I am new with video editing. I want to use the MLT framework through command line in order to edit thousands of video.
I am unable to install the framework. Can anyone help me with the installation process?
Ubuntu or Debian based linux distros:
# sudo apt-get install melt
Fedora 22 or newer:
# dnf install melt
Windows:
Download the Shotcut Windows build here:
https://www.shotcut.org/download/
This installation comes with a Windows cross compile of melt.
To run it, you can open a terminal and call:
c:\Program Files\Shotcut\qmelt.exe
Mac:
Option 1 - install via homebrew:
# brew install mlt
Option 2 - install Shotcut and use the incuded melt script
https://shotcut.org/download/
Related
I am trying to install SQL Developer on my laptop. I've download the file from Oracle and follow the instruction, I have RPM installed, but when I run rpm -Uhv sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch.rpm, I encountered the following:
rpm: RPM should not be used directly install RPM packages, use Alien instead!
rpm: However assuming you know what you are doing...
warning: RPM v3 packages are deprecated: sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch
error: Failed dependencies:
/bin/sh is needed by sqldeveloper-21.4.3-063.0100.noarch
What can I try next?
It looks like you are trying to run a package made for redhat based systems, but PopOS is debian based.
To proceed with the installation you must first install rpm2cpio, then you can extract it by running the command "# rpm2cpio datamodeler-21.4.2.059.0838-1.noarch.rpm", then you can access the extracted directory.
Then you can use the command "# ./sqldeveloper.sh" to run the application.
But, ensure you have a JDK installed You will be prompted to enter a jdk path. (ie usr/java/jdk1.8.0_181) SQL Developer will automatically launch once jdk location is provided
I am trying to install msodbcsql v13 in redhat 6.3. It shows dependency error for unixODBC(64 bit) >= 2.3.1 needs to be installed before installing msodbcsql.
I tried running below command,
odbcinst -j
It shows unixODBC 2.3.2 is installed.
Also i tried to some other way,
yum provides /usr/lib64/odbcinst.so.2.0.0
The above command shows, ODBC version 2.2 is installed.
Also if i run yum local install, it shows unixODBC 32 bit version available in machine.
To remove unixODBC, i tried the below commands. But not works out.
yum remove unixODBC
yum erase unixODBC
rpm -e unixODBC*
rpm rpm -qa | grep unixODBC
I want to remove all unixODBC available in the machine. And reinstall the actual version which we required.
Manual Installation
Remove any older installed version of unixODBC (for example, unixODBC 2.2.11). On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 or 6, execute the following command: yum remove unixODBC. On SUSE Linux Enterprise, zypper remove unixODBC.
Go to http://www.unixodbc.org. Click the Download link on the left side of the page to go to the download page. Then click the appropriate link to save the file unixODBC-2.3.0.tar.gz to your computer. UnixODBC-2.3.1 is not supported with this release of the Microsoft ODBC Driver 11 for SQL Server.
On your Linux computer, execute the command: tar xvzf unixODBC-2.3.0.tar.gz.
Change to the unixODBC-2.3.0 directory.
At a command prompt, execute the command: CPPFLAGS="-DSIZEOF_LONG_INT=8".
At a command prompt, execute the command: export CPPFLAGS.
At a command prompt, execute the command: "./configure --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib64 --sysconfdir=/etc --enable-gui=no --enable-drivers=no --enable-iconv --with-iconv-char-enc=UTF8 --with-iconv-ucode-enc=UTF16LE".
At a command prompt (logged in as root), execute the command: make.
At a command prompt (logged in as root), execute the command: make install.
For additional info - visit the site
To remove all unixODBC related packages, run:
sudo yum remove unixODBC*
To install newer version of unixODBC, try to install unixODBC-utf16 package.
Here are the suggested commands:
curl -s https://packages.microsoft.com/config/rhel/7/prod.repo | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/msprod.repo
sudo yum update
sudo yum info unixODBC*
sudo yum install unixODBC-utf16
See also: Install the SQL Server command-line tools on Linux.
If above won't help, check: How to install Microsoft Drivers for PHP for SQL Server on Amazon Linux AMI.
I am using Linux Mint 18. I installed Python 3.5 and 3.6 using apt-get in the terminal. I can open IDLE of Python 2.7 and 3.5 using commands idle and idle3 respectively. How can I access IDLE that comes with Python 3.6?
Try the command idle3.6. python3 and idle3 are still associated with your system Python, which is 3.5.
Simply typing in idle3.6 should work just like carusot42 mentioned. If it doesn't work, perhaps you might want to see if everything else is installed correctly. Here are the steps I followed which worked perfectly fine for me. I am also running Linux Mint 18. The steps that I followed were:
Installed the prerequisites of Python. Do that by typing in the following commands -
sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall
sudo apt-get install libreadline-gplv2-dev libncursesw5-dev libssl-dev libsqlite3-dev tk-dev libgdbm-dev libc6-dev libbz2-dev
Download Python using the following command and extract it (use your desired location) -
cd /usr/src
wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.6.1/Python-3.6.1.tgz
sudo tar xzf Python-3.6.0.tgz
The next step is to compile Python source. To do that type in the commands below-
cd Python-3.6.1
./configure
sudo make altinstall
make altinstall is used to prevent replacing the default Python binary
file /usr/bin/python
You should be good to go. You check your Python version by typing python3.6 -V in the terminal.
Once you do that, type in idle3.6 and then Python 3.6.1 shell should open for you.
The Software Manager in Linux Mint lists the Python Packages and IDLE Packages
separately. After you install Python, go look up the associated IDLE package in the Software Manager and install it. Reboot and it should work fine. It worked for me.
I have a Processor A13(cpu: cortex-A8 ARM v7) of allwinner and my OS is Linaro 13.01 Ubuntu tty1.
So how do I install Oracle JDK7 and Netbeans IDE on that?
If you're using Ubuntu, there are several ways to install NetBeans. One way is to use Ubuntu's "Software Centre" which you can use just to search to NetBeans and it should install it including all dependencies.
You can also use your web browser in Ubuntu and head to www.netbeans.org and click "Download" at the top right, there you can choose your operating system and download the correct version of NetBeans.
Once downloaded you can run the NetBeans installer through terminal using: sh ./<NetBeans file name here>. And the installer will start.
To install Open JDK:
However, you may need to download and install the JDK first; which you can also do in terminal by typing: sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-jdk.
To install Oracle JDK:
This is taken from this link: http://www.wikihow.com/Install-Oracle-Java-JDK-on-Ubuntu-Linux
Remove open JDK from your system: sudo apt-get purge openjdk-\*
Create a new directory for the oracle JDK: sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/java
Download the Oracle Java JDK for linux by clicking here
Copy the Oracle Java binaries to the /usr/local/java directory: cd /home/userName/Downloads, sudo -s cp -r jfk-7u13-linux-x64.tar.gz /usr/local/java, cd /usr/local/java.
Extract the file: sudo -s tar xvzf jdk-7u13-linux-x64.tar.gz
Edit the system path file: sudo nano /etc/profile
Scroll to the bottom of the file and add this:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/java/jdk1.7.0_13
PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin:$JAVA_HOME/bin
export JAVA_HOME
export PATH
Save the file and exit (Ctrl+X), then enter "y" for nano.
Let Ubuntu know where the Oracle Java JDK is:
LOCN="/usr/local/jdk7"
sudo update-alternatives --install "/usr/bin/java" "java" "${LOCN}/bin/java" 1
sudo update-alternatives --install "/usr/bin/javac" "javac" "${LOCN}/bin/javac" 1
sudo update-alternatives --install "/usr/bin/javaws" "javaws" "${LOCN}/bin/javaws" 1
Make sure Ubuntu knows to use this as the default JDK:
sudo update-alternatives --set java ${LOCN}/bin/java
sudo update-alternatives --set javac ${LOCN}/bin/javac
sudo update-alternatives --set javaws ${LOCN}/bin/javaws
Reload system path: /etc/profile, or just restart.
If you have trouble following my instructions then take a look at the link I posted above.
I would recommend using Open JDK instead though, as you can see; it's much easier to install.
I hope this helps.
Install Oracle JDK for ARM processor and Hard Float OS Image is here.
Oracle JDK for ARM Processor
And download Netbeans IDE 7.0.1 for Linux and install it.
Not to spoil your fun, but the A13 is a very weak SOC for this task.
I wouldn't even try anything below dual Cortex A15 with 2GB RAM (The Samsung XE303).
Oracle now releases the standard JDK8 for ARM Linux hardfloat so it is possible to install it on Debian/Ubuntu fairly easily:
Get JDK8 from Oracle's webpage (currently early access)
Extract th tar.gz-d JDK8 ARM/LInux/hfloat into /usr/lib/jvm/jdk1.8.0
Use update-alternatives (first answer)
Run "java -version" to check the results
..voila
I learned from Digital Ocean Docs how to manually install Oracle JDK on a headless ubuntu.
With a bit of Googling, I found following script to be useful.
wget --header "Cookie: oraclelicense=accept-securebackup-cookie" http://download.oracle.com/otn-pub/java/jdk/7u79-b15/jdk-7u79-linux-x64.tar.gz
I'm trying to install NetBeans on Linux Mint, and I'm getting the following error every time I run the installation script:
Configuring the installer...
Searching for JVM on the system...
Extracting installation data...
Running the installer wizard...
Can`t initialize UI
Running in headless mode
What should I do to get it working?
In case anyone has this problem in the future, Netbeans doesn't like OpenJDK 6 but -- fortunately -- it works fine with OpenJDK 7 (as expected as for Java 7 OpenJDK is the reference implementation). Just make sure you remove any Java 6 packages before installation attempts. On Ubuntu and Mint one can do:
sudo apt-get purge ^openjdk-6-*
sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-jdk
It should work afterwards.
Looks like Netbeans does not work properly with Openjdk. This is what I did (in Linux Mint 12):
sudo apt-get remove openjdk*
sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jdk
Then you will be able to run the .sh installer as usual.
I hit this same issue on Kubuntu 12.04 LTS but needed Sun JDK 6 for a project I'm maintaining. I stumbled upon Martin Wimpress' OAB-Java script (by way of help.ubuntu.com) which creates and installs a local apt repository for Sun JDK 6. You can find the latest instructions on Martin's github site which run as follows:
cd ~/
wget https://github.com/flexiondotorg/oab-java6/raw/0.2.7/oab-java.sh \
-O oab-java.sh
chmod +x oab-java.sh
sudo ./oab-java.sh
If you want to see what this script is doing while it is running then execute the following from another shell:
tail -f ./oab-java.sh.log
Alternatively, you can clone the OAB-Java repo and kick of the script from within it:
git clone git://github.com/flexiondotorg/oab-java6.git
cd oab-java6
sudo ./oab-java.sh
Either way, once that is in place follow Jose's instructions to remove openjdk and install sun jdk:
sudo apt-get remove openjdk*
sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jdk
One final note, the script accepts a -7 argument which will create and install a local apt repository for Oracle JDK 7 should you want to go that route.
I was able to get it to work by getting into the target system using ssh -X, then making sure DISPLAY was exported. That handles the X server issues.
Change the priority of the Oracle Java executables:
export PATH=/usr/java/latest/bin:$PATH
Run the installer:
./netbeans-8.1-linux.sh
What worked for me was installing default java environment from the terminal:
sudo apt-get install default-jre
The installation was a success - under "user".
The installation failed - under "su" (under Red Hat equivalent of "sudo"). With
Can`t initialize UI
Running in headless mode
No X11 DISPLAY variable was set, but this program performed an operation which requires it.
For me.