
You can find the element on the Model Validation Page.Ĥ. Make a note of the GUID for the 'missing' element that you want to restore. Make sure that the element is of the same type as the missing element, and has the same name.ģ. Create a Rhapsody project, local, not on Design Manager.Ģ. If you clicked Yes, ensure the As Unit radio button is selected before you proceed unless the element being replaced was an external (REF) unit.ġ.Click Yes to browse your computer, or No to open a pane in the Rhapsody window that will display applicable model elements on the Design Manager server.
If you have access to the missing element - Controlled Files and Packages only. You need to restore a previously missing element. You need to temporarily add a dummy element to enable the deletion of references to that element. However, consider the following steps in the following cases. This situation does not affect the deletion of unresolved references to 'missing' model elements. Once you move a model to Design Manager, you have no longer direct access to the project files. You see all the (U) elements in that report. Click on the "Models Validation Page" linkĭesign Manager displays a report on the models stored on the server. Visit he /dm/admin page in your web browser. Note: In addition to encountering (U) elements through the Rhapsody UI, you can also identify these elements in Design Manager 6.0.1. Then repeat steps 1 - 3.įor models stored in an actively managed Rhapsody Design Manager project area Follow the steps above for restoring an element you no longer have access to. Then, repeat steps 1 - 3.ĭelete the missing elements when you satisfy both of the following conditions. If you no longer have access to the element, follow the steps above for restoring an element. The solution is to replace the missing element with a dummy element of the same name. A missing element is associated to another missing element. You can remove most elements in this way but occasionally you get the following error when you do the deletion in step 3.Īction is not allowed on unresolved element Right-click on the entry in the search results and click Delete from Model. Right-click on the element and click Remove from View to remove it from the diagram. Double-click on the entry in the search results to observe the (U) element on the diagram. If you intend to remove the unresolved reference: Let Rhapsody replace the existing 'copy' of the element in the model. Click File > Add to Model to add the file that corresponds to the new element that you created in step 2. Return to the Rhapsody project that you attempt to fix,. Right-click on that element in the model browser and select the Create Unit menu option if the option is available. Make sure that the element is of the same type as the missing element, and has the same name. If you no longer have access to the missing element:. Let Rhapsody replace the existing 'copy' of the (U) element in the model. Ensure the As Unit radio button is selected before proceeding, unless the element was an external (REF) unit. Browse to the file that corresponds to the missing element. If you have access to the missing element:. To restore the unloaded element: to correct for the unresolved reference. Sometimes you must restore the element first before you delete the element. Delete the reference to the missing element from the model for each search result or restore the element in question. You see a list of all unresolved and unloaded elements in the model. Select the Only unresolved/unloaded radio button. Perform a search: click Edit > Search > Advanced. You need write access to the entire model before doing the following steps. Note: For CM models, all users must check in any checked out Rhapsody project files, before you check out the entire model. Replace the missing element if you need to keep the element.įor models stored locally, on a network drive or in a Configuration Management (CM) tool. Remove the element from the diagram and optionally delete the element from the model. To fix this problem, you need to resolve each (U) element manually. Having these elements in the model can lead to a crash during a check out (CM) or load (Design Manager) of the containing or parent element. Now, you have an unresolved or unloaded model element on a diagram.
Read-only means that you cannot remove the element. Here we see a Define configuration key option, which we can use to create an additional-spring-configuration-metadata.json file.When you remove an element from a model, references to that element might appear on diagrams that are read-only. Let's take a closer look at the warning message from before: If we have existing properties that are not introduced by a but still want their metadata file, then IntelliJ can help.