I want to build configuration files using ./configure which is missing in downloaded software project(here: xerces-c-3.1.1-x86_64-linux-gcc-3.4).
Hence I want to use autogen(On cygwin terminal should I use autogen.sh or autogen.exe). What is the correct path of autogen.sh that is used to generate ./configure. When I give command autogen.sh this shows output...
bash: autogen.sh: command not found
Am I missing something?
Related
I am following this :
Step 2: Installing Cygwin
Cygwin can be downloaded from http://www.cygwin.com
Run the setup file.
Install from internet. Specify C:\cygwin as the root directory.
In the Select Packages dialog box, select the packages required. gcc-core, gcc-g++, gdb, and make packages are most important. These are the C core, C++ core, the GNU Debugger and the GNU version of ‘make’ utility. These packages will be under the ‘Devel’ category.
Complete the installation.
Step 3: Testing Cygwin
To test whether Cygwin was installed properly, try the following by opening the bash shell:
cygcheck -c cygwin
gcc --version
g++ --version
make --version
gdb --version
If the version details are displayed for all these commands, the installation of Cygwin has been successful.
I got this from here
But the result I get is:
What is wrong or missing with my installation.
Follow up question:
I wanted to use the terminal window in netbeans that is why I installed this.
In this terminal widnow I also have problem. I cant type anything on it. Is this the reason for it?
Try to run /usr/bin/g++. If it is not found, then you don't have g++ installed (installation may have had problems).
You can follow the same procedure for the rest of your commands
If /usr/bin/g++ runs successfully, it means you don't have /usr/bin in your PATH (which is very unlikely). You can put that in your PATH in your startup file.
I am working on Windows 10. I want to run a "make build" in MINGW64 but following error comes up:
$ make build
bash: make: command not found
I want to build Glide for Golang
I tried following:
$ sudo yum install build-essential
bash: sudo: command not found
As well as:
$ yum install build-essential
bash: yum: command not found
And:
$ apt-cyg build-essential
bash: apt-cyg: command not found
How can I "work-around" this problem?
Go to ezwinports, https://sourceforge.net/projects/ezwinports/files/
Download make-4.2.1-without-guile-w32-bin.zip (get the version
without guile)
Extract zip
Copy the contents to C:\ProgramFiles\Git\mingw64\ merging the folders, but do NOT overwrite/replace any exisiting files.
You can also use Chocolatey.
Having it installed, just run:
choco install make
When it finishes, it is installed and available in Git for Bash / MinGW.
You have to install mingw-get and after that you can run mingw-get install msys-make to have the command make available.
Here is a link for what you want http://www.mingw.org/wiki/getting_started
We can't use the 'make' command on windows and we don't get it preinstalled with MINGW. So to use it, you need to download it first. The steps are as follows-
Go to https://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/postdownload and download it.
After the installation is over, go and check if bin folder is present in the directory of MINGW .
If everything works well till now, change the environment variables- go to settings of your laptop and type Environment variables. Go to it's section and click on 'environment variables' at the end.
On the section where 'path' is written, add a new file - the location of the bin file and save.
Install make by typing the following on mingw command line :
mingw-get install mingw32-make
Now make is installed. To use it in command line just write "mingw32-make" in place of "make".
Try using cmake itself.
In the build directory, run:
cmake --build .
Go to downloads of jmeubank.github.io/tdm/gcc : https://jmeubank.github.io/tdm-gcc/download/
Download 64+32-bit MinGW-w64 edition.
Run the .exe file.
Click on Remove if you have tdm-gcc already.
Then Click on Create to install tdm-gcc.
Complete the installation.
Add path to environment variable if not added automatically.
Now run mingw32-make on your terminal / command prompt.
Hope this works
You have to install make first. Run any of the below commands and it will work.
pip install make
OR
conda install make
I am trying to do a configure-make-make install using Cygwin on my Windows 7 32 bit machine. I have checked, and I have the make package installed (version 4.1-1).
I am able to configure using ./configure --prefix=/home/user/myfolder. Next when I run the make command, I get the following: -bash: make: command not found. I am unable to figure out if this is due to the ./configure not executing properly, or it has something to do with my make package. How do I find out which it is? Does ./configure create an output file at the location prefix=/home/user/myfolder? If so, what is the extension of this file (.in? .am?)? Is there a way to manually point the make command to a file?
I'm trying to compile the nDPI library in using Cygwin on Windows. When I try to run autogen.sh file I get the following error
./autogen.sh: line 5: autoreconf: command not found
I've been looking around now for four days to compile this nDPI library on Windows, and I DO NEED to compile it on Windows.
How do I compile this library on Windows?, OR
Is there a link that actually works and I can follow their steps to compile this library?
Here is the autogen.sh
#!/bin/sh
/bin/rm -f configure config.h config.h.in src/lib/Makefile.in
autoreconf -ivf
./configure
Try install autoconf, automake and libtool. It's under Devel of the Cygwin setup program.
To build MSYS tools, you should use the autotools provided in the MSYS System Builder package:
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=2435&package_id=227249
autoconf-2.61-MSYS-1.0.11-1.tar.bz2
automake-1.10-MSYS-1.0.11-1.tar.bz2
libtool1.5-1.5.25a-20070701-MSYS-1.0.11-1.tar.bz2
Unpack them to the same location you extracted msys package.
I think you have to first solve the errors, since they indicate that you are lacking of some of the essential libraries. For example, the autoconf library...
If you are using Cygwin, you can get apt-cyg by:
lynx -source rawgit.com/transcode-open/apt-cyg/master/apt-cyg > apt-cyg
install apt-cyg /bin
After that, you can use apt-cyg install xxx to install the lacking libraries.
I'm trying to cross-compile gst-ti-plugin for arm device but when I do make install libtool returns me error:
../libtool: line 1085: arm-none-linux-gnueabi-ranlib: command not found
The problem here is that this tool is available from PATH and when I'm trying it from console it works fine.
What could be wrong? I use CodeSourcery Toolchain.
I had a similar problem. When you sudo, you will lose your PATH environment variable. Thus, you either need to "su" and set PATH to ranlib or install without sudo. The latter can be accomplished by installing to a directory where your user has write permissions.