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Does anyone have any idea, what can cause Ripple Emulator (newesest version) onboard newest version of Chrome to always report malformed or missing config file ("config.xml file could not be found in application's root or is malformed XML")?

I have my config.xml present exactly at application root (i.e. in the same folder, where index.html file, used to fire my mobile application). I don't think it's malformed since PhoneGap Bulid builds perfectly working applications (though tested only on Android) and does not reports any problems neither with configuration file nor with compilation process.

I'm getting this error not only on my own configuration files, but also on any PhoneGap application, that I've been working with -- including: PhoneGap Hello World example application, alluny's PhoneGap Start Application, Sencha Touch Kitchen Sink demo and others. Actually I haven't found any application in my local resources, that would not cause Ripple Emulator to report problems with config.xml file.

Of course, I set proper Chrome's settings, as instructed on Ripple Emulator page and I'm opening my Chrome with proper flag to allow it access local files via file:/// protocol.

3
  • Same here, both with yeoman's internal server and with Xampp. If config.xml is clearly requested and served from the project root according to the Network tab of developer tools - nevertheless Ripple complains about it not being found.
    – Motin
    Feb 21, 2013 at 23:55
  • Are you loading your app in Ripple through a web server (e.g. localhost/foo/index.html), or from the file system (file:///C:/Users/foo/index.html)? Apr 1, 2013 at 12:47
  • @AdamStanley: Both ways and both fails. I've opened a ticket in Ripple support, as Ripple authors said, this shouldn't happen and that his have to be some sort of bug. Nothing changed (checked seconds ago) ever since that. Ripple updated itself few times, ticket remains open and I don't see any changes in this area.
    – trejder
    Apr 2, 2013 at 13:20

3 Answers 3

8

I am using the current Ripple UI (v0.9.15) and experienced this issue too.

For me the issue was caused by not having the config file in the right location. After I put it in the correct location, Ripple did not recognize it until I disabled/re-enabled Ripple.

What worked for me was:

  1. Make sure config.xml is in the www root with index.html (where you currently have it)
  2. Click on the green Ripple icon in the top left and disable Ripple for that page
  3. Re-enable Ripple
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  • Thanks! I accepted your answer, though I don't use this solution (Ripple Emulator) at all. It turned out, that it stopped working for me. Even after re-install and with using --allow-file-access-from-files it does not respond for clicking Enable or Disable. Either I'm very unlucky or Ripple is to deep in beta, containing many strange bugs, so I dropped the entire idea in favor of testing apps directly on devices, using services like TestFlight and similar. Thanks.
    – trejder
    Jun 3, 2013 at 8:08
  • 1
    One and a half month later I've come back to using Ripple Emulator, but this issue remains, both at mine side and in the form of unresolved bug on Ripple GitHub issues side. I don't know what have worked for you, but I can't reproduce this solution. My Ripple Emulator claims all the time that my config.xml file is missing or invalid.
    – trejder
    Jul 17, 2013 at 11:01
  • This answer does not seem to work. I am using phonegap 2.9.0 as of Sept 2013. Ripple still shows lots of problems with config.xml.
    – G.A.
    Sep 18, 2013 at 6:55
4

Just solved this problem, here's what I had to do:

  1. Transfer the config.xml to my root path (same path as the index.html file)
  2. Transfer the /res folder as well or edit all the .XML entries to point to the right paths.
  3. Disable Ripple and then Re-Enable.
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  • This causes the plugins tab to be lost in Visual Studio 2015. Jun 5, 2017 at 22:09
3

It took me awhile to get the switch working, but opening Chrome with the --allow-file-access-from-files switch is the solution.

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  • 1
    Using --allow-file-access-from-files is required to have Ripple working at all and it was first thing I did during my tests. It has nothing to do with working (or not) config.xml file. Some people using this switch reports that their Ripple reads configuration without problems, while others (like me) can't force Ripple to read config.xml no matter, if they use --allow-file-access-from-files switch or not.
    – trejder
    Nov 14, 2013 at 20:20

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