A general system error occurred: Not supported version: Unsupported version URI "urn:converter/7.0" while parsing SOAP body at line 6, column 0 while parsing SOAP envelope at line 2, column 0 while parsing HTTP request before method was determined at line 1, column 0.

Is it possible that an older version of the converter or its agent is installed inside the VM? If yes, uninstall it. The VMware Converter installs its own agent automatically if you connect to the machine with administrator credentials.


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But if you prefer converter approach I would strongly recommend you using a 3rd party V2V converter by StarWind instead of VMwares. It's free and helped me a lot of times working with all the most commonly used VM formats: VMDK, VHD/VHDX, StarWind native IMG, QCOW. It works both ways, converting from and to any selected format, thus having better functionality than similar converters.

How do you connect to that? I'm trying to find the previous dng converter version and came upon this link, but that ftp is user/pass locked. Is there somewhere to get previous versions of dng converter? I'm not talking years old...like a few versions back. Thanks

I am attempting to generate a CAP file and an export file from the Wallet.java which comes standard in the Java Card SDK under the samples directory. I compile the class, use the converter and encounter the following:

The Java Card 2.2.2 converter supports at most the Java 5 class file format (hence it tells you that Java 6/version 50.0 is not supported). Thus, you need to specify the source compatibility/class file version when compiling the source code using newer JDK versions:

The models trained in TAO Toolkit are deployed to NVIDIA's Inference SDK's such as DeepStream, Riva etcvia TensorRT. NVIDIA TensorRT is an SDK for high-performance deep learning inference. TensorRT provides APIs and parsersto import trained models from all major deep learning frameworks. It then generates optimized runtime enginesdeployable in the datacenter as well as in automotive and embedded environments. To understand TensorRT and it'scapabilities better, refer to the official TensorRT documentation. While the conversational AI models trained using TAO Toolkit can be consumed via TensorRT only via Riva,the computer vision models trained by TAO Toolkit can be consumed by TensorRT, via the tao-converter tool. TheTAO Converter parses the exported .etlt model file, and generates an optimized TensorRT engine. These enginescan be generated to support inference at low precision, such as FP16 or INT8.

The TensorRT engines generated by this tao-converter are specific to the GPU that it was generated on. So,based on the platform that the model is being deployed to, you will need to download the specific version ofthe tao-converter and generate the engine there.

For an x86 platform with discrete GPUs, the default TAO package includes the tao-converterbuilt for TensorRT 8.2.5.1 with CUDA 11.4 and CUDNN 8.2. However, for any other version of TensorRT,you may download using the command below:

To make the conversion process easier, you can use a free standalone MagicDraw Project Converter. This converter is specifically designed to convert MagicDraw 9.x or earlier version projects to MagicDraw 17.0 projects.

Autodesk FBX SDK is a free* C++ software development kit (SDK) that lets you create plug-ins, converters, and other applications that use Autodesk FBX technology. With FBX you can translate and exchange 3D assets and media from a variety of sources quickly and easily. The SDK is available for Windows, OSX, iOS, and Linux operating systems, which enables software and hardware vendors to add support for the FBX format.

If you need to communicate with an API that uses a content-format that Retrofit does not support out of the box (e.g. YAML, txt, custom format) or you wish to use a different library to implement an existing format, you can easily create your own converter. Create a class that extends the Converter.Factory class and pass in an instance when building your adapter.

Trying to convert an old server. I have downloaded the latest 6.1 converter and it installed smoothly. When I go to submit the conversion job everything looks good until the final screen where the job is submitted. After a few seconds of spinning an error is displayed :

Sadly there are quite a few hits on the web and none seem to cover the issue. I am logged in as local administrator, tried running the converter as administrator user, tried switching from local machine to remote and specifying the loopback address. Checked the disk for errors, nothing meaningful in the event logs. Eventually looked at the requirements of 6.1 converter and noticed that Windows 2003 does not appear to feature. I have tried in vain to locate a copy of converter 5.0.1 since it appears to be the last version to support 2003 SE but none of the links on vmWare site appear to work.


It is now sorted, the fatal I/O appears to have been [in my case] the issue that the server that is running the vconverter software that I was attempting to P2V could only communicate directly to the vCenter. After looking at firewalls it was clear the after chatting to vCenter on 443 it then opens a port to the target ESXi host on 902.

Hi, actually I used Vmware converter 6.1.1 and were able convert Windows Server 2003 with SP2 although it was not in the compatible Guest Operating System list. I succeeded through vcenter (VCSA 6.5) also directly to standalone ESXi 6.5 host. All of them (source, destination and converter) were in the same VLAN.

This logic level converter comes with 2 x 6 pin DIY terminal strips to solder. The are pointing downwards and invisible when used on a breadboard. So I have made the part with terminals only. I can change that, if it is the best way.

Logic Level Converter.fzpz (9.2 KB)

I have an ARM platform with a 1.8v UART and I want to connect my Arduino to it, but I'm afraid of ruining it. I heard about using logic level converters but surprisingly many of the sources recommending this don't have a particular model to recommend, and I can't find any that work at a 1.8v to 5v range.

I'm looking to avoid USB, so the TTL-232RG-VREG1V8-WE won't work for me. The TXB0102 looks nice but is there a breakout board or a DIP version of it? Also, while I didn't read it very thoroughly, it the datasheet doesn't explicitly say whether you can do 1.8v to 5v. I get the impression that many of these logic converters work in increments (so for example 1.8 to 3.3, then 3.3 to 5) but like I said in my OP, I can't seem to get a complete, definite answer. Also, are the data pins bi-directional?

Our PDF file converter does more than convert files to PDF. From compression and rotation to merging two different PDFs and splitting one PDF into two, you can easily edit your PDF files with our suite of tools in the blink of an eye.

mrmarkuz once again thanks for the quick response I tried the reinstall with no luck in cockpit it still shows ds-docservice and ds-converter are not running and if I try to configure only office in Nextcloud by clicking save I get the Bad gateway 502 error. If i enter the domain:8082 in a browser it goes the the only office welcome page.

If you've ever tried to connect a 3.3V device to a 5V system, you know what a challenge it can be. The SparkFun bi-directional logic level converter is a small device that safely steps down 5V signals to 3.3V AND steps up 3.3V to 5V at the same time. This level converter also works with 2.8V and 1.8V devices. What really separates this Logic level converter from our previous versions is that you can successfully set your high and low voltages and step up and down between them safely on the same channel. Each level converter has the capability of converting 4 pins on the high side to 4 pins on the low side with two inputs and two outputs provided for each side.

The level converter is very easy to use. The board needs to be powered from the two voltages sources (high voltage and low voltage) that your system is using. High voltage (5V for example) to the 'HV' pin, low voltage (3.3V for example) to 'LV', and ground from the system to the 'GND' pin.

We have tested this logic level converter more for 5V logic on the high side. Looking at the datasheet, the absolute maximum rating for the drain-source voltage is 50V with 0.22A continuous drain current. It should work for higher voltages based on this fact. We just have not stress tested this setup so we are not sure about how efficient it is when using 12V and 24V on the high side and 5V on the lower side.

Doing a quick test and measuring with a multimeter, the logic level converter was able to convert logic between 12V & 5V and vice versa. The logic level converter was also tested between 15V & 5V and 15V & 3.3V without any issues. There will probably be a slightly higher latency if there is a bigger voltage difference as the transistor switches between a logic HIGH or LOW.

What is the bandwidth of the converter? I am using it to convert a 20 kHz PWM signal from 3.3 V to 5 V. On oscilloscope, from a rising edge input signal, the output signal starts with a first-order response from 3.3 to 5 V, reaching 4.98 V after 2 s, in other words, a first-order response with a time constant of 1.1 s (See an oscilloscope screenshot at ). I could not find similar numbers in the BSS138 datasheet but I am not an electronic engineer. Is that first-order time constant correct?

This is a great little board -- it fits right in where the older versions of the SFE logic level converters went and works better! So glad that Sparkfun redesigned the board for full flexibility on all channels! Thanks sparkfun -- using these things all over the place in my mixed voltage digital projects! ff782bc1db

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