![]() I guess it used to have a different group name prior to version 1.5, however this version of the plugin was at least printing a line in the Maven output indicating this plugin was getting invoked. Within the responses on the Github repository for that plugin, I find this: When I tried this plugin, no SHA-256 checksum gets generated. Quote: "This configuration will generate checksum digest files for the project main and attached artifacts". I did try suggestion from here but if I recall it didn't list artifacts from child modules: įar easier to use a Maven plugin with "mvn deploy". If there was, I could just run "sha256sum" on this list. My alternative was to upload artifacts via Jenkins in a pipeline using the Nexus uploader block, however it doesn't seem there's a simple way to get identify ahead of time the artifacts that would be built in the Maven dependency tree. I've standardized on pom.xml for all projects in order to upload artifacts to Nexus. My organization requires that for all artifacts to be released, a SHA-25 checksum needs to be generated. Didn't go through the plugins code to work this one out, it worked purely by chance. This ends up a greater headache - lerna bootstrap downloads a ton of gulp dependencies (gulp-help, gulp-concat, etc.). Some places actually suggest to not use lerna bootstrap and switch to using file specifiers for local dependencies. The solution was to -save-dev and make it a devDependency. For gulp, even if I installed globally, it still complained the command didn’t exist. Since lerna uses webpack, I got away with installing this globally. Unless you set nodeconfig to a local installation. Lerna bootstrap calls node-gyp rebuild, which must connect to internet to download node. So to make sure we have 1 version for everything in the repository, I use sed to replace version in the root and packages package.json, but also change the versions of local dependencies. Lerna publish creates git tags for every subpackage but only if its changed, so you end up with a mess of tags with different versions. I found advise about not putting lerna bootstrap in a postinstall command, however that is no longer applicable. Lerna with loglevel silly will get stuck at ‘npm install’ on the leaf and not say anything. For eg in my case semantic.json had backslashes for paths, and gulp returns a prompt - semantic.json exists do you want to Skip Install. Lerna bootstrap will also run forever if downstream npm install demands output. We had to use -no-ci and sacrifice the speed boost. Thus will fail with nipm package-lock doesnt exist. Package-lock not sustainable in git when many developers contributing code If you set postinstall this will never exist Lerna bootstrap default behaviour uses npm ci After upgrade, everything works pretty seamlessly!ĭev team wanted to use lerna - defined bootstrap and postinstall commands that called lerna. I had to uninstall the Bluetooth driver (and unplug it) as well as my Avast Antivirus, otherwise the Windows 10 upgrade would just fail at the BIOS. Since Windows 7 support was ending 14th January, I thought heck now there's probably a legit reason to upgrade to Windows 10 - to get this Bluetooth driver working. I even got DS4Windows installed, but made no difference. I was on Windows 7 up until last week and the Bluetooth driver just wasn't working. When I tried to connect a second controller, it just wouldn't "stay connected". Spent a couple of days fumbling to get my controller connected to it. Before upgrading the firmware, it recognized the controller as "Game controller", and after upgrading just became "Controller", but with none of the correct input maps! Not only that but I couldn't map the Analog Stick at all.Īfter more research I got a simple $15 USB-Bluetooth Adapter. ![]() Great, it lets me connect all my wireless controllers wirelessly! Brought it home to try, but to my dismay Steam didn't automatically detect my controller as being a PS4 controller. Then in a glass display at Qisahn, I find this: ![]() I went looking around in shops for the USB wireless adapter, and of course I couldn't find any. ![]() My PC doesn't have a Bluetooth card installed, so I went hunting for options.īut what isn't common knowledge is most controllers - ones I have are PS4/XBox/Nintendo Switch - can connect to PC using Bluetooth! I recently bought Pummel Party on Steam, and plays better on a controller. I use my 50" TV as my PC screen, which means my peripherals have to be wireless.
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