Closed. This question needs details or clarity. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Add details and clarify the problem by editing this post.
Closed 2 years ago.
Improve this question
During Blockchain Hackathon Kyiv 2020 we picked NEAR Protocol challenge and found several issues.
Accound and account keys are created in web wallet. Then you should run "near login" command at your server which should launch curl to web wallet and authorize near-cli app for accessing keys. However in our case keys weren't imported into server deployed at Digital Ocean with Ubuntu 20.0.4 and accessed via console. Near Discord channel didn't responded to our questions at all. Telegram devs chat support guys didn't helped much, their last offer was "copy keys from localstorage to json file and put into your server .near-credentials folder"
But after all - and that was amazing - a new key created at those remote machine with near addkey command - was added to those accoundID which was not authorized to use app!!! :D
enter image description here
https://examples.near.org/ - GITPOD links doesn't properly configured, not working with errors
https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/token-contract-as
https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/near-examples/wallet-example
Excited that you chose to build on NEAR, but disheartened to hear about your subpar experience. NEAR is currently growing at an exponential rate and engineering resources certainly can be limited at times.
Unfortunately, if you created your NEAR account on a different machine than the one you want to store the credentials for that account on, running near login won't work. You could get around this by copying your private key from your browser's local storage to the remote machine's browser's local storage, then running near login on that machine but thats a little more work than what’s necessary. The easier, more straightforward path, would be to run near login on your local machine (the one that created the NEAR account) and copy the newly created .json file located in ~/.near-credentials to the target machine. I think that’s what the devs on Telegram you chatted with were referring to. Currently, that would be the easiest solution to that issue.
But after all - and that was amazing - a new key created at those remote machine with near addkey command - was added to those accoundID which was not authorized to use app!!! :D
Could you clarify what exactly happened here and how you performed this action? You should not be able to add a full access key to an account without an existing full access key.
Also, thank you for raising our attention to the two broken GitPod examples. There have been several updates recently to the near-sdk-as dependency these two projects rely on, and looks like something broke. I will make sure this is resolved ASAP!
Please let me know if you have any other questions, comments, or suggestions, and thank you so much for bearing with us as we continue to enhance our platform and developer tooling.
Near Discord channel didn't responded to our questions at all. Telegram devs chat support guys didn't helped much, their last offer was "copy keys from localstorage to json file and put into your server .near-credentials folder"
I would like to point out that there is no paid service with 24/7 support. People have their weekends to spend with their family and friends.
But after all - and that was amazing - a new key created at those remote machine with near addkey command - was added to those accoundID which was not authorized to use app!!!
Which key are you talking about? The 3 keys you have on the screenshot were sequentially used to sign the next transaction adding the new key:
ETQeNJrRiqbcuqJyrfDTh1EYAUAetXZsnuuiEH8T6mnc transaction created the account with ed25519:HBi7mgC... key.
8heaysv121qhFjktwRm9ftF4jA7dgcYRHvKkcCnhXFVT transaction signed with ed25519:HBi7mgC... key (added in (1)) adds a new ed25519:DmNJSxx... full-access key.
DUp8VJ9aoUyC6r8ira6udpgHYxsKJWi3LXkxxn5btLW2 transaction signed with ed25519:DmNJSxx... key (added in (2)) adds a new ed25519:DoMh6uC... full-access key.
Related
I have the following problem and cannot figure out where the problem is.
I created a StorageV2 (general purpose v2) storage account a few days ago, created two blob containers and two queues in it. Then uploaded some data into the blobs and the queues and stoppt working with it.
Now (the last three days), when I try to access the blob storage or the queues I receive the following error messages:
The value for one of the HTTP headers is not in the correct format
This request is not authorized to perform this operation using this permission.
Details see below screenshot:
The problem is, I access the account via azure portal, not via code, so the same way I created the storage account. So even with the exact same user.
Update: I tested with Edge and Firefox, both same errors. Funny thing is that I can access the queues and the blobs with the Azure Storage Explorer App.
Does anyone have any advice for me?
If you just want do do that on portal, please follow these steps:
If you dont use portal, you can use SAS token.
After a few days the problem disappeared by itself. I therefore assume that the cause lay with Microsoft. Thanks to all for the tips.
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
This question does not appear to be about programming within the scope defined in the help center.
Closed last year.
Improve this question
Does anyone know how to access Cpanel on 1&1(IONOS). One of the biggest in the web hosting market but I didn't know it was one of the worst. Knowledge Base is empty. Searching on Google doesn't result in anything.
I am startled by the fact that I found NO INFORMATION online. Absolutely NO information on google. How could it be possible? No one has ever tried to ask this question before?!?!? BTW IONOS is the worst web host. If someone has to search for 20 mins to access even cpanel, then it's the worst web host.
IONOS Screenshot
Note the below is only available if you have the right build assigned to your account.
Server administration with Plesk is conveniently done right in your browser.
Since Plesk provides its own HTTPS service for this, a web server (e.g. Apache)
does not need to be running on the server.
Open your web browser and enter your domain name (or IP address)
followed by :8443 in the address bar.
Log in with the user name Admin and your initial password.
You can log in to IONOS and find your initial password in the Server Access Data section.
I am sure by now you managed to fix your problem. But I figured I must just post how I accessed it for other people. I am assuming that you wanted to remove some of the files on your website (i.e. if a WordPress plugin destroyed your site). The way I accessed my files is as follows: Firstly go to your Ionos dashboard. Then click on the contract you are using (i.e. WP Business). Thereafter go to hosting and click manage, then a page will open and click webspace. Once you click webspace you will be able to access all of your files.
I hope this helps someone out because truly getting information about Ionos seems like thesis research.
I nearly fell for their $6-for-the-first-year Business Plan account. Whups! Good thing I asked some questions first.
The sales person answered the chat after approx 20 mins, and was not customer friendly. When I enquired about included CPanel apps, I was abruptly told that CPanel is not included - you must purchase it separately. She did not tell me (this is what I mean by "abrupt"), but I read elsewhere, that they wrote their own "CPanel-like" administration tool - but from what I can tell it is significantly less capable. And as of this writing, I still do not know if they offer Node.js (which was something that I asked the sales rep but she did not answer).
I would be interested to see a screenshot of the IONOS CPanel replacement. I also would like to know what included apps they offer, such as phpBB, SimpleMachinesForum, Node.js, Python, Ruby - and how Git management/deployment works. As of this writing, and over 30 minutes on chat with them (including wait time), I have no idea.
Here is a fairly recently article from Dec 2021 that sheds more light:
https://websitesetup.org/hosting-reviews/ionos/
You can access your Cpanel using below URL,
http://IP:2082
Note: In IP you have to set your Cpanel IP.
above link redirect to login page, In login page you need to enter your username and password,
From the look of your screenshot it looks as if the package you have purchased is not one that contains a server. Here are two options for packages with servers.
Cloud
Dedicated
Ref
Go to Servers & Cloud -> Infrastructure -> Servers and select the server you want to access.
Then, go to either the Plesk or cPanel section, there you'll find user, password and host for your server.
I've written a Windows TCP (NOT IIS) server program in VB that provides the backend for an enterprise iPhone app that I have also developed. The system utilizes Apple Push Notifications, and that works fine, unless the server reboots for whatever reason.
Part of the Push Notification system is the inclusion of Apple certificates on the server. I followed the steps shown here to install the necessary certificates, and even though it's for ASP.NET applications, it works for my Windows-based server. Except, as I said, a reboot requires installing the certificates all over again.
I found this page on Server Fault that suggests adding a user to the certificate through the MMC snap-in, but that didn't work either.
Two questions: Following the steps shown on the Server Fault page, do I need to add a specific user? The only users that pop up are SYSTEM (which I tried), Administrators(ComputerName/Administrators) (also tried) and "S-1-1-5-blah, blah" (didn't try). Would there need to be a different user added to make it work?
Q2: If this won't ever work, is there a different way?
Full disclosure: This is the second time I have submitted this question, but the previous one (four months ago) was never responded to. I'm hoping someone who knows will see this.
Thanks for any advice.
AFTERTHOUGHT: The instructions I linked to above say to install the certificates to Personal/Certificates. Maybe this is wrong? This stuff is way over my head, so I don't understand the function of all the different stores.
Found the problem.
The page on Server Fault left out something. I needed to add a user that the system would recognize to the Permissions list. I added my user authentication, selected it, and after that the certificate persisted after a restart.
It is at least working on my development server. I haven't tried it yet on my production server.
Update: Works the same on the production server. Also, instead of using my user authentication, I used the IUSR authentication, meaning that it should work even after my name is removed from the active directory.
Open browser
Navigate to http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/
Select portal top right
login with my email address
Receive the below error
https://manage.windowsazure.com/Error/Login?getsupport=true&f=255&MSPPError=-2147217320
Receive the error
" We are having trouble logging you into the portal
Please contact Customer Service for assistance."
Using IE or Chrome, incognito or not, cookies cleared or not, cache cleared or not. The problem still exists. Also tried on multiple devices media centre PC, desktop running windows 7, iPhone 5, ipad 3...
Prior to November 2012 I have accessed the windows azure subscription without a problem.
I clicked the customer service link and the australian number is 13 20 58 I have contacted that number explaining that I cannot access my windows azure subscription and each time I login I receive an error. They proceed to redirect me to other support teams where I repeat my details and the problem they either redirect me again or provide a number to call.
In one case I was redirected to a number that no longer exists. Another I was told to raise a case on the windows azure portal page the same portal page that I receive an error on when logging in, when I asked for alternative options there were none.
So far I've spoke with the msdn support team, windows subscription support, online services, etc and still no resolution. In the latest call to support they have said to raise the issue on the forums so here goes.
Anyways long story short I have probably spent 3+ hours calling Microsoft support explaining the problem, waiting on hold, being redirect, repeating... still I can't access my windows azure subscription
I checked in commerce.microsoft.com and there is a windows azure subscription associated with my email address
Subscription-1
Windows Azure MSDN - Visual Studio Premium
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to resolve this issue?
Some time it's happened wait for while and retry
or just ask azure support in twitter
Editing for those who are like me and skipped reading the comments (in small font) below the OP's question. This was resolved and was due to the first reason I list below. However, it could (and has) happen in past for other reasons as well, so might as well keep this response here in case it helps someone else out.
Try logging at https://portal.azure.com/
The manage.windowsazure.com isn't even DNS resolvable to any website - I am not sure how you are getting that address (maybe its from some part of Azure IAM pipeline that hasn't been updated) and (more interestingly) how you are able to open that link - Maybe this is something available only in your region ! (but I am stretching here).
Regardless, I also tried to find other instances of similar issues and in general I see this issue is related to cases when the an account has been transitioned to Office 365.
Here an account was moved and resulted in creation of two accounts with different passwords - solution here was to set the Office 365 account (new account) as a co-admin on the old account that was used to setup the Azure account.
Here the account was not provisioned correctly in Azure AD Store and had to be removed and re-created using DirSync
Here, the problem seems to be related to (the new) Account Provisioning in Azure AD.
In general, it seems this is a problem that might be harder to explain to level 1 support. You might have better mileage speaking to your organizations IT admin and have them check for any inconsistencies that might be similar to those stated above.
Try forcing the directory in the URL like so
https://portal.azure.com/#domain.name
For example in case of MS AAD domain
https://portal.azure.com/#mycompany.onmicrosoft.com
In case of custom domain
https://portal.azure.com/#mycompany.com
Sometimes there is some odd behaviour with redirect loops or when you no longer have access to the tenant but you have selected 'last visited' in the Startup directory.
Glad to hear this was resolved by support. Since this was posted, we made a number of updates to the login process and types of accounts (incl. the addition of MFA). At TechEd we announced a new portal (video # http://channel9.msdn.com/Blogs/Windows-Azure/Azure-Preview-portal) if you want to see what is coming.
Closed. This question needs to be more focused. It is not currently accepting answers.
Want to improve this question? Update the question so it focuses on one problem only by editing this post.
Closed 8 years ago.
Improve this question
I was brainstorming interesting usages of Twitter and came up with the following:
An application can use it as a call home mechanism
An application that has an invalid license could broadcast its location
A software company could use it as a remote shell like interface and issue commands to shutdown, restart and to publish patches
An application can use it for heartbeat purposes
Has anyone else came up with other non-standard usages of Twitter?
I fail to see the advantage of using a proprietary, third-party chat site in place of an appropriate networking protocol.
Matthew nailed the point that all these "applications" just represent a communications protocol between twitterer and remote host, and there are lots of mature protocols you could use instead right out of the box, rather than rolling your own on twitter.
But depending on your situation, of course there could be scenarios in which twitter is the easy way. I have written similar hacks that use e-mail as transport mechanism for automated tasks, simply because corporate red tape doesn't permit us other more conventional means. They can reboot machines, restart processes, post public messages, etc.
One of it is already available for Windows - "TweetMyPC v2.0 lets you shutdown/restart/LogOff and lots more in your windows PC.remotely."
I'm not sure this counts as a very practical use (a bit of fun mainly), but it certainly attracted my interest:
Twitter image encoding challenge
The idea of this challenge is to try to encode a picture into a 140 (Unicode) character Tweet. It's quite astounding how much information some of the algorithms posted there can fit into a message.
Scott Hanselman used Twitter to create an app for ordering a sandwich.
Check out his post
I think the main advantage of using twitter in instances like this is its SMS capabilities (and the fact they're free - whereas you can buy services that charge a monthly fee to allow you to receive SMS messages to a HTTP page or something like that).
I'd considered using it to make a little budget app for myself where I could SMS twitter things I'd bought to a private twitter account, similar for tracking petrol usage I was planning on smsing the odometer reading,cost etc in a certain format and capturing it at home to run statistics and stuff on it. There are limitations to it though - like you can only hook up an SMS number to 1 twitter account...
It's good to think outside the box, but don't be too focused on using just twitter because it's cool.
If you were comfortable setting up sensors and such, you could get a microcontroller, hook it up to a twitter feed, and then give it remote commands.
For instance, remote controlled house lights. You could then just tweet "Home lights on GXSDFXV" (The garbage at the end is to prevent real tweets from turning on and off your lights).
I wouldn't use Twitter in particular for transferring any private information (think about security if someone hacks the account and can shutdown your corporate servers or transfer fake licenses). For that I would setup a private server which implements the open microblogging protocol (like identi.ca) as long as - like others already said - there is another more suitable protocol.
For publishing PUBLIC information (heartbeat messages can be considered that, too) I like the idea pretty much. We recently had a very successfull (but unfortunately effectless) E-Petition in Germany where a Twitter account posted the number of signatures every couple of minutes.
Carsonified are using this to allow people to discover other people sitting in the same room at their conferences.
They label each chair with a tag and then you tweet that tag to an account they have and it registers you on a floorplan on the venue. Users are coloured in on the plan by their interests.
Clever but a bit overcomplicated for my tastes...
http://hello.carsonified.com/Home/Faq