I install GNU nano 2.7.5 editor from source on my CentOS 6.5
./configure --prefix=/usr
make
make install
Now I try to locate global nanorc file but can't find any, then I create new /etc/nanorc but it seems that nano doesn't read it. How & Where shoud I create this file? Is there any nono command that can help me locate where this file should be? (Yes I know that I can create ~/.nanorc but I need it global not local)
I don't see any other problems with this fresh installed nano editor.
//EDIT//
I reinstal nano from source using, but /etc/nanorc still doesn't work
./configure --prefix=/usr \
--sysconfdir=/etc \
--enable-utf8 \
--docdir=/usr/share/doc/nano-2.7.5
It's unfortunate this relatively simple answer didn't receive a satisfactory answer for four years. Hopefully OP is still around to take a look.
The location of any program config file depends on its install path, or more accurately, its install prefix. The binary goes in <prefix>/bin, and it would look for <prefix>/etc/<name-of-config-file> on startup, unless otherwise configured.
Therefore if you installed with --prefix=/usr, then your nano binary would be /usr/bin/nano, and its global config file would be /usr/etc/nanorc.
Similarly, if you installed with --prefix=/usr/local (which I recommend for locally compiled programs; also default), your global config file would be /usr/local/etc/nanorc.
Tested with CentOS-7_5.4.72_aarch64 & nano-5.7 on Raspberry Pi-4.
normally when you install a program from source, its config file will be at the place where its installed ,somewhere like "/usr/src" or "/opt"
you can change that whene you run ./configure
take a look at the file named "INSTALL" in tar file of nano source
By default, make install' installs the package's commands under
/usr/local/bin', include files under /usr/local/include', etc. You
can specify an installation prefix other than/usr/local' by giving
configure' the option--prefix=PREFIX', where PREFIX must be an
absolute file name.
Related
I had downloaded sublime previously directly from the browser as tarball and saved it in a folder (and of course extracted it).But this way I wasn't able to make Sublime my default editor and it didn't feature as an application when I tried to open a text file with a right-click.I read somewhere installing sublime text 3 using commands:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/sublime-text-3
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install sublime-text-installer
will solve my problem. So I directly deleted the Sublime_text3 folder saved in my Downloads directory and then used the given commands. But when I entered the 3rd command line I got the following error(just writing the error part):
subprocess new pre-installation script returned error exit status 1
Errors were encountered while processing:/var/cache/apt/archives/sublime-text-installer_3126-2~webupd8~1_all.deb
E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1)
Can anyone explain why this error is coming and suggest a way to solve this problem? Also if anyone can tell how I can set Sublime as my default text editor from the tarball downloaded from the sublime text 3 website. Thanks in advance!
you can try this command to install Sublime Text using Snap Store..
sudo snap install sublime-text --classic
I'm not sure overall how to fix that error or what's going on (I use Slackware and not Ubuntu/Debian), but for a long while there have been official Sublime repositories several different Linux distributions, including Ubuntu/Debian.
It's highly recommended that you use those if you want to go the package route and not use existing solutions such as the one referenced in your question or in the other response here, if for no other reason than only the official repository is guaranteed to contain an unmodified version of Sublime. Additionally the official repositories are always updated on release, which may or may not happen in a timely manner in other repositories.
The links referenced above contain instructions on how to set up and use Sublime from those repositories, and if you have any issues a good place to ask is the forum.
One thing to note which isn't mentioned explicitly in the above pages is that to use the official repositories, you should:
Choose only one of them (stable or dev, noting that you need a license to run a dev version) and not add both repositories or things will not work as expected
Ensure that other repositories that you've added (such as the one in your question) are removed to make sure that the package system definitely pulls the correct package
There are a couple of ways to go if you want to install Sublime from the tarball version. The easiest way would be to extract it, then manually set up launcher shortcuts and so on based on what falls out. How exactly you would register it as a text editor in that case, I'm not entirely sure since I don't use the same distribution as you.
Presuming that the process would be easier if Sublime was installed in a way similar to how the package manager would do it, the tarball comes with a desktop file and icons, so the following steps can be used to (presumably) do what the package installer would do.
The proviso here is that although these steps work on my non-Ubuntu machine, I don't know if all of the referenced tools are installed by default on an Ubuntu system, so so more setup work may be involved.
Note also that the files in the tarball are not entirely self-consistent, which makes this a little bit more work.
First, you need to extract the tarball (replace tarball filename as appropriate for location and build):
cd /opt
sudo tar xvf ~/Downloads/sublime_text_3_build_3176_x64.tar.bz2
This creates the folder /opt/sublime_text_3/ and fills it with the contents of the tarball.
Next, you want to install the icons contained in the tarball. As far as I have been able to tell, the icons in the tarball aren't in the correct directory structure, requiring each to be copied into place individually. We also need to update the icon cache to ensure that the new icon is noticed by the system:
cd /usr/share/icons/hicolor/
sudo cp /opt/sublime_text_3/Icon/16x16/sublime-text.png 16x16/apps/
sudo cp /opt/sublime_text_3/Icon/32x32/sublime-text.png 32x32/apps/
sudo cp /opt/sublime_text_3/Icon/48x48/sublime-text.png 48x48/apps/
sudo cp /opt/sublime_text_3/Icon/128x128/sublime-text.png 128x128/apps/
sudo cp /opt/sublime_text_3/Icon/256x256/sublime-text.png 256x256/apps/
sudo gtk-update-icon-cache -f -t .
Now we want to install the sublime_text.desktop file that is in the tarball. Note however that like the icons, it seems kind of broken; the tarball extracts to sublime_text_3 but the desktop file assumes that the application is actually in /opt/sublime_text instead.
As such, you either need to rename the folder that was extracted to sublime_text to match what is in the desktop file, or edit the desktop file to make the path correct.
The following steps assume that we want to keep the folder the same and rewrite the desktop file. These commands will generate a new file named sublime_text_3.desktop with the changes.
cd /opt/sublime_text_3/
sed -e "s^/sublime_text/^/sublime_text_3/^" sublime_text.desktop | sudo tee sublime_text_3.desktop
Now you can install the desktop file. You do that with desktop-file-install, passing it the name of the desktop file. For accessing Sublime from the command line, you also want to set up a subl link to the installed copy of Sublime.
Adjust the paths as appropriate here if you decided to rename the folder instead of editing the desktop file:
sudo desktop-file-install sublime_text_3.desktop --rebuild-mime-info-cache
sudo ln -s /opt/sublime_text_3/sublime_text /usr/bin/subl
At this point Sublime should show up as an installed application, or at least it does in my Window Manager; if not, executing sudo update-desktop-database may help refresh it.
You can try this once. i hope it will help
wget https://download.sublimetext.com/files/sublime-text_build-4126_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i sublime-text_build-4126_amd64.deb
A few days ago I had a few problems while installing trying to install lapis on my new installation of linux mint. The main problem was that I wanted to have lua 5.3 as the main lua interpreter on my system, but lapis only works with lua 5.1.
This is how I ended up installing it
Note: Instructions for normal installation process, with aditional lua 5.3 being optional
Prerequisites
First of all install all the prerequisites with apt-get install libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libpcre3-dev libssl-dev perl make build-essential*. This is all you should need to install lua, luarocks and openresty.
* copied from openresty website
Lua Interpreter(s)
Next, go to https://www.lua.org/versions.html and download the latest version of lua5.1 (wget https://www.lua.org/ftp/lua-5.1.5.tar.gz). Then extract the downloaded file tar -xf lua-5.1.5.tar.gz and optionally rename the directory mv lua-5.1.5 lua51.
Now you can simply build and install lua by moving to the directory cd lua51 and running make make linux and sudo make install
Aditionally, you might want to have lua5.3 installed on your system as the main lua interpreter. Luarocks doesn't seem to particularly like this kind of setup though, so I recommend the following:
First download and extract (and optionally rename) both lua5.1 and lua 5.3; go to the lua 5.1 directory and open Makefile in a text editor; Edit lines 12-15 to install lua in another directory. For me it worked to just add /lua51 to INSTALL_TOP (line 12). Next go to line 44 and change the names of the binaries (I chose lua51 and luac51), optionally do the same with the man pages (this requires also changing them in the doc subdirectory).
The next step is to go to the src/ directory and edit the makefile there as well: in lines 32 and 35 change the names as you did in the previous makefile (lua51 and luac51 in my case).
After this you can just make linux and sudo make install as described above.
Luarocks
Now you need to install luarocks on your system. Start by downloading the latest release of luarocks (http://keplerproject.github.io/luarocks/releases/) and extract it. Again, you can rename it to luarocks/ reduce typing. cd to the directory you just extracted and run ./condigure.
If you changed the lua installation path, you will have give some parameters to the configure script:
For lua 5.1 ./configure --lua-version=5.1 --with-lua=/usr/local/lua51 --lua-suffix=51 is how I had to do it (--lua-suffix is what I added to lua and luac and --with-lua tells it where the bin, lib, etc. subdirectories are; only relevant if you changed INSTALL_TOP in the makefile)
Optionally you can now proceed to (download, ) build and install lua 5.3 with its standard configuration. After that you can even go back to the luarocks directory and repeat ./configure, make build and make install and it should automatically install itself with lua 5.3 and leave the installation for lua5.1 intact**.
** the luarocks executable is actually just a symlink to luarocks-VERSION (where VERSION can be 5.1, 5.3, etc.) in the same directory. Each time you install luarocks this link is overwritten to point to the latest installation, but the other executables are still there.
OpenResty
The next step is to install OpenResty: open http://openresty.org/en/installation.html and check the prerequisite section. It should say the same as at the beginning of this answer. If not, install any missing package now. You can also just follow the installation instructions there, but I will be repeating it anyway; go to http://openresty.org/en/download.html and download the latest version. Extract the downloaded archives (and rename the new directory to simply openresty). cd to the new directory and run ./configure --with-pcre-jit --with-ipv6 (this might take a while), make (this might take an even longer while) and sudo make install.
At this point everything except lapis itself should be set up and working.
Lapis
To install lapis, type sudo lurocks install lapis (user luarocks-5.1** instead if you have installed more than one version of it).
Congratulations! If you got no errors, you should now have lapis installed and ready to use :)
** see section Luarocks.
Archlinux.
I downloaded mtools, which includes mcopy, which is what I'm after. The instructions in the INSTALL file say do this:
# ./configure
# make
These worked fine, now I have a bunch of .o files and of course executables.
What do I need to do, so I can just type
# mcopy
and have it run? Since I don't have it "installed" right now, doing that just says
-bash: mcopy: command not found
The usual linux build sequence is
./configure
make
make check
sudo make install
make check attempts to validate if the build took place correctly; not all Makefiles have it but many do. Note you will need sudo make install to do the install in the usual system directories if you are not root.
You can determine which of these options is available for your particular Makefile by
cat Makefile
and reading the labels on the left of the file.
You could create a symbolic link to the application in your /usr/bin folder like
ln -s /fullpath/to/app /usr/bin/aliasnameforapp
Then you can simple call aliasnameforapp from anywhere.
I already installed asteriskNow 2.0 ISO, thus after system installation, i've already have built-in asterisk within CentOS. I do not need to download source package and compile the source files. But right now, i have an situation that requires to recompile asterisk again.
I checked it out the installation tutorial which needs to go to the asterisk source directory to execute following commands:
# make clean
# ./configure
# make menuselect
# make install
# make samples
My questions : Is it the asterisk source directory means the directory which has asterisk installation files? But in my case, i do not download and compile the asterisk source ever.What should i do?
I asked myself: It needs to download source from and execute the following commands:
wget http://downloads.asterisk.org/pub/telephony/asterisk/asterisk-1.8.17.0.tar.gz
tar xzf asterisk-1.8.17.0.tar.gz
cd asterisk-1.8.17.0
./configure
make
make install
I want to run 'make install' so I have everything I need, but I'd like it to install the things in their own folder as opposed to the system's /usr/bin etc. is that possible? even if it references tools in the /usr/bin etc.?
It depends on the package. If the Makefile is generated by GNU autotools (./configure) you can usually set the target location like so:
./configure --prefix=/somewhere/else/than/usr/local
If the Makefile is not generated by autotools, but distributed along with the software, simply open it up in an editor and change it. The install target directory is probably defined in a variable somewhere.
Since don't know which version of automake you can use DESTDIR environment variable.
See Makefile to be sure.
For example:
export DESTDIR="$HOME/Software/LocalInstall" && make -j4 install
make DESTDIR=./new/customized/path install
This quick command worked for me for opencv release 3.2.0 installation on Ubuntu 16. DESTDIR path can be relative as well as absolute.
Such redirection can also be useful in case user does not have admin privileges as long as DESTDIR location has right access for the user. e.g /home//
It could be dependent upon what is supported by the module you are trying to compile. If your makefile is generated by using autotools, use:
--prefix=<myinstalldir>
when running the ./configure
some packages allow you to also override when running:
make prefix=<myinstalldir>
however, if your not using ./configure, only way to know for sure is to open up the makefile and check. It should be one of the first few variables at the top.
If the package provides a Makefile.PL - one can use:
perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=/home/my/local/lib LIB=/home/my/local/lib
make
make test
make install
* further explanation: https://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=564720
I tried the above solutions. None worked.
In the end I opened Makefile file and manually changed prefix path to desired installation path like below.
PREFIX ?= "installation path"
When I tried --prefix, "make" complained that there is not such command input. However, perhaps some packages accepts --prefix which is of course a cleaner solution.
try using INSTALL_ROOT.
make install INSTALL_ROOT=$INSTALL_DIRECTORY