Error Reading Config File /etc/ Webmail /dbmail.conf
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up mongoDB, could not read from config file — config in different folder / Uninstall it? up vote 4 down vote favorite 1 I'm very new to MongoDB and Mac in general. I installed mongoDB from the official site with a download package. For all it's worth, given all the issues I'm having, I'd like to uninstall it and reinstall using Homebrew. Brew complains that mongoDB is already installed so I'm stuck at the moment. From all the tutorials and online search, the config file should be installed in a /etc/ directory path. However, my mongodb.conf file is located in a very different file structure. I get a ERROR: could not read from config file each time I try running mongod. This is where my config file is located: /opt/sm/sets/versions/databases/head/mongodb/templates/mongodb.conf How do I either : Get the current version working (MongoDB shell version: 2.4.6) Uninstall mongoDB entirely so I can install it with Homebrew (which seems a lot more straight forward)? EDIT: I've also tried following this guide with no luck. http://www.mkyong.com/mongodb/how-to-install-mongodb-on-mac-os-x/ Thanks mongodb homebrew uninstall share|improve this question edited Sep 2 '13 at 5:11 asked Sep 2 '13 at 4:44 B. L. 188129 are you running mongod with option pointing to config file with its full path? Can you show the exact mongod command you are running and the permissions and contents of the mongodb.conf file? –Asya Kamsky Sep 2 '13 at 8:21 Issue resolved. Turns out the mongodb.conf file that was on my system at /opt/sm/sets/versions/databases/head/mongodb/ WAS NOT the same config file mongo was complaining about it couldn't read. The file that is needed is mongodb.config which I had to create in the bin folder first. O
Sign in Pricing Blog Support Search GitHub This repository Watch 760 Star 5,965 Fork 4,826 arduino/Arduino Code Issues 672 Pull requests 117 Projects 0 Wiki Pulse Graphs New issue avrdude: can't open config file "/Users/jenkins/jenkins/workspace/toolchain-avr-mac32/objdir/etc/avrdude.conf": No such file or directory #4379 Closed fr0zenrain opened this Issue Jan 3, 2016 · 3 comments Projects None yet Labels None yet Milestone Release 1.6.8 Assignees No one assigned 4 participants fr0zenrain commented Jan 3, 2016 a problem with avrdue In OSX 10.10 command "avrdude -v" show errors as follows avrdude: can't open config file "/Users/jenkins/jenkins/workspace/toolchain-avr-mac32/objdir/etc/avrdude.conf": No http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18565789/mongodb-could-not-read-from-config-file-config-in-different-folder-uninsta such file or directory avrdude: error reading system wide configuration file "/Users/jenkins/jenkins/workspace/toolchain-avr-mac32/objdir/etc/avrdude.conf" and i also set AVRDUDE_CONF=$AVR_TOOLS_DIR/etc/avrdude.conf it seems avrdue_bin use a hardcode path, i don't want create this path for configure file ,how can i resolve? astrawa commented Jan 4, 2016 I have the same problem with arduino-1.6.7-linus32 on a raspberrypi. Previously, I got an error saying there was an "id_type" error at line 332 in https://github.com/arduino/Arduino/issues/4379 avrdude.conf. I removed and re-installed arduino. Now I get the error that avrdude.conf does not exist both in the IDE and from the command line. astrawa commented Jan 4, 2016 Re-installed. Now avrdude.conf can be read but I am back to the "id_type" error. A previous post suggested that there might be another avrdude.cnof file on the machine, but there is not. Arduino member facchinm commented Jan 4, 2016 Hi @fr0zenrain , the avrdude executable is a script (you can open it using Textedit) that wraps avrdude_bin executable. It doesn't wrap the conf path since it is passed by the IDE. If you are in Arduino.app/Contents/Java/hardware/tools/avr/, the right way to execute avrdude is ./bin/avrdude -C etc/avrdude.conf @astrawa , I believe your problem is totally different. Where did you get the IDE for RPi? Can you open another issue? Thanks 😉 👍 1 facchinm closed this Jan 4, 2016 agdl added this to the Release 1.6.8 milestone Jan 26, 2016 Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment Contact GitHub API Training Shop Blog About © 2016 GitHub, Inc. Terms Privacy Security Status Help You can't perform
14.04 mail server in Amazon Web Services, using Postfix, Dovecot, and MySQL, with anti-spam packages in the form of amavisd-new, Clam AntiVirus, SpamAssassin, and Postgrey. Local users are virtual rather than being system users. Administration of users and https://www.exratione.com/2014/05/a-mailserver-on-ubuntu-1404-postfix-dovecot-mysql/ domains is achieved through the Postfix Admin web interface. Webmail is provided by Roundcube. This http://www.dovecot.org/list/dovecot/2013-January.txt is an updated version of an earlier Ubuntu 12.04 mailserver recipe. A number of people graciously helped to fix bugs and make improvements in the original, so should you find a blocking issue here please do let me know. 1) Introduction Building a Linux mailserver from scratch to your own liking is a painful process unless you happen to be error reading one of the few folk who do that day in and day out - there is no way around that fact. A mailserver generally consists of a range of different packages that separately handle SMTP, POP/IMAP, local storage of mail, and spam-related tasks: they must all talk to one another correctly, all have small novels in place of configuration documentation, and there is no one obvious best practice for how users are managed, how error reading config to store user data, or how to glue the various different components together. There are any number of different viable setups for moving mail between Postfix and Dovecot, for example. Further, the whole assembly tends to be unforgiving on matters such as file ownership and permissions, choice of users for specific processes, and tiny errors in esoteric configuration files. Unless you know what you are doing the end result will likely be either insecure or otherwise subtly non-functional. Merely not working is perhaps the best of bad outcomes. There are a number of fairly up to date recipes for creating mailservers out there; one of the better ones is an Ubuntu recipe by Ivar Abrahamsen, which gives you Postfix for SMTP, Courier for IMAP/POP, MySQL to store account information, virtual user mail directories, and an array of anti-spam tools that are highly effective when working in concert. It's a good set of documents, as the author places an emphasis on producing a secure mailserver as the end result. In the past I have made good use of Abrahamsen's guide as a basis for my mail servers, and recommend it. There are also a great many partial recipes and out of date guides that are frankly more of a hindrance than a help - especially when it comes to Dovecot, which has change