Thank's for the fast response ! (back to EAP after a year or so and things look the same, nice :)
My D:\ drive is a usual drive with all permissions - all my applications are installed there, including all previous EAP builds (up to 3394). I don't think the drive is the problem - may be the code checking whether it's Ok or not is mulfunctioning ..
Ahh .. damn, you're all right, guys - I'll fix it. Thank you !
But still - I think you all will agree that the error message in that case should be much more explicit. Simply disabling the "Next" button because "something" is wrong with the drive (free space, permissions, God knows what else ..) may confuse a hell lot more users.
On my machine it refuses to enable 'next' if drive is not writeable (CD-ROM)
or I do not have write access there.
-
Maxim Shafirov
http://www.jetbrains.com
"Develop with pleasure!"
Thank's for the fast response ! (back to EAP after a year or so and things look the same, nice :)
My D:\ drive is a usual drive with all permissions - all my applications are installed there, including all previous EAP builds (up to 3394). I don't think the drive is the problem - may be the code checking whether it's Ok or not is mulfunctioning ..
erm, you might wanna take another careful look at that second screenshot :))
Honestly I have no other ideas. Our installer based on NSIS and I'm unsure
where to look at (faulty?) code.
-
Maxim Shafirov
http://www.jetbrains.com
"Develop with pleasure!"
Evgeny
Looks like you're simply running out of disk space on your D drive.
Regards,
Franck
Yep indeed, out of space :)
-
Maxim Shafirov
http://www.jetbrains.com
"Develop with pleasure!"
Ahh .. damn, you're all right, guys - I'll fix it. Thank you !
But still - I think you all will agree that the error message in that case should be much more explicit. Simply disabling the "Next" button because "something" is wrong with the drive (free space, permissions, God knows what else ..) may confuse a hell lot more users.