Step by Step install of wso2 EMM for Ubuntu - wso2

I've visited the wso2 website and the install instructions are very disjointed in that there is a lot of jumping around between pages. I've seen the following blog that seemed to streamline the instructions but it doesn't seem complete (plus it's out of date with the version it's installing) - https://maxmalm.se/blog/2014-06-17-installing-wso2-enterprise-mobility-manager-110
Has anyone seen step-by-step instructions on what needs to be done to completely setup wso2-EMM on a newly installed Ubuntu 14.04 virtual machine with just the O/S on it and none of the pre-reqs installed yet? The blog I mentioned above seems to give a lot of the necessary apt-get install bits but doesn't mention anything about a database (yet the wso2 has a whole section on installing and using a database).
Thank you.

To try out WSO2 EMM you will only need to have JDK 7 or 8 [1] installed as minimum to start off the server. WSO2 products are build to run with OOB database which is H2. So to get things started and play around, I suggest that you install java and then start the pack to get things going.
[1] https://docs.wso2.com/display/EMM201/Installing+on+Linux+or+OS+X

To getting started all you need is JDK installed in your machine and setting the Java related environment variables like PATH, JAVA_HOME. You might have to install the correct version of JDK for the particular version of the EMM.

Related

Redmine version 3.0.3 to 4.0.3 upgrade

I'm currently on a task to upgrade from Redmine 3.0.3 to Redmine 4.0.3.
I have followed these steps from http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/redmineupgrade but the current system is running a version of Ruby that is not supported by Redmine 4.0.3. I have also tried to make a new server using Turnkey Redmine and then copied over the database and configuration file, but with no luck.
Has anyone done this before and if so is there an how-to guide somewhere?
This appears to be more of a general 'How to deploy a Rails application' question, not really Redmine specific.
In short, Chruby or the aforementioned Rvm are the answer to all your Ruby version problems. After installing a current version of Ruby, you will have to somehow configure your Ruby server (Unicorn or mod_rails or whatever you're using) to run with that version of Ruby. How to do that really depends on what you are running and, again, is not Redmine specific but specific to that server.

Is there any well documented Redmine installation process

is there any well documented step by step procedure to install redmine?. I tried to install it on my Ubuntu machine.But i am unable to access it from another machine. please tell me how to it. is there any document which show how to host as centralized
See this guide: http://www.redmine.org/projects/redmine/wiki/redmineinstall. Its a general installation guide. I used it to install Redmine on Debian Jessie.

Rethinkdb chef solo cookbook

Is there any RethinkDB chef solo cookbook that allows one to install latest rethinkdb on ubuntu 14.04 / AWS.
I tried couple options, however it didn't help.
https://github.com/vFense/rethinkdb-chef - how to install latest version?
https://github.com/sprij/rethinkdb-cookbook.git - source compilation takes hours
I would appreciate any help regarding this.
Thanks
Try the cookbook that is available from the community repository first:
https://supermarket.chef.io/cookbooks/rethinkdb
It claims to be integration tested on Ubuntu. If it doesn't work under chef-solo, then I'd advise you to switch to local mode chef client instead.
https://www.chef.io/blog/2013/10/31/chef-client-z-from-zero-to-chef-in-8-5-seconds/
PS
Also checkout Berkshelf for managing cookbook dependencies. It's a standard tool in the chefdk
I updated rethinkdb-chef to work with the latest version of RethinkDB as well as removed the network portion of the .kitchen.yml file. I validated that this does work on CentOS 6 and Ubuntu 14.04.
I still need to write tests as well as documentation. As per Marks answer, try to use the community supported version 1st. I created this cookbook, so that I can customize it as per my needs with vFense.

Unable to download distribution package for Django

I'm currently testing with a django web application using version 1.6 with a python version 3.4.1 and needs to install some packages here on my machine. Based from what I've observed we are currently connected to a proxy server which is why I'm having issues downloading some of it. Below are the actions that I've taken so far.
1) I've updated my http_proxy connection to http://innoproxy:8083/proxy.pac which is our current proxy connection.
2) Below is error that mostly occurs when I would install the South Package.
C:\Users\fx0.MANDAUE>pip install South
Downloading/unpacking South
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement South
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for South
Storing debug log for failure in C:\Users\fx0.MANDAUE\pip\pip.log
My question is, would it be possible for me to install that package without using the command prompt(manual download) or do I still lack some actions from my end for the downloading to work? I've already checked other possible solutions but so far to no avail. Thanks!
I'm in a similar situation behind my corporate proxy. You may first want to check whether your proxy is looking for authentication, in which case setting you connection string to http://username:password#proxyserver:port/ may help. In my case, however, our authentication relies on Windows Active Directory, which I've yet to overcome on my Linux box.
If all else fails, as in my case, you can manually download the source tar.bz (or similar compressed directory) from PyPI and use pip install path/to/source. This will mean manually downloading all dependencies and installing them the same way. It can be a pain, but it works.

How to Install Solr to use with Haystack in Django

I'm installing Solr to be used with Haystack / Django.
How do I go about installing Solr? Do I need to follow the online instructions exactly and install services like Tomcat?
The above questions I just commented make all the difference if you are set on installing / setting this up yourself. OR you could use a hosted service (read: easy).
Try out http://websolr.com I'm loving it.
If you are on OSX and want a local Solr instance just to try out for some development, this is an awesome tutorial: http://realityloop.com/blog/2011/07/19/setting-multicore-apache-solr-os-x-using-homebrew
essentially brew install solr, and then some configuration.
If you are trying to do a production level solr server on a linux operating system, I would suggest working with an instruction set specific to that distribution and the version you are using. OR even better, bite the bullet and pay someomne who knows what they are doing to set it up (make sure your indexes won't fail or go down).