We are trying to install asterisk call center solution on Azure VM platform but after unable to install the Dahdi-linux-complete setup file . It display below error
stack protector enabled but compliler support broken
Config_x86_x32 enabled but no binutils support
cannot use config_cc_stackprotector_strong
screenshot:
Request for your help.
Regards,
Sohan Singh:
This has nothing to do with Azure. It just happens the distro you're on does not have GCC installed. Install with
sudo apt-get install build-essential
or whatever the yum equivalent is for RedHats.
EvilSnobu is right, according to the error message, you should install gcc first.
If you sure you have gcc, and the still can't use command make, you should check your /etc/environment, here are similar case, please refer to the link.
Related
Right now I am running Ubuntu 14.04 in VMware trying to make a Live CD with a tool called UCK. I am in the process where I can customize and add my own packages and tools to my live CD. I want to install and setup Autopsy so I began with the process of downloading both Sleuthkit and Autopsy. While trying to install those I have been told I have first have to use ./configure according to this guide: https://shankaraman.wordpress.com/2012/11/16/how-to-install-autopsy-and-sleuthkit-in-ubuntu/
and I got the following error: 'Configure: error: missing libstdc++'
Does anyone know how to fix this? I haven't found a solution on the internet yet.
Fixed it by running: sudo apt-get install build-essential -_-.
I have R 3.4.1.1 on my computer (Linux).
I want to install R version 2.14.1 since the package Rmosek does not work in newer version.
I have downloaded the R-2.14.2.tar.gz from Cran.
My problem is that I do not understand the INSTALL instructions,
It says to unpack the R sources and go to the top directory and issue the following commands:
./configure
make
I wrote the following in a terminal:
tar -zxvf R-2.14.2.tar.gz
cd Downloads
cd R-2.14.2
./configure
It is run but finally gives the error:
configure: error: --with-x=yes (default) and X11 headers/libs are not available
make
and it gives the error:
make: *** No targets specified and no makefile found. Stop.
The file explains that If my make is not called `make', set the environment variable MAKE to
its name, and use that name throughout these instructions. I really do not know how I should do it since I am new in Linux.
Is there any other instruction with more explanation? I would be very thankful in advance for your help or guidances.
Regards,
Shima.
This is answered in detail in the R installation and administration guide,
http://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/R-admin.html#Essential-programs-and-libraries
Unless you do not want to view graphs on-screen (or use a Mac) you
need ‘X11’ installed, including its headers and client libraries. For
recent Fedora distributions it means (at least) RPMs ‘libX11’,
‘libX11-devel’, ‘libXt’ and ‘libXt-devel’. On Debian we recommend the
meta-package ‘xorg-dev’. If you really do not want these you will need
to explicitly configure R without X11, using --with-x=no.
More specifically, for Ubuntu, this means:
sudo apt-get install xorg-dev
and then proceed with compiling and installing R.
If you have to compile R in your system and install you should have libx11-dev package installed in Ubunut.Can you check whether this package is installed or not.
Otherwise you can configure the source with this option as a work around solution only in the case if you are not going to use any GUI functionality in R.
./configure --with-x=no
You need to install these libraries:
sudo apt-get install -y libx11-dev \
xorg-dev \
libcurl4-openssl-dev
Then run:
./configure
make
And then it should work.
Good luck!
I'm trying to configure powertop-2.5 but when I run ./configure I get a "configure: error: libnl and libnl-genl are required but were not found" error
I've run
sudo apt-get install libtool autoconf libnl-dev ncurses-dev pciutils-dev build-essential -y
as was recommended by these guys but I get the same error.
I ran
sudo apt-get install libnl-genl-3-dev
Which replaced the previous libnl file but I still get the config error.
According to this, powertop has (or had) problems with detecting libnl but I can't figure out how to fix it.
I'm currently running Linux username 3.2.0-4-686-pae #1 SMP Debian 3.2.51-1 i686 GNU/Linux
I see you tried libnl-dev, maybe try libnl-3-dev instead:
sudo apt-get install libnl-3-dev libnl-genl-3-dev
Probably the problem is the lack of the pkg-config application in your system (which is used to find the proper dependencies with the configure script). I just have the same problem in a fresh installed Ubuntu 14.04 system, and after installing the pkg-config package the configure script finalized successfully its work. Then I could compile and install the last version (2.6.1) of powertop.
I "solved" my problem by installing powertop-2.0 instead.
The use of pkg-config made the trick. I was able to install Powertop 2.7.
I'm trying to install GCC in my Debian but when I execute ./contrib/download_prerequisites command, I receive a "Forbidden" error, indicating that I'm not allowed to retrieve one or more packages from its resources due to proxy restrictions.
I'm not able to bypass proxy neither contact administrator in order to get permission. So, I'd like to download a complete set of GCC packages, if available. Unfortunately my Linux is quite spartan and apt-get and aptitude very often don't work due to dependencies issues. So, a tar-gz/bz approach would be fine.
Thanks for helping.
I've managed to setup aptitude to install all the required dependencies. Fortunatelly, these resources weren't blocked by proxy's firewall, and all them could be downloaded. Thanks to aptitude.
I'm having a hard time trying to install Qt on linux. I downloaded the .run file on the website and installed Qt. However, when I try to compile the default Hello World project using Qtcreator, I get the following :
error cannot find -lGL
I was able to solve the problem by issuing the command :
sudo apt-get install libqt4-dev
But, I'm not satisfied with the solution as I want to use Qt5 and the name of the lib I downloaded implies version 4. Can someone explain what is going on and tell me if my solution is correct? If not, what should I do to get a working Qt on Linux.
Additional question
The correct answer, as provided by LtWorf, was to install libgl-dev. For future problems of this sort, can someone tell me how I should have guessed that I had to download this particular library? And why are there some libs with -dev at the end? What do they provide?
Well it is trying to link with libgl and doesn't find it. You should install libgl-dev.
-l is a linker option, it tells the linker to use a certain library.
For example you can have -lmagic meaning that you want to use libmagic.
Normally all libraries are called libsomething, and on debian you will find 3 packages called:
libsomething
libsomething-dbg
libsomething-dev
The 1st one is the library, the second one is the library compiled with the debug symbols, so you can make sense of stacktraces more easily, and the final one is the development package, it contains the .h files so you can link to the library.
sudo apt-get install libgl-dev
On Fedora 17, I did:
sudo yum install mesa-libGL-devel
Do you have libgl-dev installed? If not install it and it should work.
Those other posters are correct, but on some systems, the lib to install is named differently. I just dealt with a 32bit Ubuntu 14.04.5 LTS system, and libgl-dev was not available.
Instead, I needed to install the libgl1-mesa-dev package via:
sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-dev