Neo4j can be installed on my 32bit windows OS. But it cannot be activated on my local IE browsers. Is there anyone who meet up the same problem?
neo4j cannot be accessed in my IE browsers
I suggest you download Neo4j Desktop
I have nice interface and everything built-in to run database and browser on desktop (even without using windows command prompt).
Related
Does anyone have details on installing Neo4j Desktop 1.1.12 silently? I have tried every switch I can think of.
I'm trying to make the config flag dbms.read_only=true working with Neo4j community edition (I know there are user roles in the enterprise, but I'm not wealthy enough for their expensive fees).
I've done this:
Created a database as read/write, using Neo4j Desktop (v1.1.8) under Mac and 3.4.5 as database engine.
Populated it with just a few nodes
Stopped, set dbms.read_only=true and restarted
At the last step, the server logs shows the error: "UnsupportedOperationException: Can't create index writer in read only mode" and shuts down. So, is that option really (still) working?
Neo4j Desktop is meant for usage with Enterprise Edition (you do get an individual license for usage for dev purposes only), not Community Edition.
I believe there's an issue with dbms.read_only=true and running via Neo4j Desktop, but there isn't any problem using the server deployment of Neo4j Community edition and using that setting.
My advice would be to download the community edition from Neo4j and use that directly rather than going through Neo4j Desktop.
this is my first post I am having some trouble with an app, in Visual Studio I can run it on Debug without any issue and everything works correctly, but when I deploy it using IIS I can access any page except of the ones where there is an interaction with an access database. If I search through virtual directory I can download the file without an issue.
Do you have any recommendation?
Are you running x32 or x64 iis? (Usually it x64).
Of course on your desktop, then Visual Studio defaults to x32, and that would explain why the Access database engine (ACE) works. You likely should force your project to x32 or x64 (and then ensure that you have a x64 bit version of the ACE (Access) istalled on your developer machie. You then want to ensure that you launching the x64 bit version of IIS.
You donβt need Access installed on your server, but you will need the ACE database engine β and the most easy way to ensure that data engine is installed is simply installing the Access runtime on that server.
Give that the standard ACE database engine download is x32, then I would look into this issue. You could (should) be able to resolve the issue by installing a x64 bit Access runtime on that server β this would also suggest a possible update to your connection strings. And I would check/test the connection string you are using once you resolve the x64 bit version of Access. The path name in your connection string will ALWAYS be a absolute path (not a relative one).
I'm experimenting with the new Windows Subsystem for Linux as a way to develop Rails applications in Windows. I have WSL installed and I have Ruby in it but how do I use that Ruby from a Windows GUI application, specifically, RubyMine:
This is so I can easily start rails, run tests, etc.
If anyone is wondering how this can be done at this time with the latest version of Ruby, there is a WSL connector for the remote repo of ruby.
[Update 2020-10-30]
Updating the response below as a lot has changed and improved since my initial reply in 2017 π
The awesome team at JetBrains have enabled RubyMine to talk to WSL via SSH and to use the "remote" Ruby interpreter, and even debug Ruby code running in WSL! :)
Also, in Windows 10 1903, WSL provides the ability to access Linux distros' filesystems from Windows via the \\wsl$\ pseudo-UNC path.
In Windows 10 2004, WSL added a Linux icon to File Explorer making it easier to discover this pseudo-UNC path.
So, in Windows 10 >= 1903, Windows apps, editors, IDEs, etc. can also access files stored in, for example, \\wsl$\Ubuntu\...!
π Notes:
Accessing files in Linux via \\wsl$\... will be slower than accessing files locally because file IO requests have to be marshalled back and forth via a 9P fileserver. If you intend on accessing files intensively, we recommend storing the files in the filesystem closest to whatever you'll be using to access those files most intensively.
Thus ... while you can access files directly via the pseudo-path, using WSL integrations built-in to tools like RubyMine, VSCode, Visual Studio, etc. should be preferred if available.
Settings: An executable native application written in Delphi FireMonkey (object pascal) application on Windows 64bit and Windows 32bit. The executable is run from a virtual machine through VNC, typically from an Ubuntu Linux machine to a virtual Windows 7 configuration running the executable.
Problem: The problem is when displaying an image (TImage) with effects (TMonochromeEvent, TShadowEffect), the image is not displayed in a VNC connection. Changing the effect will sometimes render the image, sometimes it will flash for a second and disappear.
The same happens with custom styled TListItem. They display fine over Windows 7, Windows 8 in 32bit and 64bit when running locally, and work as expected.
Would appreciate ideas and commentary! :-) Thank you.
Could it be related some settings in VNC (poll full screen?) or the version of VNC you are using (perhaps try UltraVNC or TightVNC). Are you running VNC as a service? I believe they have some sort of display driver hook, are you taking advantage of this? Could you use Remote Desktop Services instead, or LogMeIn?