I'm trying to install lombok in the Spring Tool Suite 4 ide which is in the /opt folder on Ubuntu. The command: java -jar lombok.jar does not work because the opt folder requires privileges.
I tried using the command suggested by the installation software: sudo java -jar lombok.jar I get the result:
sudo: java: command not found
Note: I have the SDKMAN software development kit manager installed to manage java versions.
Because root does not have sdkman install. root can not get java.
You can do this:
sudo su -
mkdir -p /usr/lib/jvm
cd /usr/lib/jvm
ln -s /home/YourUserName/.sdkman/candidates/java/current jdk
nano /root/.bashrc
# ADD This
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/jdk
export PATH=/usr/lib/jvm/jdk/bin:$PATH
# Ctrl + O save
# Ctrl + X exit nano
exit
UPDATE:
Add JDK Path to sudoers config:
Run Command : sudo nano /etc/sudoers
find Defaults secure_path="/usr/local/sb..."
append :/usr/lib/jvm/jdk/bin at end of this line
it will like Defaults secure_path="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/snap/bin:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk/bin"
save and exit nano.
Test: sudo java -version
Then you can run sudo java -jar lombok.jar
Tesseract run successfully in eclipse, windows 7, Tomcat 8
When I run the same application on linux machine(RHEL)+java 8+tomcat 8 I get classdefnotfound error. The class is present (TessAPI.class) in classes folder.
I did this to setup in linux.
tar xzf tomcat8.0.37.tar.gz
sudo yum install libpng-devel libjpeg-devel
sudo yum install libtiff
sudo yum install automake
sudo yum install libtool
yum install apr-devel openssl-devel
rpm -ivh jdk-8u101-linux-x64.rpm
tar xzf leptonica-1.69.tar.gz <- download this
cd /tmp/leptonica-1.69
./configure
make
sudo make install
tar xzf tesseract-ocr-3.02.02.tar.gz <- download this
cd tesseract-ocr
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
sudo make install
yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
source /etc/profile
sudo ldconfig
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
Am I missing something here?
After spending much time I successfully completed OCR integration with Red Hat linux, with all the steps above and below is additional step I have done, might be helpful for someone in near future :)
Added(created new file with name "setenv.sh" in tomcat_home/bin)
Add these lines
JRE_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.8.0_101/jre
<-- this line as my default jre was 1.7
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib/:/usr/local/apr/lib:$CATALINA_HOME/lib
<-- /usr/local/lib location tesseract .so available
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
I'm new to Ubuntu and Linux in general. I want to code in Java on my computer, but I'm having problems installing IntelliJ IDEA on Ubuntu. I have downloaded and extracted the file and for some reason renamed the folder to idea. I tried moving the folder to /usr/share/applications or something but I didn't have permission. I used sudo -i in terminal to gain permission but didn't manage to get out of root folder. Can anyone help me with a step by step way to move the folder, create a shortcut in the search bar or whatever it's called and install it properly?
Note: This answer covers the installation of IntelliJ IDEA. For an extended script, that covers more JetBrains IDEs, as well as help for font rendering issues, please see this link provided by brendan.
Furthermore, a manual Desktop Entry creation is optional, as newer versions of IntelliJ offer to create it on first startup.
I have my intellij int /opt folder. So what I do is:
Download Intellij
Extract intellij to /opt-folder: sudo tar -xvf <intellij.tar> -C /opt/ (the -C option extracts the tar to the folder /opt/)
Create a Desktop Entry File called idea.desktop (see example file below) and store it anywhere you want (let's assume in your home directory)
Move the idea.desktop from your home directory to /usr/share/applications: sudo mv ~/idea.desktop /usr/share/applications/
Now (in a lot) Ubuntu versions you can start the application after the GUI is restarted. If you don't know how to do that, you can restart your PC..
idea.desktop (this is for community edition version 14.1.2, you have to change the paths in Exec= and Icon= lines if the path is different for you):
[Desktop Entry]
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=IntelliJ IDEA
Comment=IntelliJ IDEA
Exec=/opt/ideaIC-14.1.2/bin/idea.sh
Icon=/opt/ideaIC-14.1.2/bin/idea.png
Terminal=false
StartupNotify=true
Type=Application
Edit
I also found a shell script that does this for you, here. The given script in the link installs Oracle Java 7 for you and gives you the choice between Community and Ultimate Edition. It then automatically downloads the newest version for you, extracts it and creates a desktop entry.
I have modified the scripts to fulfill my needs. It does not install java 8 and it does not ask you for the version you want to install (but the version is kept in a variable to easily change that). You can also update Intellij with it. But then you have to (so far) manually remove the old folder! This is what i got:
Edit2
Here is the new version of the script. As mentioned in the comments, breandan has updated the script to be more stable (the jetbrains website changed its behavior). Thanks for the update, breandan.
#!/bin/sh
echo "Installing IntelliJ IDEA..."
# We need root to install
[ $(id -u) != "0" ] && exec sudo "$0" "$#"
# Attempt to install a JDK
# apt-get install openjdk-8-jdk
# add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java && apt-get update && apt-get install oracle-java8-installer
# Prompt for edition
#while true; do
# read -p "Enter 'U' for Ultimate or 'C' for Community: " ed
# case $ed in
# [Uu]* ) ed=U; break;;
# [Cc]* ) ed=C; break;;
# esac
#done
ed=C
# Fetch the most recent version
VERSION=$(wget "https://www.jetbrains.com/intellij-repository/releases" -qO- | grep -P -o -m 1 "(?<=https://www.jetbrains.com/intellij-repository/releases/com/jetbrains/intellij/idea/BUILD/)[^/]+(?=/)")
# Prepend base URL for download
URL="https://download.jetbrains.com/idea/ideaI$ed-$VERSION.tar.gz"
echo $URL
# Truncate filename
FILE=$(basename ${URL})
# Set download directory
DEST=~/Downloads/$FILE
echo "Downloading idea-I$ed-$VERSION to $DEST..."
# Download binary
wget -cO ${DEST} ${URL} --read-timeout=5 --tries=0
echo "Download complete!"
# Set directory name
DIR="/opt/idea-I$ed-$VERSION"
echo "Installing to $DIR"
# Untar file
if mkdir ${DIR}; then
tar -xzf ${DEST} -C ${DIR} --strip-components=1
fi
# Grab executable folder
BIN="$DIR/bin"
# Add permissions to install directory
chmod -R +rwx ${DIR}
# Set desktop shortcut path
DESK=/usr/share/applications/IDEA.desktop
# Add desktop shortcut
echo -e "[Desktop Entry]\nEncoding=UTF-8\nName=IntelliJ IDEA\nComment=IntelliJ IDEA\nExec=${BIN}/idea.sh\nIcon=${BIN}/idea.png\nTerminal=false\nStartupNotify=true\nType=Application" -e > ${DESK}
# Create symlink entry
ln -s ${BIN}/idea.sh /usr/local/bin/idea
echo "Done."
Old Version
#!/bin/sh
echo "Installing IntelliJ IDEA..."
# We need root to install
[ $(id -u) != "0" ] && exec sudo "$0" "$#"
# define version (ultimate. change to 'C' for Community)
ed='U'
# Fetch the most recent community edition URL
URL=$(wget "https://www.jetbrains.com/idea/download/download_thanks.jsp?edition=I${ed}&os=linux" -qO- | grep -o -m 1 "https://download.jetbrains.com/idea/.*gz")
echo "URL: ${URL}"
echo "basename(url): $(basename ${URL})"
# Truncate filename
FILE=$(basename ${URL})
echo "File: ${FILE}"
# Download binary
wget -cO /tmp/${FILE} ${URL} --read-timeout=5 --tries=0
# Set directory name
DIR="${FILE%\.tar\.gz}"
# Untar file
if mkdir /opt/${DIR}; then
tar -xvzf /tmp/${FILE} -C /opt/${DIR} --strip-components=1
fi
# Grab executable folder
BIN="/opt/$DIR/bin"
# Add permissions to install directory
chmod 755 ${BIN}/idea.sh
# Set desktop shortcut path
DESK=/usr/share/applications/IDEA.desktop
# Add desktop shortcut
echo -e "[Desktop Entry]\nEncoding=UTF-8\nName=IntelliJ IDEA\nComment=IntelliJ IDEA\nExec=${BIN}/idea.sh\nIcon=${BIN}/idea.png\nTerminal=false\nStartupNotify=true\nType=Application" > ${DESK}
echo "Done."
You can also try my ubuntu repository: https://launchpad.net/~mmk2410/+archive/ubuntu/intellij-idea
To use it just run the following commands:
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:mmk2410/intellij-idea
sudo apt-get update
The community edition can then installed with
sudo apt-get install intellij-idea-community
and the ultimate edition with
sudo apt-get install intellij-idea-ultimate
JetBrains has a new application called the Toolbox App which quickly and easily installs any JetBrains software you want, assuming you have the license. It also manages your login once to apply across all JetBrains software, a very useful feature.
To use it, download the tar.gz file here, then extract it and run the included executable jetbrains-toolbox. Then sign in, and press install next to IntelliJ IDEA:
If you want to move the executable to /usr/bin/ feel free, however it works fine out of the box wherever you extract it to.
This will also make the appropriate desktop entries upon install.
Since Ubuntu 18.04 installing Intellij IDEA is easy! You just need to search "IDEA" in Software Center. Also you're able to choose a branch to install (I use EAP).
For earlier versions:
According to this (snap) and this (umake) articles the most comfortable ways are:
to use snap-packages (since versions IDEA 2017.3 & Ubuntu 14.04):
install snapd system. Since Ubuntu 16.04 you already have it.
install IDEA snap-package or even EAP build
to use ubuntu-make
(for Ubuntu versions earlier than 16.04 use apt-get command instead apt):
Add PPA ubuntu-desktop/ubuntu-make (if you install ubuntu-make from standard repo you'll see only a few IDE's):
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-desktop/ubuntu-make
Install ubuntu-make:
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install ubuntu-make
install preffered ide (IDEA, for this question):
$ umake ide idea
or even ultimate version if you need:
$ umake ide idea-ultimate
I upgrade Intellij IDEA via reinstalling it:
$ umake -r ide idea-ultimate
$ umake ide idea-ultimate
TL;DR:
Download IntelliJ IDEA from here.
cd Downloads
extract the downloaded file: sudo tar xf ideaIC-2017.2.5.tar.gz -C /opt/
Switch to the bin directory: cd /opt/idea-IC-172.4343.14/bin
Run idea.sh from the bin subdirectory.
Since Ubuntu 16.04 includes snapd by default.
So, the easiest way to install the stable version is
IntelliJ IDEA Community:
$ sudo snap install intellij-idea-community --classic
IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate:
$ sudo snap install intellij-idea-ultimate --classic
For the latest version use channel --edge
$ sudo snap install intellij-idea-community --classic --edge
Here is the list of all channels https://snapcraft.io/intellij-idea-ultimate (drop down 'All versions').
options
--classic
The --classic option is required because the IntelliJ IDEA snap requires full access to the system, like a traditionally packaged application.
[https://www.jetbrains.com/help/idea/install-and-set-up-product.html#install-on-linux-with-snaps]
--edge
--edge Install from the edge channel
[http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/bionic/man1/snap.1.html]
Note: Snap, also work a few major distributions: Arch, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE, Linux Mint,...
Recent IntelliJ versions allows automatic creation of desktop entry. See this gist
Launch from commandline. If launching for the first time, setup will ask about creating a desktop launcher icon; say yes. Or else after launching (ie. from the commandline) any time, use the IDEA menu Configure > Create Desktop Entry . That should create /usr/share/applications/intellij-idea-community.desktop
Trigger the Ubuntu desktop search (ie. Windows key), find the Intellij IDEA you used to create the desktop entry.
Drag the icon it's showing into the Ubuntu Launcher.
In a simple manner you can also try to just run a pre-packaged docker with intellij, I found the good job of #dlsniper : https://hub.docker.com/r/dlsniper/docker-intellij/
you just need to have docker installed and to run :
docker run -tdi \
--net="host" \
--privileged=true \
-e DISPLAY=${DISPLAY} \
-v /tmp/.X11-unix:/tmp/.X11-unix \
-v ${HOME}/.IdeaIC2016.1_docker:/home/developer/.IdeaIC2016.1 \
-v ${GOPATH}:/home/developer/go \
dlsniper/docker-intellij
Standalone installation
Download the tarball.tar.gz.
Extract the tarball to a directory that supports file execution.
For example, to extract it to the recommended /opt directory, run the following command:
sudo tar -xzf ideaIC-2020.3.tar.gz -C /opt
Go to /opt folder and open intellij folder
Go to /bin folder and execute the command sh idea.sh
Now the application opened and create the desktop shortcut if you need
I find and follow this youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbW-doAiAvI
Basically, download the tar.gz package, extract into /opt/, and then run the "idea.sh" under bin folder (i.e. /opt/idea-IC-163.7743.44/bin/idea.sh)
Enjoy
I needed to install various JetBrains tools on a number of machines from CLI, so I wrote a tiny tool to help with that. It also uses cleaner APIs from JB making it hopefully more stable, and works for various JB tools.
Feel free to try it: https://github.com/MarcinZukowski/jetbrains-installer
try simple way to install intellij idea
Install IntelliJ on Ubuntu using Ubuntu Make
You need to install Ubuntu Make first. If you are using Ubuntu 16.04, 18.04 or a higher version, you can install Ubuntu Make using the command below:
sudo apt install ubuntu-make
Once you have Ubuntu Make installed, you can use the command below to install IntelliJ IDEA Community edition:
umake ide idea
To install the IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate edition, use the command below:
umake ide idea-ultimate
To remove IntelliJ IDEA installed via Ubuntu Make, use the command below for your respective versions:
umake -r ide idea
umake -r ide idea-ultimate
you may visit for more option.
https://itsfoss.com/install-intellij-ubuntu-linux/
I'm trying to switch maven from 2 to 3 (on Linux) using:
sudo update-alternatives --set mvn /path/to/maven3/bin/mvn
Anyway mvn -v still gives version 2, so I always have to execute /path/to/maven3/bin/mvn to use maven. How can I rebind the mvn command to the appropriate maven path?
Run:
sudo update-alternatives --config mvn
Then choose which version you want use.
Also check than which mvn is symbolic link to /etc/alternatives/mvn
which mvn
And then recreate symbolic link to point on new Maven version. And verify than environment variable MAVEN_HOME points to the right directory.
Set system property M2_HOME to path to the maven home.
My build server is linux based. I need protoc to integrate it to my ant based build system.
I use following in build.xml for same:
<exec executable="tools/protoc.exe" failonerror="true">
<arg value="--java_out=../protos/java/generated" />
<arg value="--proto_path=../protos/proto" />
<arg value="../protos/proto/*.proto" />
</exec>
I found windows binary , but didn't find linux binary for protoc.
Any help to find one or build statically linked protoc binary would be nice.
Have you tried just downloading the main protobuf project and following the installation instructions? I seem to remember it's pretty straightforward if you only need the binary:
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure
$ make
(You probably don't need make install in this case, if you only need the protoc binary. Just find out where it's been built and copy it.)
Precompiled binaries for the latest release are on the official releases page on GitHub. Previous versions can be found on the Maven repository.
For java you also could use https://github.com/os72/protoc-jar which already contains binaries for different platforms.
On Ubuntu (since 12.04) you can find protobuf-compiler in the repository.
sudo apt-get install protobuf-compiler
$> protoc --version
libprotoc 2.6.1
And you might as well want to install the header files:
sudo aptitude install libprotobuf-dev
In case you want to compile only protoc binary for any platform, then follow these steps:
Under protobuf project directory
./autogen.sh
cd protoc-artifacts
./build-protoc.sh linux x86_64 protoc
Once, the protoc.exe is built in protobuf/protoc-artifacts/target/linux/x86_64/protoc
rename it to protoc
mv protobuf/protoc-artifacts/target/linux/x86_64/protoc.exe protobuf/protoc-artifacts/target/linux/x86_64/protoc
1) Download binary from the url https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/releases
2) extract and keep the directory at particular location (/user/app/protoc)
3) add the entry in /usr//.bash_profile as
export PROTOC_HOME=/user/app/protoc
export PATH=$PROTOC_HOME/bin:$PATH
4) refresh file $source /usr/<username>/.bash_profile
Other option is run the following command one by one after downloading the repository :
sudo rm -rf ./protoc
unzip protoc-3.10.1-linux-x86_64.zip -d protoc
chmod 755 -R protoc
BASE=/usr/local
sudo rm -rf $BASE/include/google/protobuf/
sudo cp protoc/bin/protoc $BASE/bin
sudo cp -R protoc/include/* $BASE/include