#Arcgis file license#
Follow the solutions in the order they are presented, and attempt to connect to ArcGIS License Manager after each solution. There are six solutions outlined below to troubleshoot and resolve issues connecting to ArcGIS License Manager. A firewall is not configured to allow connections to ArcGIS License Manager.Incorrect ports are used to connect to ArcGIS License Manager.An incorrect ArcGIS License Manager IP address is used for connection.ArcGIS License Manager or FlexNET services are not running.
#Arcgis file software#
The ArcGIS License Manager and client software versions are not compatible.There are various reasons why a user may not be able to connect to ArcGIS License Manager, some of which are listed below: Launching these products may result in them freezing or not loading. When attempting to use an ArcGIS product with a Concurrent Use license, users cannot connect to ArcGIS License Manager, preventing the use of ArcGIS products such as ArcMap, ArcGIS Pro, and ArcCatalog. Problem: Unable to connect to ArcGIS License Manager Description Here is a link to the 2009 AIS data that you can download. The readOGR function was able to open the.
gdb files on Marine Cadastre (where the sample data originated), but was unable to open. The readGDBlayer function worked for the 2014. (I'm not sure if all of these are actually necessary, I just installed anything with the name gdal).
#Arcgis file install#
#Arcgis file driver#
I use GDAL 2.0.2 that is "shipped" with FDGB support and without a third party a FGDB driver to investigate that stuff. The solution just needs to be scalable and automated. Is there any way to import the tables directly into R or is the only solution to first export them from ArcGIS as *.dbf (or *.txt) files as in this answer?Īs an addition, if anyone can provide calls from R to a python script that automates the export of *csv (preferrably) or *.dbf files, that would be an acceptable work-around. Thus, it appears that only geographical features can be read by readOGR. In ogrInfo(dsn = dsn, layer = layer, encoding = encoding, use_iconv = use_iconv, : The two linked tables also show when you use ogrListLayers or ogrInfo. You can read the shapefile in R using readOGR from the rgeos package: library(rgeos)ĭownload("", dest="Zone9_2014_01.zip", mode="wb") The database contains a point feature class (Zone9_2014_01_Broadcast) and two linked tables (Zone9_2014_01_Vessel and Zone9_2014_01_Voyage). An example data file can be downloaded here. I am trying to read a table directly from an ESRI file geodatabase into R.