I've downloaded spring-tool-suite-3.6.1.RELEASE-e4.4-win32-x86_64.zip and getting the following error while trying to unzip and install:
Error 0x80010135: Path too long
POM.properties
Type PROPERTIES File
Date Modified 6/11/2014 12:47PM
Size 146 bytes.
What may be the reason?
Possible solutions:
Rename spring-tool-suite-3.6.1.RELEASE-e4.4-win32-x86_64.zip to springts.zip
Move spring-tool-suite-3.6.1.RELEASE-e4.4-win32-x86_64.zip to C:/ or in another location that is not very deep.
Change your extractor to 7-zip.
Try with any alternative for zip such as 7Zip or WinRAR. 7Zip worked for me
This happens because of the zip file name being too long.You can rename the downloaded zip file to something like STS.zip (Give a short name) and then try to extract it.The error should now disappear.
When you extract, it will try to extract in a folder named "spring-tool-suite-3.6.1.RELEASE-e4.4-win32-x86_64" which is too long for a folder name. Simple rule of thumb -- install to C:\ and rename the above to STS361_x8664. Be very frugal with folder names.
This happens because the file name & path are too long.
Rename them to something smaller and simpler.
Here is the link that I found helpful
Step 1: Download STS zip file from spring official website
Step 2: After downloading Spring Tool Suite zip file then extract that then Open STS directory file click on STS icon below like this.
Step 3: Run that file then Select a directory as a workspace and browse your directory.
Here is complete installations of STS on Windows operating system.
Source : http://commandstech.com/how-to-install-springtoolsuitests-with-scala-on-windows-7-8-10/
Related
I am trying to unzip an archive file in my Gradle build script.
The archive file exists, and I have checked that it is indeed a zip file by running
file myfile.zip
However, build fails with the following error:
Could not expand ZIP '/.../file.zip': is not a ZIP archive
For Windows:
Please delete the package of the zip file and clean gradle. It will resolve.
One reason this can happen is if the file is damaged or corrupted.
The way to check that is to try manually unzipping the file.
For me, the problem was semi-unrelated. My build directory was owned by root and I was running as a user that did not have permissions to write there. I ended up deleting the dir and the next gradle build handled it.
Yes.. it was due to permission on that file.
For windows:
Give the permission including parent folder as same administrator.
Try it to do it again.
If still not work, delete the zip file and let them create again after 1st step. It will resolve.
I got same error, and after running ./gradlew build --stacktrace found out that resources folder contained Flyway migration file with name "V1.1.98__documents..sql" (double dot). Apparently this caused problems with zipping. Was typo of course.
I need your help.
I downloaded maven 3-5-0-src.zip file from maven site. I started to unzip process after a few seconds I got an this error.
Error: System doesn't find this path.
Cannot create
C:\Users\AppData\Local\Temp\wz85b2\apache-maven-3.5.0\maven-core\src\test\resources\org\apache\maven\extension\test-extension-repo\org\apache\maven\core\test\test-lifecycle-and-artifactHandler\1\test-lifecycle-and-artifactHandler-1.pom.sha1.
I can't install maven on my computer. How can solve this?
The ...-src.zip file only contains the source files for your reference.
You need to download and install the binary zip file at apache-maven-3.5.0-bin.zip if you're planning to use maven to build stuff.
Otherwise, the above error looks suspiciously like a Windows path length problem.
I'm trying to set up a Node build system in Sublime Text. I thought I'd use tanepiper's, and I'm following its instructions exactly, but there's a problem: my Node executable isn't found (yes, it's in my system PATH). It says to edit Nodejs.sublime-settings if that happens, but that file is inside Nodejs.sublime-package, which is an archive.
I can't edit the file in-place in the archive. I've tried extracting the archive and then zipping it up again and calling the zip a sublime-package, but that doesn't work either.
So what am I supposed to do here?
You should create Nodejs.sublime-settings in your Packages/User folder. The settings will be merged properly. If you really feel you need to modify the packaged file, use https://github.com/skuroda/PackageResourceViewer, though I'd recommend against it (for settings) as placing a file with the same name in the Packages/User folder will do what you want.
I have created a new version of my Joomla extension.
Manual upgrade via zip file or the directory works fine.
But the automatic upgrade (which used to work fine before), now gives an error 500 and the following error messages: "Unknown Archive type", "*Update path does not exist" and "Installation unexpectedly terminated: Update path does not exist".
I have no idea why those messages appear.
The update.xml references the correct zip files. Downloading it manually works just fine.
Joomla(/php/apache) has all rights on the folder containing the joomla installation.
After trying the automatic update, the tmp folder contains the downloaded zip archive with the latest extension version, interestingly without the .zip extension. Is the Joomla downloader not correctly naming the file and then failing upon finding that the file doesn't have a .zip extension?`Or what could it be?
Would be very thankful for any ideas...
Edit: My project is hosted on github, and github seems to automatically create a subfolder in the downloaded zip archive, named -.zip.
I'm using a link to the tagged github zip directly in my update.xml
I'm not sure if github always added this folder in the zip file, back when it still worked for me...
Might the Joomla problem have to do with the zip file containng such a folder, and not directly the extension stuff at root level? If so, anybody know if/how I can change github to not create that subfolder?
Right, just had a quick test of this.
I couldn't seem to find out how to automatically zip up a sub folder (there is a way but I need to do some more research/ask questions regarding this), however what you can do is the following:
Create a zip of your Repo
Open the zip, extract the folder you wish to be zipped then zip it
Create a new version and then drag your zip file into the upload box
Publish the release
Here is an example, have a look at the "Creating Releases" sections at the bottom:
https://github.com/blog/1547-release-your-software
Hope this helps
To answer my own question:
Yes, github seems to have recently changed their policy to create a root folder in the zip file, named as the repository the zip file is downloaded for (stupid, if you ask me, since the exact same information is encoded in the zip file name already anyway!).
Edit and Rewrite: It seems that either something changed in Joomla or that if you adhere to a naming convention - namely the root folder in the zip file having the exact extension name (or, I think and have to test, actually the same as the file name, without the version information), then the automatic update will work.
So as in my case, I have a Joomla package; the package is now in a repository pkg_mypkg. The zip file generated by github has the name pkg_mypkg-version.zip (e.g. pkg_myfancyext-1.0.9.zip), and contains a folder named pkg_mypkg. And inside the pkg_mypkg folder is a pkg_mypkg.xml file, the extension manifest. And this actually seems to be the configuration where automatic update works.
I have a scorm package that works in Moodle. However, if unzip it to a folder and then rezip it and try to use it I get the following in Moodle:
"Incorrect file package - missing imsmanifest.xml or AICC structure"
Note, I'm doing this because I was trying to debug it and drilled down to this simple test:
Start with working scorm .zip package "TestCourse.zip"
On mac os x, I double click to extract it to the current folder.
I cmd click on it and selected decompress which makes "TestCourse2.zip"
I try to use "TestCourse2.zip" on Moodle as a scorm package and get the error above.
I tried using a different program to re-zip the folder and got the same results.
What am I missing here?
It's because you rezip the folder itself. You shouldn't do this. You should go into the folder root and then rezip all the contents to generate a new valid package.
imsmanifest.xml must be in the root of the zip file, not inside any folder (and do not change structure in any other way because the imsmanifest have dependencies with the other files).