I think I'm moving in the right direction. I downloaded several packages 
that IJulia depends on and put them in the ~/.julia/v0.3 directory along 
with the IJulia package itself. Before I was just sticking them in the 
~/.julia directory, and I don't think Julia was seeing the packages.

When trying `using IJulia`, I get "ERROR: ZMQ not properly installed. 
Please run Pkg.build("ZMQ"). When I run that command, it tries to build 
Homebrew, WinRPM, and ZMQ, all of which have their own errors.
Homebrew: "could not spawn setenv(`git rev-parse --git-dir`; 
dir="P:\\.julia\\v0.3\\Homebrew\\deps\\usr"): no such file or directory 
(ENOENT)"
WinRPM: "update not defined"
ZMQ: "RPM not defined"

When I try `Pkg.build("IJulia")`, it trys to build Homebrew, WinRPM, 
Nettle, ZMQ, and IJulia.  I get errors for all except IJulia.  The 
Homebrew, WinRPM and ZMQ errors are the same.  For Nettle, I get: "RPM not 
defined"

Now I can open an IJulia instance, but the kernel dies shortly after it 
comes up. The command window states "ERROR: ZMQ not properly installed. 
Please run Pkg.build("ZMQ")". Then it attempts to restart the kernel and 
repeats the process.


On Wednesday, June 17, 2015 at 12:31:22 AM UTC-4, Tony Kelman wrote:
>
> Can you do `using IJulia`, and/or `Pkg.build("IJulia")` ? Note also that 
> IJulia depends on several other packages, indicated in the REQUIRE file 
> (and those packages may have other dependencies of their own).
>
>
> On Tuesday, June 16, 2015 at 3:40:14 PM UTC-7, Yonatan Tekleab wrote:
>>
>> Hi Stefan,
>>
>> I'm having the same problem.  Unfortunately the firewall I'm behind is 
>> clever enough prevent me from re-configuring git to use https, as many 
>> other threads have indicated.
>>
>> I downloaded the master branch IJulia package from 
>> https://github.com/JuliaLang/IJulia.jl, extracted the folder, placed it 
>> inside the ~/.julia folder, then removed the ".jl-master" suffix.  This 
>> still isn't working for me.  When I try to open IJulia from the command 
>> prompt ("ipython notebook --profile julia"), it pulls up the typical 
>> IPython notebook.
>>
>> Any thoughts on what I'm doing wrong?
>>
>> Thanks in advance.
>>
>> On Thursday, October 31, 2013 at 10:16:06 AM UTC-4, Stefan Karpinski 
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> If you just make sure that the package source exists in ~/.julia, that 
>>> should do the trick. In fact, you don't need to mess around with the 
>>> package manager at all – Pkg commands will fail but loading packages should 
>>> work fine. Unfortunately, building packages with binary dependencies will 
>>> likely fail, but if you stick with pure-Julia packages, you should be ok.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 7:51 AM, Able Mashamba <[email protected]> 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Dear Informed,
>>>>
>>>> Is there a way to manually install julia packages on a Windows system 
>>>> that has a proxy.pac config system with a paranoid firewall. I have 
>>>> downloaded the packages I need and would want to install them manually as 
>>>> it appears Internet permission settings at my institution are making all 
>>>> Pkg.*() commands fail.
>>>>
>>>>                _
>>>>    _       _ _(_)_     |  A fresh approach to technical computing
>>>>   (_)     | (_) (_)    |  Documentation: http://docs.julialang.org
>>>>    _ _   _| |_  __ _   |  Type "help()" to list help topics
>>>>   | | | | | | |/ _` |  |
>>>>   | | |_| | | | (_| |  |  Version 0.2.0-rc2
>>>>  _/ |\__'_|_|_|\__'_|  |  Commit b372a68 2013-10-26 02:06:56 UTC
>>>> |__/                   |  i686-w64-mingw32
>>>>
>>>> julia> Pkg.add("Distributions")
>>>> INFO: Initializing package repository C:\Users\amashamba\.julia
>>>> INFO: Cloning METADATA from git://github.com/JuliaLang/METADATA.jl
>>>> fatal: unable to connect to github.com:
>>>> github.com[0: 192.30.252.130]: errno=No error
>>>>
>>>> ERROR: failed process: Process(`git clone -q -b metadata-v2 git://
>>>> github.com/Jul
>>>> iaLang/METADATA.jl METADATA`, ProcessExited(128)) [128]
>>>>
>>>> julia>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>

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