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Hi,In point 9 You said clearly to create a script file named mozilla (no extension), obviously the chmod +x command in point 10 won't succeed due to the file extension. I wonder if that was a mistype!?Question:Which file under the installation directory calls for mozilla and/or mozilla.sh? I'm asking just to make sure It calls mozilla and not firefox with and/or wothout a file extension.I created a mozilla.sh file under /usr/local/sbin and chmod +x the file but the fact is that Fxx and Ctrl+Fxx keys don't really work.Can you please advise?PS: Ubuntu 11.10+Firefox 7.0.1.
Choose the location where you want to install Unified RTMT. If you do not want to use the default location, click. You can create a Unified RTMT user by adding a new application user in the administration interface and adding the user to the predefined Standard RealtimeAndTraceCollection group. Contact Cisco. Open a Support Case.
I'm trying to install the RTMT on Ubuntu 10.4, 64 bit. When I get to your step 4 and run the 'sudo./CcmServRtmtPlugin.bin,' it starts to load, I get a GUI box with a progress bar, but then I get a Fatal Application Error. It looks like there is some issue with Java. How do I find out?
![Interface Interface](/uploads/1/2/7/1/127126766/371870235.png)
What can I do about this?This is my Java versionjava version '1.6.020'OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.9.13) (6b20-1.9.13-0ubuntu110.04.1)OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 19.0-b09, mixed mode)This is what's on my Terminal when I run the command:Preparing to install.Extracting the JRE from the installer archive.Unpacking the JRE.Extracting the installation resources from the installer archive.Configuring the installer for this system's environment.Launching installer.Invocation of this Java Application has caused an InvocationTargetException. This application will now exit. (LAX)Stack Trace:java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: '0-b09'at java.lang.NumberFormatException.forInputString(NumberFormatException.java:65). Under ubuntu 14.04, I get the following error. I installed java 8, same error. I installed java 7, same error. Thankstim@tim-Latitude-E6430:/Downloads$ sudo./CcmServRtmtPlugin.binPreparing to install.Extracting the JRE from the installer archive.Unpacking the JRE.Extracting the installation resources from the installer archive.Configuring the installer for this system's environment.strings: '/lib/libc.so.6': No such fileLaunching installer./CcmServRtmtPlugin.bin: 2506: exec: /tmp/install.dir.6733/Linux/resource/jre/bin/java: not foundI made a symlink for /lib/libc.so.6 - /lib/x8664-linux-gnu/libc.so.6, which got rid of the 'no such file' error, but error on line 2506 remains.
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I'm in Lubuntu 19.04 (which is Ubuntu with the lightweight desktop LXDE)I couldn't even install until I installed 'iced tea' and used the extra LAX bit at the end. Thanks Michael Heimann.sudo./CcmServRtmtPlugin.bin LAXVM /usr/bin/javaAfter install, I got an icon underStartAccessoriesCisco Unified RTMT 10.5but nothing happens when I click it.I also tried running the launcher script above in this thread, and running JRtmt and run.sh from the command line. None of those work.The best clue I can collect is this:/opt/Cisco/Unified-Rtmt/JRtmt/JRtmt:2478: exec:/opt/Cisco/Unified-Rtmt/JRtmt/./JRtmt/jre/bin/java: not foundJava is.included. with RTMT, right? Why can't it find the java?If it's known to work on Ubuntu (instead of Lubuntu) I guess I could install Ubuntu, but Lubuntu is much easier on the CPU.Any advice on how to troubleshoot this a little more?edit:I just checked, and all three of these are already installed:libxtst6:i386libxrender1:i386libxi6:i386.
With the current Postfix setup, you should be able to send an email to user@nagiosfg3-desktop and read email with an client when logged in as user. But I understand that is not your aim.You have to setup Postfix as simple satellite thanks to a relayhost and SMTP protocol. You should use your company SMTP server if there is one.As you mention a gmail destination, you can also use as relay, thanks to. As Google requires TLS/SSL to connect to its service, must be used too: relayhost = smtp.gmail.com:587smtpsaslauthenable = yessmtpsaslpasswordmaps = hash:/etc/postfix/saslpasswdsmtptlspolicymaps = hash:/etc/postfix/tlspolicyIn /etc/postfix/saslpasswd, you will set your gmail account username and password so that Google allows your Postfix to use its service as relay: smtp.gmail.com [email protected]:yourpasswordAnd the file /etc/postfix/tlspolicy to contain: smtp.gmail.com:587 encrypt protocols=TLSv1 ciphers=high.
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