From: Michael <scr...@ya...> - 2012-11-27 06:29:30
|
Personally I've moved to Ubuntu 10.04 as I couldn't get my soundcard working anymore on Suse ca. back in 2009. I've never looked back and probably never ever use again Suse... --- On Mon, 11/26/12, Renk Thorsten <tho...@jy...> wrote: > From: Renk Thorsten <tho...@jy...> > Subject: [Flightgear-devel] Musings on FG on Linux/Windows > To: "FlightGear developers discussions" <fli...@li...> > Date: Monday, November 26, 2012, 10:45 AM > > So, I finally broke down over the weekend, getting so > frustrated with a the GPU not powering up under Linux that I > installed FG on Windows. > > If I want to get FG last stable under Fedora 17, I have to > compile it myself, only 2.6 is on the repo. The process is > probably similar to compiling current GIT. Which took me > more than 5 hours to get right, which means a normal user > can't do it. I frequently use compilers, know the FG > structure, can read scripting language, know RPMfinder and > other tools... my wife is a normal Linux user who never in > her life compiled anything. > > The problem isn't the obvious things - the problem are the > implied things. Like cmake warns about libsvn not being > installed and being needed for Terrasync. Now, I happen to > know what Terrasync is, I also happen to know what libsvn is > for, my wife doesn't. Searching on the 'Add software' tool > for libsvn draws a blank, but I know that it stands for > subversion, so I find it. > > I install boost, yet cmake throws an error that it can't > find config files - WTF, I just installed it... Wait a > minute, there's a different package which contains cmake > support for boost, maybe if I install that as well? In the > end, cmake runs through, but the compiler then bitches about > its inability to find libXmu (or so)? So, I know what to do, > I look for the lib in /usr/lib64, see what the name is. open > CmakeCache.txt, look by what name cmake wants the lib to be > identified, pass that as explicit parameter to cmake - > voila, it finally compiles. > > Then I had the funny directory issues I metioned , but that > was just me trying to do user install instead of system wide > - self-inflicted, one might say. > > If anyone believes that a normal Linux user can install last > stable FG this way, he's kidding himself. For Ubuntu, > there's the download and compile script, I don't know how > good that is and what it assumes about packages being > installed - but since the package manager is different, sure > doesn't work on Fedora. > > Now, I installed FG on windows. One package, > double-click, I don't even need to know if I am on Windows > Vista or Windows 7, one click to select the 64bit version, > 30 seconds later I am on the runway. Want current GIT > instead of 2.8.5 - no problem, just copied the 64bit > binaries from Jenkins, copied my FGData, and I'm seeing the > state of my latest merge request (copying 6.3 GB was the > only delay here). > > Please don't get this wrong - I'm a Linux person to the > bone. I like xterm, using command lines, the ability to see > configuration files directly, the ability to use commands > which actually do what I tell, and desktops free of 'Your > computer is at risk!' and other attention-grabbing messages > very much. But... why? > > Why do I need to make a song and dance to get the last > stable under Linux when it works no fuss under Windows? Are > we genuinely unable to provide a working generic 32 and a > 64bit set of binaryies for Linux? I know that lib paths and > versions are different across distribtions, but can't one > simply compile the thing static? Of course it'll be much > larger, but I have a 1 TB harddisk which is 10% full after I > copied every last mp3 and movie from external storage device > onto it - I don't mind if the binary is 20 times the size. > > I am genuinely at a loss here. A normal Linux user has > practically no change to get last stable on his box running > if it isn't in his distro - a normal Windows user gets > everything nice and streamlined. > > Does anyone else understand this? > > * Thorsten > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Monitor your physical, virtual and cloud infrastructure from > a single > web console. Get in-depth insight into apps, servers, > databases, vmware, > SAP, cloud infrastructure, etc. Download 30-day Free Trial. > Pricing starts from $795 for 25 servers or applications! > http://p.sf.net/sfu/zoho_dev2dev_nov > _______________________________________________ > Flightgear-devel mailing list > Fli...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/flightgear-devel > |