacon;
I am in the process of writing unit/behavioural tests using Mocha for a particular blockchain network use-case. Based on what I can see, these tests are not hitting the actual fabric, in other words, they seem to be running in some kind of a simulated environment. I don't get to see any of the transactions that took place as a part of the test. Can someone please tell me if it is somehow possible to capture the transactions that take place as part of the Mocha tests?
Initial portion of my code below:
describe('A Network', () => {
// In-memory card store for testing so cards are not persisted to the file system
const cardStore = require('composer-common').NetworkCardStoreManager.getCardStore( { type: 'composer-wallet-inmemory' } );
let adminConnection;
let businessNetworkConnection;
let businessNetworkDefinition;
let businessNetworkName;
let factory;
//let clock;
// Embedded connection used for local testing
const connectionProfile = {
name: 'hlfv1',
'x-type': 'hlfv1',
'version': '1.0.0'
};
before(async () => {
// Generate certificates for use with the embedded connection
const credentials = CertificateUtil.generate({ commonName: 'admin' });
// PeerAdmin identity used with the admin connection to deploy business networks
const deployerMetadata = {
version: 1,
userName: 'PeerAdmin',
roles: [ 'PeerAdmin', 'ChannelAdmin' ]
};
const deployerCard = new IdCard(deployerMetadata, connectionProfile);
console.log("line 63")
const deployerCardName = 'PeerAdmin';
deployerCard.setCredentials(credentials);
console.log("line 65")
// setup admin connection
adminConnection = new AdminConnection({ cardStore: cardStore });
console.log("line 69")
await adminConnection.importCard(deployerCardName, deployerCard);
console.log("line 70")
await adminConnection.connect(deployerCardName);
console.log("line 71")
});
Earlier, my connection profile was using the embedded mode, which I changed to hlfv1 after looking at the answer below. Now, I am getting the error: Error: the string "Failed to import identity. Error: Client.createUser parameter 'opts mspid' is required." was thrown, throw an Error :). This is coming from
await adminConnection.importCard(deployerCardName, deployerCard);. Can someone please tell me what needs to be changed. Any documentation/resource will be helpful.
Yes you can use a real Fabric. Which means you could interact with the created transactions using your test framework or indeed other means such as REST or Playground etc.
In Composer's own test setup, the option for testing against an hlfv1 Fabric environment is used in its setup (ie whether you want to use embedded, web or real Fabric) -> see https://github.com/hyperledger/composer/blob/master/packages/composer-tests-functional/systest/historian.js#L120
Setup is captured here
https://github.com/hyperledger/composer/blob/master/packages/composer-tests-functional/systest/testutil.js#L192
Example of setting up artifacts that you would need to setup to use a real Fabric here
https://github.com/hyperledger/composer/blob/master/packages/composer-tests-functional/systest/testutil.js#L247
Also see this blog for more guidelines -> https://medium.com/#mrsimonstone/debug-your-blockchain-business-network-using-hyperledger-composer-9bea20b49a74