Category:Cumulus MX: Difference between revisions

m
and I got the response "URL reservation successfully added", so I know it worked. This command is apparently to allow all users to bind to port 8998 (i.e. that used for the Cumulus interface). This also means ''you don't have to run the engine (CumulusMX.exe) in an administrator user, nor select "Run as administrator" from right click menu on the shortcut'', nor set the properties for any shortcut to run in any special way.
 
IMPORTANT NOTE: I don't use "localhost:8998" for two reasons, first I already have a web server on my PC at IPv4 "127.0.0.1" using "localhost" as an alternative name (and port 81, selected because something called 'Skype' that I don't use had reserved port 80 that I had expected to use), and second using the IPv4 exact "http://192.168.1.64:8998/" address as a bookmark, I can view the Cumulus userAdmin interfaceInterface on my mobile phone which shares bookmarks with my PC and connects to my LAN via wifi.
 
When I am happy to stop using MX, I type '''Control + C''' into that MX command window on my PC and MX closes.
 
Obviously, you cannot have Cumulus 1 and Cumulus MX running at same time, accessing same weather station. If you (like I was to begin with) are just experimenting with MX you may sometimes run one flavour (say MX) and sometimes the other (Cumulus 1). Each time you swap, you must copy all the updated log files from the ''just used'' data folder to the data folder you are ''about to use'' when you close one favour before you start the other flavour, or you must have both executables in same top level folder to force them to share the data folder. Please note, '''today.ini''' is a special case, the time-stamp line has a different format in Cumulus 1 (C1) and MX; while MX can read the format that C1 uses, C1 cannot understand the format that MX uses. Remember [[today.ini]] determines which stored entries in the weather station console need to be read to "catch-up" and it also holds the various figures that will inform what gets stored in [[dayfile.txt]] at the end of the day. So to have this file being read and updated correctly is vital.
 
If you don't do either of those alternatives, various derivatives (e.g. Chill Hours) will become wrong and you may have conflicting rows in dayfile.txt (because its content is generated from what that flavour saw when it was running the previous day) and generally this will be particularly evident in any weather parameter that varies a lot like wind vector. It also affects what is stored for any derivatives that rely on averaging (temperature, wind run, rain rate) as these are calculated biased towards the actual times when that flavour of Cumulus was actually running, so you can have issues if you run the 2 flavours in different folders/devices as if the other does not exist.
 
I have some batch scripts that Cumulus initiates, and a number of Cumulus templates, and in my case I had to be happy these were working before I stopped using Cumulus 1, and got MX as the flavour that auto-started on switching on my PC. I also use output modifiers on a lot of the web tags I use in my custom web pages and it took me a long time to work out the necessary changes to get these templates edited so that MX could process them and produce the web page content I wanted. I am not going to explain all the problems nor give the solutions, because you probably don't have web pages as complex as mine.
5,838

edits