I trying to start my custom visual (like usually) but after I updated powerbi-custom-visual to version beta 3.0.11 from version 3.0.10 I got the following error:
error ENOENT: no such file or directory, open '/Users/mar/CustomVisuals/rangechart/.tmp/precompile/visualPlugin.ts'
(node:1454) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: Error: Failed to generate visualPlugin.ts
at generateVisualPlugin.then.catch.ex (/usr/local/lib/node_modules/powerbi-visuals-tools/node_modules/powerbi-visuals-webpack-plugin/index.js:168:12)
at <anonymous>
Does anyone knows why is that? I returned back to the previous beta version of powerbi-custom-visual but it did not help. With version 2.3.0 everything works fine.
I ran into something similar after I deleted the .tmp folder in my project to clean up from an old build. I found that I had to manually (re)create the .tmp/precompile directories inside my project folder. Not sure why the tool couldn't handle creating them itself.
So, I'm working on a robotframework test project, and the goal is to run several test suites in parallel. For this purpose, pabot was chosen as the solution. I am trying to implement it, but with little success.
My issue is: after installing Pabot (which, I might say, I did by cloning the project and running "setup.py install", instead of using pip, since the corporate proxy I'm behind has proven an obstacle I can't overcome), I created a new directory in the project tree, moved some suites there, and ran:
pabot --processes 2 --outputdir pabot_results Login*.robot
Doing so results in the following error message:
2018-10-10 10:27:30.449000 [PID:9676] [0] EXECUTING Suites.LoginAdmin
2018-10-10 10:27:30.449000 PID:400 EXECUTING Suites.LoginUser
2018-10-10 10:27:30.777000 PID:400 FAILED Suites.LoginUser
2018-10-10 10:27:30.777000 [PID:9676] [0] FAILED Suites.LoginAdmin
WARN: No output files in "pabot_results\pabot_results"
Output:
[ ERROR ] Reading XML source '' failed: invalid mode ('rb') or filename
Try --help for usage information.
Elapsed time: 0 minutes 0.578 seconds
Upon inspecting the stderr file that was generated, I have this message:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\robotframework-3.1a2.dev1-py2.7.egg\robot\running\runner.py", line 22, in
from .context import EXECUTION_CONTEXTS
ValueError: Attempted relative import in non-package
Apparently, this has to do with something from the runner.py script, which, if I'm not mistaken, came with the installation of robotframework. Since manually modifying that script does not seem to me the optimal solution, my question is, what am I missing here? Did I forget to do anything while setting this up? Or is this an issue of compatibility between versions?
This project is using Maven as the tool to manage dependencies. The version I am running is 3.5.4. I am using a Windows 10, 64bit system; I have Python 2.7.14, and Robot Framework 3.1a2.dev1. The Pabot version is 0.44. Obviously, I added C:\Python27 and C:\Python27\Scripts to the PATH environment variable.
Edit: I am also using robotframework-maven-plugin version 1.4.0.8, if that happens to be relevant.
Edit 2: added the error messages in text format.
I believe I've come across an issue similar when setting up parallel execution on my machine. Firstly I would confirm that pabot is installed using pip show robotframework-pabot.
Then you should define the directory your results are going to using -d.
I then modified the name of the -o to Output.xml to make it easy to identify.
This is a copy of the code I use. Runs optimally with 8 processes
pabot --processes 8 -d results -o Output.xml Tests
Seems that you stumbled on a bug in the prerelease version of robot framework (3.1a2.dev1).
Please install a release version of robot framework. For example 3.0.4.
Just in case anyone happens to stumble upon this issue in the future:
Since I can't use pip, and I tried a good deal of workarounds that eventually made things more unstable, I ended up saving my project and removing everything Python-related from my system, so as to allow me to install everything from scratch. In a Windows 10, 64bit system, I used:
Python 2.7.14
wxPython 2.8.12.1, win64, unicode, for py27
setuptools 40.2.0 (to allow me to use the easy_install command)
Robot Framework 3.0.4
robotremoteserver 1.1
Selenium2Library 3.0.0
and Pabot version 0.45.
I might add that, when installing the Selenium2Library the way I described above, it eventually tries to download some things from the pip repositories - which, if you have a proxy, will cause you trouble. I solved this problem by browsing https://pypi.org/simple/selenium/, manually downloading the 2.53.6 .tar.gz file, then extracting it and running setup.py install on the command line.
PS: Ideally, though, anyone should be able to use proxy settings from the command line (--proxy http://user:password#server:port) to get pip and then use it; however, for some reason, probably related to network security configurations that I didn't want to lose time with, this didn't work in my case.
I am new to pycharm and I am having trouble to run a simple file which is just to import pandas. I am having following issues:
Whenever, I open the project, "Scanning files to index" takes
forever.
I can see that in indexing, it is using packages/files from
Anaconda2 and that is why it takes forever for my program to run.
I have already tried to make certain folder "Excluded" as described here PyCharm 4.0.5 hangs on 'scanning files to index' background task
I have also deleted the "Caches" folder as described here Intelli J IDEA takes forever to update indices
Pycharm Layout
Pycharm indexes your python environment as well as your project folders. This is normal when first changing either of these. If it occurs more frequently:
View the end of the log that #Pavel mentioned in Help | Show Log in Explorer.
Replicate the command that is stalling the scan and fix any errors.
In my case the package scanning stalled with a vague [y/N] as shown
here. Searching the log I found the following conda.exe command:
Command line: C:\Users\<User>\anaconda3\Scripts\conda.exe list -p C:/Users/<User>/anaconda3/envs/py38 -e
Running this on the command line gave me a more detailed description of my environment error and how to fix it.
I am trying to compile the Minko framework on Windows 10 targeted at HTML. However, I'm hitting an error running the build_html5.bat script.
I've followed the instructions and completed all the steps (except for moving from the main branch to the dev branch, which is listed as optional). I cloned the source, set the new Environment Variable, ran the install_emscripten.bat file, and ran the specified commands in the emscripten command prompt.
However, when I try to run the build_html5.bat script, I get the following error:
I've looked in the MINKO_HOME directory and was able to find the jsoncpp.cpp file, but the jsoncpp.o file is not where in the directory specified in the command being called. The only file in MINKO_HOME/framework/obj/html5/release is a file named 'linker.rsp'.
I tried pulling down the dev branch into a different directory and updating the MINKO_HOME variable accordingly. I couldn't find the tool directory, but I was able to run the script scripts/solution_gmake_full.bat, after my first error trying to run build_html5_full.bat. When trying to run build_html5_full.bat, however, I get a different error:
Am I missing something here? Any help would be appreciated!
Sincerely,
Alex
I manually copied WPT folder from a file server onto my Windows10 test machine and ran below XBootmgr command:
"Xbootmgr -trace shutdown -noPrepReboot -traceFlags BASE+CSWITCH+DRIVERS+POWER -numRuns 1 -resultPath d:\tempetl"
Note: copied WPT folder at location "C:\WPT" and I have manually created "D:\tempetl"
But it is not running and giving small error pop-up which doesn't contain any error message. Getting same issue on another Windows8.1 machine.
I thought there is some issue with the switches I have used, so I tried simple command:
"Xbootmgr -trace shutdown -noPrepReboot"
But faced same issue.
Can anybody help me to resolve this issue?
Thanks in Advance!
Manually copy-pasting the WPT folder won't work. You need to install WPT using an MSI file (WPTx64-x86_en-us.msi).
On a Windows PC which has WPT installed on it, you can find this file in
C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\8.1\Windows Performance
Toolkit\Redistributables
You can also install WPT as part of Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit (ADK) from https://www.microsoft.com/en-US/download/details.aspx?id=39982
Also, once you install WPT, you need to restart the computer once before you can start using the WPT commands for xbootmgr and xperf from an elevated command line window.