While installing Oracle fusion Middleware 11g web tier utilities at step 7 following error occurs and stops installation process.
Installation Failed. Prepare Session failed SEVERE:Values for the following variables could not be obtained from the command line or response file(s): MYORACLESUPPORT_USERNAME(MyOracleSupportUsername) Silent install cannot continue.
I could not figure out what is wrong , please help ...
The message suggests you're doing a silent install, so have you created/modified a response file as described in the documentation? The MYORACLESUPPORT_USERNAME is mentioned here, but its interaction with the other parameters isn't always obvious. There is more detail here.
Assuming you don't want to get security updates, you need to set DECLINE_SECURITY_UPDATES to TRUE (although I seem to recall having to supply the MSO credentials anyway, but not sure which version I saw that and it seemed like a bug). If you do want security updates then leave that as FALSE and set the MSO credentials to appropriate values.
Related
We're using odoo.sh platform with odoo14. The installed wkhtmltopdf is wkhtmltopdf_paas_wrapper 0.12.5, we can't upgrade to 0.12.6 because the access is very limited we cant use 'sudo' to apt-install. To temporarily solve this, we decided to use the 0.12.5 version. But it returns "Unable to call host printing service (HTTPError)" even with the right arguments. I've already tried it with the staging and production server, but still the same result. The ticket I've sent hasn't been replied to yet. This is so frustrating, I'm going bonkers...please help.
here's a screenshot:
ps: unrecognized argument error was intentional so I can display the available args. I've also crossed out the project domain. Thank you
Apparently, to properly execute the package, it should not have been "wkhtmltopdf" but instead "wkhtmltopdf.bin". I've overridden the ir_actions_report.py to change the package name. Here's the snippet of the original source code:
They shouldve known better, its a paid platform.
I am unable to create a new Common Data Service Database in my Power Apps default environment. Please see the error text below.
It looks like you don't have permission to use the Common Data Service
in this environment. Switch to a different environment, or create your
own.
Which as I understand I should be able to create after the Microsoft Business Application October 2018 update as listed in the article available at following link.
https://community.dynamics.com/365/b/dynamicscitizendeveloper/archive/2018/10/17/demystifying-dynamics-365-and-powerapps-environments-part-1
Also when I try to create a Common Data Service app in my default environment, I encounter following error.
The data did not load correctly. Please try again.
The environment 'Default-57e1485d-1197-4afd-b792-5c423ab508d9' is not
linked to a new CDS 2.0 instance. The operation 'ListInstanceMetadata'
is forbidden for unlinked environments
Moreover I am unable to see the default environment on https://admin.powerapps.com/environments, I can only see the Sandbox environment there.
Any ideas what I am missing here?
Thank you.
Someone else faced a similar issue and I read in one of the threads about deleting the browser cache and trying it again or trying it in a different browser resolved the issue. Could you try these first level steps and check if you still have these issues?
Ref: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Common-Data-Service-for-Apps/Default-Environment-Error-on-CDS/m-p/233582#M1281
Also, for your permission error ref: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Common-Data-Service-for-Apps/Common-Data-Service-Business-Flows/td-p/142053
I have not validated these findings. But as these answers are from MS and PowerApps team, hope it helps!
I am trying to set up a test environment on my mac (os 10.12) and it requires Fishbowl/Firebird DB. No matter what I do i bounce back and forth between these two errors:
isql localhost:/Users/me/Fishbowl/database/data/EXAMPLE.FDB
which gives me:
Your user name and password are not defined. Ask your database
administrator to set up a Firebird login.
And anything to do using gsec to create user or change password:
And:
Statement failed, SQLSTATE = HY000 operating system directive stat
failed
-Bad file descriptor
This is supremely frustrating. Fishbowl Client itself seems to hit this DB just fine. I have chmod 770 the /tmp/firebird directory and even tried to chown the example.fdb file itself.
Can anyone tell me how I might hit this DB from my java app or commandline? Both ways produce these errors.
1) Your connection line starts with "localhost:". That means you user TCP/IP connection to reach the database server. And the database server is running in a separate process. That means chmod and chown should not matter as long as there is firebird daemon server running and listening at TCP port ( default is 3050 AFAIR, you can read the value of your installation in the text file firebird.conf ).
Indeed, there is so-called "embedded server" or "embedded mode" where the server is loaded as DLL/SO library into the application. But then the connection string can not have network protocol prefix, so that should NOT be your case.
2) You can check documentation at http://firebirdsql.org/manual/isql-switches.html to specify your user and password in the isql command line. The Firebird has one built-in superuser, namely "SYSDBA". Regarding the password it might be a bit complicated.... It differs by Firebird version and platform
2.0) whatever SYSDBA password might be set by the server installation, if server comes in a bundle with some application the said application can override it later. Then you would either have to contact application developers or try to remove the bundled FB and install your own vanilla one, risking rendering the application no more functioning.
2.1) Windows installation of FB 2.x sets the "default" SYSDBA password as "masterkey" (only 8 first symbols actually matter)
2.2) Linux installation of FB 2.x generates a random SYSDBA password and saves it into a text file in Firebird folder.
2.3) MacOS ? Don't know. Perhaps it is closer to Linux than to Windows. So try to find such a text file and try "masterkey"
2.4) With FB 3 the authentication methods and configuration was greatly overhauled, so... So it is quite hard to tell something specific. At least for me.
3) I don't know what Fishbowl ever is, but Google suggests this: https://www.fishbowlinventory.com/wiki/Fishbowl_for_Mac
If that is so, then check the bottomline examples at that page. They stress that you should sudo all those commands. That also makes sense because
3.1) Firebird daemon might have "trusted authentication" enabled, mapping FB users to Operating System users. On UNIX that would at least map SYSDBA to root. On Windows - to Administrator (however it is localized). This does not have to be enabled, but if it is then sudo UNIX command is exactly what makes applications run with OS superuser grants and might explain lack of user and password in the command line examples.
3.2) Firebird embedded server/mode work as part of an application process, and especially with CS (Classic Server) package on UNIX the command line utilities tend to fall into this mode. Then again it needs to be run as root to read highly sensitive data from Firebird Security Database, thus the need to sudo the command. Granted, I do not think your isql command might ever run in embedded mode - because you do specify "localhost:' prefix. But the example at the wiki link above - backup and restore - they use local connection strings, so they probably do run as embedded. So that might give you yet another hint - to try remove "localhost:" prefix from the connection string and to sudo isql rather than running it from regular user. It would hardly be a normal mode, but for test purposes why not.
Hope this helps.
PS. you might also try this Firebird IDE - it is simplistic, but again, for testing purposes... http://www.flamerobin.org/dokuwiki/wiki/manual
I'm trying to do this:
import groovy.sql.Sql
def sql = Sql.newInstance(
url:'jdbc:sqlserver://localhost\\myDB',
user:'server\user', //this I don't think I need because of SSPI
password:'password',
driver:'com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver',
SSPI: 'true'
)
The problem I'm having is that this connection is just timing out. I can ping the machine. I can also connect to the database with Managment Studio logged into my SSPI user (or whatever you call it, I start the Management Studio with a different user)
So I've tried that with my SoapUI as well, started the program as a different user, but I still time out when I initiate the connection. So something is very wrong with my connection string and any help would be appreciated.
P.S. Yes, I don't know what's up with the \ backslashes after the URL to the server, I guess it indicates that it's at the root. If I don't use them I get a message that I'm on the incorrect version.
And then we found the answer..... First of all I had the wrong JDBC driver installed. You need to head over to microsoft to get the real deal:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=11774
Then you need to unpack this one, place the 4 or 4.1 version in your bin directory of SoapUI. (You are apparently supposed to use Lib/Ext, but that doesn't work for me)
Then, since we are trying to use SSPI or Windows Authentication, to connect to the SQL server, you need to place the sqljdbc_auth.dll from the driver/enu/auth folder. This is used in one of your path's or in SoapUI Lib folder. Remember to use the 32 bit dll for 32 bit SoapUI!!! I did not since my system is 64.....
After this, I used this string, but now you have the setup correct, so it should work fine as long as you remember to start SoapUI up using the correct windows user. (Shif-right click - start as different user - use the same user you have started the SQL server with)
Again, I wasn't completely aware of this from the start (yes, total newbie here) and it failed.
Finally, when you have done all this, this is the string that works - and probably a lot of derivatives since the failing part here were the driver and dll.
def sql =Sql.newInstance("jdbc:sqlserver://localhost;Database=myDB;integratedSecurity=true","com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver")
I have a production database running DB2 at 10.1.2 workgroup (OpenSuse 12.2) and I have Full Text Search running pretty well there. Now I'm trying to build a test enviroment, but when I turn over de production backup into test machine with 10.1.2 express-c the FTS is presenting this error:
<message>IQQD0040E The client specified the wrong authentication token.
com.ibm.es.nuvo.inyo.common.InyoFactoryWrapper.authenticate(InyoFactoryWrapper.java:203)
com.ibm.es.nuvo.inyo.common.InyoFactoryWrapper.getHandler(InyoFactoryWrapper.java:85)
com.ibm.es.nuvo.inyo.common.InyoServer$InyoListener.run(InyoServer.java:425)
java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1121)
java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:614)
java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:769)</message>
The redbook says to me that this error cause is: "Usually this error occurs when there are 2 or more text search instances configured with the same port number and one instance is already running".
I've already searched other instances but I've only found one. So "usually" does not apply to my situation.
Anyone know what else I can do to fix that?
Best regards,
jacker
I've found out a solution. When the backup is transported to a new instance of DB2, de FTS application engage it communication with a token. After restored, we just need to go to the bin directory of FTS, commonly at /home/db2inst1/db2tss/bin and run this command:
configTool generateToken -seed <username> -configPath ~/sqllib/db2tss/config
Hope this help anyone who's passing by this trouble.
Regards.