LINUX.IE, website of the Irish Linux Users' Group
Tux rules!

   
Home
New Users
Articles
Download
Projects
Community
Vendors

  Print Version
Email to...
 
Archives:


planetILUG

Recent News

News Archive


Join the
ILUG
on FaceBook


Join the
ILUG
on LinkedIn


Join the
ILUG SETI
Group



















 
 :: Mailing Lists

[ILUG] finding the path of an installed program

[ILUG] finding the path of an installed program

Stephen Reilly leydar at gmail.com
Thu Jul 14 10:40:14 IST 2005


On 7/14/05, Darragh <lists at digitaldarragh.com> wrote:
> So, I need to find out where the bonobo libraries are so I can tell the
> .make command.
Check in /usr/lib and /usr/local/lib 
You can use whatever packjage installer you used to install the
libraries to find out where it put them (that is of course if you used
one YAST, KPackage, RPM etc.). Also locate and find are useful.
Through X you can have a look in Install and Remove Software/Package
Groups. Personally I'd create a symlink where the make file expects
the libraries to be rather than redirect it. The likelyhood is some
other install in the future will expect it to be there and it saves
you the trouble of finding it again and editing another make file.
 
> I don't suppose any one else has installed the java-access-bridge on Suse?
> Is there anything else I should look out for? I think all the dependencies
> are installed so it should just be a case of telling the .make command where
> they are.
A quick google reveals AT SPI-1.6.4 and JDK-1.5.0 as dependencies. If
you start here:
http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/view/svn/gnome/java-access-bridge.html
you can follow these two through to find their dependencies and so on.

Regards,
Stephen



More information about the ILUG mailing list
Read this without the formatting.
                                                                                                    

 

Hosted by HEAnet


Maintained by the ILUG website team. The aim of Linux.ie is to support and help commercial and private users of Linux in Ireland. You can display ILUG news in your own webpages, read backend information to find out how. Networking services kindly provided by HEAnet, server kindly donated by Dell. Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds, used with permission. No penguins were harmed in the production or maintenance of this highly praised website. Looking for the Indian Linux Users' Group? Try here. If you've read all this and aren't a lawyer: you should be!
RSS Version
Powered by Dell