Versions 2.0 and higher have a graphical user interface based on the powerful Gtk+ toolkit which enables portability between Linux, Unix and Windows platforms. After installing, see readme.txt for more information.Download for Windows, Linux-Intel, Macintosh,Linux-ARM. Download the scale archive
- Mac Os X Create Zip File With Password
- Macbook Create Zip File
- Mac Create Zip File Without Folder
- Linux Create Zip File From Directory
- Mac Create Zip File
- Mac Create Zip File With Password
You can help to create more user interface translations for Scala! Now Scala is available in English and Dutch. Download the Portable Object Template. See here for an explanation.When you've made one, please email me the new .po file you've created from the scala.pot file and I will include it in the installers.
- Open the patches.plist file with a text editor and copy the patches manually to your existing clover config.plist which is located in EFI/EFI/CLOVER/ Save and Done. Grab the generic config.plist file according to your CPU family model, provided in respective 15h16h or 17h CPU family folders.
- Click File Save to save your changes. For Linux: Open a terminal window. Open the hosts file in a text editor (you can use any text editor) by typing the following line: sudo nano /etc/hosts. For Mac OS X 10.6 through 10.12: Open Applications Utilities Terminal. Open the hosts file by typing the following line in the terminal window.
- Create a virtual HDD image where macOS will be installed. If you change the name of the disk image from machdd.img to something else, the boot scripts will need to be updated to point to the new image name. Qemu-img create -f qcow2 machddng.img 128G NOTE: Create this HDD image file on a fast SSD/NVMe disk for best results.
Extract the files from the ZIP file into a directory of your choice. If a binary snapshot was downloaded, proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document. If a source snapshot was downloaded, perform step 6 and step 7 of the #Windows Source Installation procedure. Following start-up, proceed to the #Testing the Installation section. Create a password-protected ZIP file in OS X. To create a password-protected Zip file in OS X, you can use the Terminal and you don’t need to download any other programs. First, place all of the files that you want to compress into a single folder, and then rename that folder to the name that you want your ZIP file to have. Open the Terminal.
Versions 1.x are a console application with only a command line which runs in a terminal window (command window, xterm, etc.)
PC/Intel
- Scala 2.44z for Windows,http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/Scala_Setup.exe (3.4 MB)
To install on Windows, first download the Gtk+ Windows Runtime Environment installer available from https://gtk-win.sourceforge.io/home/index.php/Main/Downloads. The version should be the 32-bit 2.24.10 for 32-bit and 64-bit Windows.In the GTK2 runtime installer, leave the tickboxes in the additional options on, especially the one with the PATH variable. You can also use the GTK2 Themes installer (GTK+ Preference Tool) from SourceForge.net: GTK+ for Windows Runtime Environment to change the visual style of Scala. You will also needthe GTK+ Themes Package.Should you have an older Gtk+ version installed then uninstall it first.
Then run the Scala_Setup.exe program and choose an installation directory, for example C:Program FilesScala22 or C:Scala22. It can be installed in an existing directory overwriting a previous version.
If you get an error message about a missing entry point of libglib-2.0-0.dll, or different error messages about dlls, there is probably another incompatible Gtk version installed in another location, or the PATH (environment variable) does not contain the C:Program Files (x86)GTK2-Runtimebin folder.In case it does there's probably an incompatible version installed or left over. Then try moving thisfolder more to the left in the PATH variable.(Go to Control Panel, System, Advanced, Environment Variables). Also search for Gtk files in otherlocations on the computer, especially the system area windowssystem32 where they don't belong, orother directories contained in the PATH variable.
If that still does not help, or if you don't know how to do the above things, you can then better use the portable Windows version of Scala, listed below.If you want to make graphical plots like scale plots, interval histograms, etc. then the Windowsversion of GNUplot must be downloaded and installed also from http://sourceforge.net/projects/gnuplot/files/gnuplot/
- Scala 2.44w for Windows, Portable version.http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/Scala_Portable_Win32.zip (22.3 MB)
With this version, installation of the Gtk+ Windows Runtime Environment is not necessary, although it also will not do any harm or benefit.Unzip the zip archive on the local hard disk and start Scala.exe by navigating where it was copied and then into the Scala22 folder.The GTK+ Preference Tool is included and can be started by double clicking gtk2_prefs.exe.
- Scala 2.42p for 32-bit GNU/Linux on PC/Intel, http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/scala-22-pc-linux.tar.bz2 (4.2 MB)
Install the following packages:
- aconnectgui (recommended)
- gnuplot (if not installed yet, dependency only if graphic plots are made)
- libgnat-4.6
- playmidi (recommended)
- timidity (recommended)
- Scala 2.44w for 64-bit GNU/Linux on PC/Intel, http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/scala-22-pc64-linux.tar.bz2 (4.5 MB)
Install the following packages:
- aconnectgui (recommended)
- gnuplot (if not installed yet, dependency only if graphic plots are made)
- libgnat-5.4
- playmidi (recommended)
- timidity (recommended)
For all Linux distros, read the file INSTALL for instructions. See theLinux MIDI HOWTO for adding virtual MIDI ports to be used by Scala and Scala's readme.txt.
I recommend the desktop environment XFCE rather than Gnome.It leaves the menu and button icons visible whereas Gnome removes them. The icons arehelpful to find the right menu item more quickly because Scala has many menu items. You caneasily install XFCE plus associated other packages in Ubuntu. Then log out, and chooseXFCE in the login screen settings. The file manager is also better in my opinion. - Scala 1.88e for Windows XP and higher,http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/scala18win.zip (2.2 MB)
(This is a 32-bit console mode executable which runs in a Command Prompt window) - Scala 1.88e for 64-bit GNU/Linux on PC/Intel, http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/scala-18-pc64-linux.tar.gz (2.3 MB)
(This is a 64-bit console mode executable which runs in a Terminal window)
This version runs on recent Ubuntu versions, on which currently the full version is not supported.So if you do not have an older Linux version with gcc 5.4, then this is an alternative. - Scala 1.88e for different architectures under GNU/Linux: contact the author.
Macintosh
Memo to Mac users, before sending me an email please read carefully the bottom paragraph of this page.
- Scala 2.42r for OS X 10.5 'Leopard' to 10.14 'Mojave' on Intel/Mac, http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/Scala_Setup.app.zip (6.4 MB)
Warning: Do not use this version if you plan to use the MIDI out function with SimpleSynth for example.Due to a bug which still needs fixing it does not work. Instead download the previous version 2.42q for 10.5 'Leopard' to 10.14 'Mojave':
http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/Scala_Setup_2.42q.app.zip
Steps
- Update XQuartz
Download and install the latest Apple XQuartz package suitable for your OSX version fromhttps://www.xquartz.org/releases/index.html.
- Install Gtk2 Runtime
http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/gtk2-2.24.31.mpkg (111 MB) (right-click, Save as). You do not need to reinstall this runtime library for every new Scala release. However if you encounteran incompatible library version message when starting Scala, then download and install the new version of this runtime also. Always install Scala again after installing this package.
In case you have MacPorts installed, then do not install this package but enter this command: sudo port install gtk2, andsudo port install gnuplot if you want to make graphic plots.
Or if you have Homebrew installed, then do not install gtk2 with Homebrew because that will not be compatible with Scala, use the mpkg installer instead. But installing gnuplot with sudo brew install gnuplot should be fine. - Download, unzip and install Scala fromhttp://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/Scala_Setup.app.zip
- Check Security setting (OSX 10.8 to 10.14)
In OSX 10.8 and higher, it is necessary to allow any downloaded applications to be run. This is shown by Scala's installer. The installer shows how, but does not check what the setting actually is and it is not an error message.
- Install SimpleSynth
It plays via Apple's DLS Synthesizer and it can set soundfonts: http://mac.softpedia.com/get/Audio/SimpleSynth.shtml.
- Scala 2.22d for OS X 10.4 'Tiger' on PowerPC/Mac, http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/ScalaX.zip (8.0 MB)
Note: If you have OS X 10.5 on PowerPC then use the following workaround:
- Update XQuartz
Download and install the latest Apple XQuartz package fromhttps://www.xquartz.org/releases/index.html.It's included with Xcode on Mac OS X 10.5 'Leopard'. It's located in the 'Optional Installs.mpkg' package on the Mac OS X 10.4 'Tiger' DVD. It's on disk 3 of the Mac OS X 10.3 'Jaguar' CD set.
- Install MacPorts
- Install gtk2 from MacPorts. Go to Utilities and start Terminal, then type
sudo port install gtk2
- Scala
a) Download and install Tiger package
b) Control-click Scala.app, Show Package Contents
c) Open Scala.app's Contents/Resources/script with your favourite text editor
d) Delete lines 13-27
e) Save Contents/Resources/script
- Double-click Scala.app to run
Please read the following instructions carefully if you use 10.4 and the information on Install and use Scala on Mac OS X 10.4, especially if you still have OS X 10.3.
- Check if X11 is installed. If so, you should see an X11 icon insideApplications/Utilities/X11. If not, install it from Apple's OS X DVD (or the above website).
- Unzip ScalaX.zip
- Mount the Scala.dmg disk image (double click on it)
- Drag the Scala folder from the image into the Applications folder
- Double click on Scala inside the Scala folder to run
- Type 'help' in the bottom line of the Scala window
- For other OSX versions, you can download the Windows version and the Windows Gtk+ runtime and run it under CrossOver Mac.The message 'Unsupported Software' can be ignored. Sound output works too.
Linux, Unix
- Scala 2.44p for 32-bit Linux on ARMv7 (armhf) http://www.huygens-fokker.org/software/scala-22-armv7-32-linux.tar.bz2 (4.3 MB)
Install the following packages:
- gnuplot (if not installed yet, dependency only if graphic plots are made)
- libgnat-4.9
- playmidi (recommended)
- timidity (recommended)
For all Linux distros, read the file INSTALL for instructions. See theLinux MIDI HOWTO for adding virtual MIDI ports to be used by Scala and Scala's readme.txt.
Scala can be compiled on almost every other variety of Linux and Unix.For PC/Intel, see above. For other platforms, contact the author at coul@huygens-fokker.org.
Scale Archive
A large collection of over 5000 scale files for Scala is also available for download.
- Scale archive, version 90, October 2020:http://www.huygens-fokker.org/docs/scales.zip
The files will go to a subdirectory 'scl' of the current directory.The best way to unzip them is to do File:Import scales.zip in Scala since that takes care of the factthat they are stored in Windows text format (CR-LF).
Macintosh OSX, Linux and Unix users: if you don't do it like this, you can unzip them via the command line with the -a (autoconvert) option. Right-click on the link and save it in the user or home directory. Go to Utilities and start Terminal, then navigate with cd if you saved it somewhere else and type:unzip -aa scales.zip
N.B. If the files are unzipped on Mac and Linux like normal without this option,they cannot be opened!! Do not just double click on the zipfile assuming that it works!
25 Mar 2021
Using ActiveMQ > Getting Started
Introduction
This document describes how to install and configure ActiveMQ 5.x for both Unix and Windows’ platforms.
Document Organization
The Getting Started Guide for ActiveMQ 5.x document contains the following sections:
- Installation Procedure for Windows
- Installation Procedure for Unix
- Starting ActiveMQ
- Testing the Installation
Pre-Installation Requirements
Hardware:
- ~ 60 MB of free disk space for the ActiveMQ 5.x binary distribution.
(you need additional disk space for storing persistent messages to disk) - ~ 300 MB of free disk space for the ActiveMQ 5.x source or developer’s distributions.
`Operating Systems:**
- Windows: Windows XP SP2, Windows 2000, Windows Vista, Windows 7.
- Unix: Ubuntu Linux, Powerdog Linux, MacOS, AIX, HP-UX, Solaris, or any Unix platform that supports Java.
Environment:
- Java Runtime Environment (JRE)JRE 1.7 (1.6 for version <=5.10.0)
(a JDK is required if you plan to recompile source code) - The JAVA_HOME environment variable must be set to the directory where the JRE is installed
(Unix: the binary “java” has to be resolvable by the PATH variable; execute “which java” to verify) - Maven 3.0.0 build system
(only if you plan to recompile source code) - JARs that will be used must be added to the classpath.
(only if you plan to recompile source code)
Installation Procedure for Windows
This section of the Getting Started Guide explains how to install binary and source distributions of ActiveMQ on a Windows system.
Windows Binary Installation
This procedure explains how to download and install the binary distribution on a Windows system.
- Download the latest release
(see Download -> “The latest stable release” -> “apache-activemq-x.x.x-bin.zip”) - Extract the files from the ZIP file into a directory of your choice.
- Proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document.
- Following start-up, go to the #Testing the Installation section of this document.
Windows Source Installation
This procedure explains how to download and install the source distribution on a Windows system.
- Download the latest release
(see Download -> “The latest stable release” -> “apache-activemq-x.x.x-source-release.zip”) - Extract ActiveMQ from the ZIP file into a directory of your choice.
- The recommended method of building ActiveMQ is the following:
where
[activemq_install_dir]
is the directory in which ActiveMQ was installed. - If you prefer to use an IDE, then you can auto-generate the IDE’s project file using maven plugins:
or
Feel free to use any other applicable IDE. Please refer to the plugin reference for more details.
- Start ActiveMQ from the target directory, for example:
NOTE: Working directories get created relative to the current directory. To create the working directories in the proper place, ActiveMQ must be launched from its home/installation directory.
Proceed to the #Testing the Installation section.
Warning
If you are building ActiveMQ 4.x under Windows using Cygwin there is a path name length limitation. If the path name length is exceeded, you may see build errors. To correct this, move the ActiveMQ source directory higher in the file system tree, e.g., /cygdrive/c/d/sm.
Windows Developer’s Release
This procedure explains how to download and install the latest developer’s snapshot.
- Open the release archive: https://repository.apache.org/content/repositories/snapshots/org/apache/activemq/apache-activemq/
(open one of the SNAPSHOT directories) - Select the version of ActiveMQ to download (if necessary, scroll down to see the ActiveMQ snapshots).
- Extract the files from the ZIP file into a directory of your choice.
- If a binary snapshot was downloaded, proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document.
If a source snapshot was downloaded, perform step 6 and step 7 of the #Windows Source Installation procedure. - Following start-up, proceed to the #Testing the Installation section.
Installation Procedure for Unix
Unix Binary Installation
This procedure explains how to download and install the binary distribution on a Unix system.
NOTE: There are several alternative ways to perform this type of installation.
- Download the activemq zipped tarball file to the Unix machine, using either a browser or a tool, i.e., wget, scp, ftp, etc. for example:
(see Download -> “The latest stable release”) - Extract the files from the zipped tarball into a directory of your choice. For example:
Proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document.
- Following start-up, go to the #Testing the Installation section.
Using Homebrew installer on OSX
If you use OSX as your platform, you can use Homebrew package manager to easily install Apache ActiveMQ.
- After installing Homebrew package manager successfully, just run
You can expect the following output:
ActiveMQ will be installed in /usr/local/Cellar/apache-activemq/x.x.x/
directory (where x.x.x
denotes the actual version being installed).
Now you can proceed to #Starting ActiveMQ and #Testing the Installation sections.
Unix Source Installation
This procedure explains how to download and install the source distribution on a Unix system. This procedure assumes the Unix machine has a browser. Please see the previous #Unix Binary Installation section for details on how to install ActiveMQ without a browser.
- Download the latest source release
(see Download -> “The latest stable release” -> “activemq-parent-x.x.x-source-release.zip”) - Extract the files from the ZIP file into a directory of your choice. For example:
- Build ActiveMQ using Maven:
The preferred method of building ActiveMQ is the following:If Maven crashes with a java.lang.OutOfMemoryError, you you need to do this first (assuming a Bourne-like shell):
If you prefer to use an IDE then you can auto-generate the IDE’s project file using maven plugins:
or
Feel free to use any other applicable IDE. Please refer to the plugin reference for more details.
NOTE: Working directories get created relative to the current directory. To create working directories in the proper place, ActiveMQ must be launched from its home/installation directory. - Proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document.
- Proceed to #Testing the Installation section.
Unix Developer’s Release
This procedure explains how to download and install the latest developer’s snapshot.
- Open the release archive: https://repository.apache.org/content/repositories/snapshots/org/apache/activemq/apache-activemq/
(open one of the SNAPSHOT directories) - Select the version of ActiveMQ to download (you may have to scroll down to see the ActiveMQ snapshots).
The filename will be similar to:activemq-x.x.x-tar.gz
. - Extract the files from the gzip file into a directory of your choice. For example:
For a binary developer’s snapshot:For a source developer’s snapshot:
- If a binary snapshot was downloaded, to make it executable, the
ActiveMQ
script may need its permissions changed: - For a binary snapshot, proceed to the #Starting ActiveMQ section of this document.
- If a source snapshot was downloaded perform steps 6 - 8 of the #Unix Source Installation procedure.
- Proceed to the #Testing the Installation section.
Starting ActiveMQ
There now follows instructions on how to run the ActiveMQ Message Broker.
On Windows:
From a console window, change to the installation directory and run ActiveMQ
:
where [activemq_install_dir]
is the directory in which ActiveMQ was installed, e.g., c:Program FilesActiveMQ-5.x
.
Then type:
`NOTE:** Working directories get created relative to the current directory. To create working directories in the proper place, ActiveMQ must be launched from its home/installation directory.
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On Unix:
From a command shell, change to the installation directory and run ActiveMQ
as a foregroud process:
From a command shell, change to the installation directory and run ActiveMQ
as a daemon process:
More help
For other ways of running the broker see Here. For example you can run an embedded broker inside your JMS Connection to avoid starting a separate process.
Testing the Installation
Using the administrative interface
- Open the administrative interface
- URL: http://127.0.0.1:8161/admin/
- Login: admin
- Passwort: admin
- Navigate to “Queues”
- Add a queue name and click create
- Send test message by klicking on “Send to”
Logfile and console output
If ActiveMQ is up and running without problems, the Window’s console window or the Unix command shell will display information similar to the following log line (see stdout output or “[activemq_install_dir]/data/activemq.log”):
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Listen port
ActiveMQ’s default port is 61616. From another window run netstat and search for port 61616.
From a Windows console, type:
OR
From a Unix command shell, type:
Monitoring ActiveMQ
You can monitor ActiveMQ using the Web Console by pointing your browser at http://localhost:8161/admin
.
From ActiveMQ 5.8 onwards the web apps is secured out of the box.
The default username and password is admin/admin. You can configure this in the conf/jetty-real.properties file.
Or you can use the JMX support to view the running state of ActiveMQ.
For more information see the file docs/WebConsole-README.txt
in the distribution.
Stopping ActiveMQ
For both Windows and Unix installations, terminate ActiveMQ by typing “CTRL-C” in the console or command shell in which it is running.
If ActiveMQ was started in the background on Unix, the process can be killed, with the following:
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Configuring ActiveMQ
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The ActiveMQ broker should now run. You can configure the broker by specifying an Xml Configuration file as a parameter to the activemq command. An alternative is to use the Broker Configuration URI to configure things on the command line in a concise format (though the configuration options are not as extensive as if you use Java or XML code). You can also
Also see Configuring Transports to see how you can configure the various connection, transport and broker options using the connection URL in the ActiveMQConnectionFactory.
See the Initial Configuration for details of which jars you need to add to your classpath to start using ActiveMQ in your Java code
If you want to use JNDI to connect to your JMS provider then please view the JNDI Support. If you are a Spring user you should read about Spring Support
After the installation, ActiveMQ is running with a basic configuration. For details on configuring options, please see refer to the Configuration section.
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Additional Resources
If you are new to using ActiveMQ, running the Web Samples or the Examples is a good next step to learn more about ActiveMQ.
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The Commercial Providers listed on the Support page may also have additional documentation, examples, tutorials, etc… that can help you get started.