Now, neither the boinc manager nor boinc client will run. I just upgraded a drive and did a fresh install of Tumbleweed. If the 15.1 and15.2 manager versions are the same but behave differently, then I don’t see that this is an openSUSE issue and I need to take up this issue with boinc as I see it.ĭid you find a resolution to this issue? I’ve been running boinc for many years and I kept the manager running all the time. If the versions are the same, what if anything could have changed in openSUSE between 15.1 and 15.2 to change this behavior? I don’t think this to be likely but who knows. Perhaps just put the 15.1 Main Repository repo back into my repo list temporarily to download boinc manager? If a different boinc version, how can a replace the version I have now with the earlier version. I am also looking for the version that ran on 15.1. This would eliminate some quirk with my system. I am hoping for someone to verify this behavior on 15.2 with boinc manager version 7.16.6. I racked up 1.5 million statistics points running boinc for months on 15.1 and started and stopped manager many times. With openSUSE 15.1, closing boinc manager did not kill boinc client. I let boinc run continuously for month without looking at it much in the background and I don’t wish to keep the manager running. I have verified this behavior multiple times. The manager version now running is labeled as: 7.16.6. I am using the boinc client and manager apps from openSUSE software management repos. I hope you find this method to retrieve file versions from SharePoint helpful for your work and on you travels.With openSUSE 15.2, closing boinc manager now kills the boinc client service running in the background and stops computations. The file will should either download or prompt to be saved depending on what your browser of choice is. An example would look like this: /_vti_history/512/_catalogs/masterpage/Display Templates/Content Web Parts/Control_List.html Success Step 5: In a web browser of your choice, paste the file path you copied into the browser immediately after the root URL to your site or site collection. Step 4: Click on the version you want to download and copy the text in the URL field contained in the right column of the application. If the file only has one version or versions are not enabled, the version tab will not contain information. Here you will find all the versions of the file. Step 3: Drill down to: SPwebService > Web Applications > “Web Application” > Sites > “Site” > Folder > File > Versions. Step 2: On a SharePoint server, extract and run the “SharePoint Manager 2013.exe” Step 1: Download SharePoint Manager 2013 from Codeplex at This tool is a must have for SharePoint administrators, developers, and the like. SharePoint Manager 2013 is a SharePoint object model explorer that enables you to browse every site on the local farm and view every property. That can be answered using a server side tool named SharePoint Manager 2013 to find the URL to the previous file versions and download it. Microsoft may have designed this behavior on purpose or maybe not, but that doesn’t answer the question. So the question is how can I view and download an older version of the file. I have found that this method does not work for most custom and system files in the master page gallery. There are some posts on the web that say if the file has a “Title” field the file can be downloaded or opened by clicking on the Title field value. The option to download the file is not available like it was when I downloaded a Word document from before. Instead of opening or downloading the old version of the file, the page links to a display form window (/_catalogs/masterpage/Forms/DispForm.aspx?ID=X). However, it does not work for hidden files such as those in the Master Page Gallery (/_catalogs/masterpage/). This method works for most documents including files and pages. Step 4: The document will download or prompt to be saved. Step 3: Find the the version number you want and click on the Date hyperlink in the “Modified” column to download the file. Step 2: Click the drop down arrow (or the ellipses) next to the file you want and click on the Version History link Whatever the reason, there is an easy way to do this for files that reside in document libraries that have versions enabled. Maybe there is a need to view content that was removed from the current version or you’re just bored. Have you ever wanted to view an older version of a file? Most of us have for one reason or another.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |