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From: | Marcus Müller |
Subject: | Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package |
Date: | Fri, 19 Jun 2015 15:35:36 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.7.0 |
Hi!
This means that the gnuradio-config-info was definitely built with another version of boost (1.58) than what is found at the moment you start it. The point about distributions is that they strive to keep all their libraries coherent in one release. So, although the install script might have installed the modern boost version correctly and set up some paths so that on your first PC, linux knows where to look for boost 1.58, on the other, this won't work automatically. You can find out where the libboost_system.so.1.58.0 is on the system where it works by running "ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info)". So the question is: which tool did you exactly use to install GNU Radio? If you use pyBOMBS, you get the ability to install everything, including updated versions of boost etc., into a specific private directory, and generate a script that sets up all paths accordingly. You can then just copy that prefix and script over to the other PC; that's pretty distribution agnostic, but to be honest: If you wanted to make packages for all the things that GNU Radio likes to have a bit more recent, you'd be basically producing packages for half the development libraries that GNU Radio needs -- 12.04 is 3 years old... Best regards, Marcus On 06/19/2015 02:52 PM, Murray Thomson
wrote:
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