Re: gnopernicus 0.7.11 on debian unstable.



Hi, Jason.
Perhaps the easiest and most painless way of doing an upgrade yourself with
out depending on your Linux of choice having packages is to get the garnome
build script.
Garnome will download all the source packages for gnome 2.6, and depending
on your configuration compile a stand alone gnome  somewhere on your system.
For example some common install paths are /opt/gnome, home/garnome,
/opt/garnome, and home/gnome.
Once compiled you can set some export paths to use garnome rather than using
the default gnome installed on your system.
Note, you should have a cable modem or dsl in order to get a quick
installation. Otherwise, a modem install will take all day.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Jason White" <jasonw ariel ucs unimelb edu au>
To: <gnome-accessibility-list gnome org>
Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2004 3:42 AM
Subject: Re: gnopernicus 0.7.11 on debian unstable.


> What's the easiest route to running an up to date version of
> Gnopernicus on Debian unstable?
>
> I half completed the process once before, but found that I would have
> needed to install a large number of Gnome libraries from CVS as the
> Debian packages were only for Gnome 2.4. While I don't have any
> objection to installing libraries from CVS, I would rather keep most
> of my Gnome installation under the control of the package management
> system and compile only the libraries that are directly ATK and
> Gnopernicus-related. This avoids having lots of Gnome components under
> /usr/local that have to be manually sorted out and deleted later on,
> and also eliminates library conflicts when /usr/local/lib is in
> LD_LIBRARY_PATH, as it is on my system for other reasons.
>
> Suggestions?
> _______________________________________________
> gnome-accessibility-list mailing list
> gnome-accessibility-list gnome org
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list
>




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