I am currently running Ubuntu 20.04 on my machine. GridDB's official web site's download page only shows GridDB CE(server) for Ubuntu 18.04. Will I able to download (& install )?Will it support?
After bunch of struggle and help from googling I managed to build v4.5 on ubuntu 20.04. So I would guess 4.6 will work too. I am running “arm” version which yet doesnt have source for v4.6.
Main problem was related to wrong version of gcc in v20.04 and so I had to download gcc 4.8 manually to build it.
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I would like to install on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS an application that requires java 8.
When I want to install this application, an error is raised about the default-jre:
Package default-jre is not configured yet
However, when I tried java - version, the java version returned is openjdk version 1.8.0_191
Please note, I don't want the version 10 or 11 of java.
So, do you know how to solve this issue?
I'd like to install the FLEXPART program on my kubuntu 14.04 x64 LTS machine, they require the installation of the grib-api and jasper library first as mentionned in the website (http://flexpart.eu/wiki/FpInstall).
the issue is that i can't achieve correct installation of these two packages and therefore the proper install of FLEXPART. could someone give me the right way to install these two libraries in order to make the model run?
there is a precompiled package of FLEXPART 9.02 for ubuntu distribution
http://packages.ubuntu.com/trusty/utils/flexpart
I am trying to install the C/C++ development tools for Eclipse Luna.
Taking reference from this page here, I navigated to Help> Install New Software> and placed http://download.eclipse.org/tools/cdt/releases/8.4
in the "Works with" section.
I got the options for C/C++ Development Tools and C/C++ Development Tools SDK which I downloaded and restarted Eclipse. However, on restarting eclipse I cannot find any place/interface to create C programs or files. The tools are showing up in the installed softwares list(screen attached).
I have also installed MinGw as instructed here.
Have I missed any step? How can I start C development in Luna. Please advice.
I had the same issue with Luna. I installed Java 1.7.0_80, which then allowed me to change to the C/C++ Perspective and create new C/C++ projects.
My system previously only had Java 1.6.0_45, which was sufficient to run Luna but apparently insufficient to run CDT in its entirety.
Your JDK version is below 1.6 which is too old. You should upgrade it to 1.7 or higher.
I had the same problem - installing java 8 helped.
I had exactly the same problem, using Luna SR 1a on Ubuntu 12.04 LTS.
Switching from Java 1.6.0_34 to 1.7.0_75 fixed the issue - everything works now
Is there a way to get native clear case support on Ubuntu 12+? I've only seen it supported via remote rich client. We have red hat and suse machines with cleartool installed and I would like a similar set up for Ubuntu so we could re-use the same scripts.
The "System Requirements for Rational ClearCase" from IBM does mention Ubuntu, but with the caveat:
Ubuntu 12.04 kernel issue with ClearCase 8.0.1:
For Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, do not use Kernel 3.5. This kernel is not a LTS and is not supported by ClearCase. Even though Ubuntu will try to upgrade the kernel to 3.5, you must keep using kernel 3.2.x to be able to use ClearCase.
I was trying to install Sourcery G++ cross-compiler for ARM on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS from the following link ->http://www.codesourcery.com/sgpp/lite/arm/portal/release644
I did not use the graphical interface since I got java.awt error. While using the console mode of installation, I provided all the details asked by the program.(changed the default location of installation)
Some time into the installation, I got this error:
Unable to create file links
An error occurred while running an internal program.
Please remove the toolchain from "/home//cross_compiler".
EXITCODE=-1
I'm not sure what the reason is. I redid this process as a root user and I still got the same error.I am trying to install this on a 64 bit machine.
I suppose it is important to check your system requirements.
There is the possibility you are running a 64bit build of Ubuntu.
Sourcery G++ requires 32bit host libraries. Ensure those are installed.
In my mind, it may be easier to run a 32bit installation in a VM.
If that is not possible, there are installation logs in the 'uninstall' directory of your installation attempt directory. That may help you troubleshoot the issue.
You must have the 32-bit compatibility libraries installed to install Sourcery CodeBench.
From the FAQ: "What do I need to do to install and run Sourcery CodeBench on an x86 64-bit Linux host system?"
https://sourcery.mentor.com/sgpp/lite/arm/portal/kbentry62
Full FAQ here:
https://sourcery.mentor.com/sgpp/lite/arm/portal/target_arch?#action=faq&target_arch=arm
The ARM Lite edition tools have their own mailing list where you can ask such questions.
Go to sourcerytools.com and use the "arm-gnu" mailing list for ARM Lite edition questions.
Cheers!