i have installed clutter-1.0 from gnome site using terminal.
But when i run the application, error is notified as libcluttermm-1.0 not found. Has this
library not available as of now. if not what is the alternative that i can use.
What did you install exactly? libcluttermm (C++ interface to Clutter) is provided by the cluttermm package. On my Fedora system, I ran:
# yum install cluttermm
# locate libcluttermm
/usr/lib/libcluttermm-1.0.so.0
/usr/lib/libcluttermm-1.0.so.0.0.0
Of course, if you are doing development against it install cluttermm-devel instead.
Use libclutter instead, as libcluttermm is not in Ubuntu repositories.
Related
I'm trying to uninstall the current version of Eclipse IDE in my RHEL machine by simply deleting all the files like:
sudo rm -rf ~/.eclipse
sudo rm -rf ~/eclipse-workspace
I also tried
sudo yum remove 'eclipse*'
However, these didn't seem to solve the purpose.
Any help will be appreciated, thanks!
Applications on Linux systems are most often installed using so-called packages, which are managed by a package management system. In the case of RHEL, packages use the RPM format, and the package manager of choice is a tool called yum.
Both installation and removal of software (packages) should be done using yum, so as to allow the package management system keep track of all installed files and current status. Therefore, you shouldn't try to remove software by simply deleting files from the file system. Instead, use the yum command. See the RHEL System Admin Guide for a detailed explanation of how to use yum to search, install, upgrade, and remove packages: Working with Packages.
You have tried the correct command (yum remove <package-name>), but you need to use the correct package name. On RHEL 7.4, the latest version of Eclipse is available as a part of the DevTools channel, and the package name is rh-eclipse47 (see Enabling the Red Hat Developer Tools Repositories). Note that you may have also installed an older version, which would be, for example, rh-eclipse46.
To find out what is the name of the package you have installed, you can run, for example, the following command:
yum list installed | grep eclipse
There is also the possibility that you installed the software not from an RPM package but manually, e.g. from a .tar.gz file distrubuted from eclipse.org. If that's the case, you will need to use the uninstaller program supplied with that distribution of the software.
Write command as:
rpm -qa|grep eclipse
This will give a list of installed packages. Remove all the packages by giving below command:
rpm -e *package-name*
Done!!!
I'm running Centos 6.7 on my server and am trying to install Erlang/Rabbitmq following these instructions:
Erlang Installation
RabbitMQ Installation
The trouble is that at time of writing these install Erlang 19.0 with RabbitMQ 3.6.3, which leads to a pretty major bug as far as my client who occasionally looks at the management interface to monitor queues is concerned.
The guidance in the error ticket is not to use erlang 19 until RabbitMQ 3.6.4 is released. But how can I install a specific version of Erlang?
These steps worked for me:
Go to the download page here: https://packages.erlang-solutions.com/erlang/
Select your appropriate package -- you can copy/peek the link then download it using wget.
Install it using rpm.
Example:
# Download erlang 19
$ wget http://packages.erlang-solutions.com/site/esl/esl-erlang/FLAVOUR_1_general/esl-erlang_19.0~centos~7_amd64.rpm
# Install
rpm -Uvh esl-erlang_19.0~centos~7_amd64.rpm
You can always build install from source.
Go to the Erlang.org Downloads page, pick your version from the right side.
From there you can follow the instructions. Although they are for Ubuntu, the commands are the same except for the dependencies part where you can use the command below to install what you need:
sudo yum install g++ openssl-devel unixodbc-devel autoconf ncurses-devel
Another option would be to use kerl, which is similar to rvm in some sense and very (very!) easy to use. It will let you install different Erlang versions and switch between them any time you want.
I prefer this approach instead of looking up packages myself (with possible incompatibilities in the dependencies required) or downloading and compiling everything myself every time I want to try a new Erlang version.
Although there is good description of how to Set Up ROUGE evaluation , i could not get any place where the installation was described completely.
Basically, the trick is in the successful installation of the perl modules.
I am providing the download and installing links as well.
First Download ROUGE.
Install perl.
Install Synaptic Package manager for installing XML::DOM
libxml-dom-perl
The good thing is that synaptic package manager will install extra Perl modules that are required by XML::DOM. Many times people get stuck at how to install the XML::DOM.
Hope this helps. Any suggestions are welcomed.
You can also try the Java version of ROUGE if the perl version does not work. The documentation and download links can be found here: http://kavita-ganesan.com/content/rouge-2.0
I'm good at installing package in Linux environment but newbie to Solaris OS. I need to install Python - libxml2 package to my project. Does the below command also work in Solaris server for installation??
sudo apt-get install libxml2 libxml2-dev
I have tried googling, unfortunately not able to get.
What you proposed is specific to Debian-based Linux distributions.
IMHO, the fastest way would be to download the libxml2 source code in order to compile and install it yourself.
If you're running Solaris 11, then pkg install libxml2 with sufficient privilege would be the right invocation. Determining the right package name is as simple as pkg search with a reasonable query (assuming that you're still connected to the repository from which you installed the system).
If you're running Solaris 10 or older, then you'll need the original install media, plus whatever patches have been issued that intersect SUNWlxml. But frankly, installing from source is probably easier at that point.
To install RTEMS and all the requirements, I need the install bin to work correctly and it seems not to be the case.
Indeed, when I try "install -c -d tmp/foo/bar" it doesn't create the directories as it should.
On the RTEMS doc, they say I need to upgrade GNU fileutils, but how should I do so? I've search the internet but found nothing...
You can see the concerned RTEMS getting started page here.
I'm running a centos 6.3 virtual machine.
Thanks,
Guillaume
For the original issue, you need to install an updated GNU coreutils. Nowadays, you should use the RTEMS Source Builder (RSB) to get started with RTEMS, because RSB will build all the dependencies you need in a host-independent fashion.