Hello how does this forking thing work. I have to compile a program which is in heavy development it is usually developed against the latest release of ubuntu (12.10). My question is does ubuntu's bleeding edge libraries come from the same pool as wheezy's.
Regards
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[Solved]Forking and latest development libraries
[Solved]Forking and latest development libraries
Last edited by yesme on 2012-11-20 12:03, edited 1 time in total.
- stevepusser
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Re: Forking and latest development libraries
No, Wheezy's libraries were frozen some time ago, so U-12.10 will have some newer libraries. This does not necessarily mean that the program will not build against the versions available in Wheezy, or it not, that you can't backport a newer library into your version of Wheezy to support your mystery package. You need to find out the minimum library versions required, either in the program's documentation or from the developer.
MX Linux packager and developer
Re: Forking and latest development libraries
Thank you for the info. Compiling programs is difficult enough for me as it is, I'll try and search for other avenues.
Best regards
Best regards
- stevepusser
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Re: [Solved]Forking and latest development libraries
If you can find someplace else that has already made deb packages of the program, reusing their source files makes making your own a hundred times easier (assuming you can meet the build-depends) Maybe there's a PPA with your program in it?
MX Linux packager and developer
Re: [Solved]Forking and latest development libraries
Hey thanks for the suggestions, there are PPA's but not distro specific. I'll try a search for deb files tho. Some people are using static libraries to compile so that maybe an option.
Anyway I'm looking for the shortest possible route with least amount of headache to get things up and running.
All the best
There's no mystery it's called 'blender' the main version should be in the repositories. The reason why I compile is that the developers have different branches going, there are places to download these precompiled branches but they are not always available so that's why I do it myself....your mystery package...
Anyway I'm looking for the shortest possible route with least amount of headache to get things up and running.
All the best
- stevepusser
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Re: [Solved]Forking and latest development libraries
Hmmm--as far as I remember, Blender does require a really recent version of python3. I remember just downloading and installing a fairly recent statically linked version with internal python3 and other internal static libraries from the Blender website. It ran just fine on Squeeze, and the latest Openshot 1.4.3 used it correctly to render animated titles.
If you're going to try and use the system python3, Wheezy's may be a bit too old, so that's what I'd check out first.
If you're going to try and use the system python3, Wheezy's may be a bit too old, so that's what I'd check out first.
MX Linux packager and developer