[LAU] Compiling Rubber Band (sorta) revisited

Justin Smith noisesmith at gmail.com
Sun Sep 14 18:53:25 EDT 2008


On Sun, Sep 14, 2008 at 10:35 PM, Darren Landrum
<darren.landrum at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> Justin Smith wrote:
>>
>> What is the output of 'which g++'?
>> It should show you where g++ is installed.
>> The error makes it look like g++ (the gcc c++ compiler) is not
>> installed on your system.
>
> The output is:
>
> darren at ashe:~/Downloads/rubberband-1.2$ which g++
> /usr/bin/g++
>
> So it is there. Just for kicks, though, I did "locate g++" and got:
>
> darren at ashe:~/Downloads/rubberband-1.2$ locate g++
> /usr/bin/g++
> /usr/bin/g++-4.2
> /usr/bin/x86_64-linux-gnu-g++
> /usr/bin/x86_64-linux-gnu-g++-4.2
>
> I don't know if that means anything. g++ is a symlink to g++-4.2, and
> x86_64-linux-gnu-g++ is a symlink to x86_64-linux-gnu-g++-4.2.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Regards,
> Darren Landrum
>

I did not look closely enough.

You set Vamp_CFLAGS to be 'no', so it adds 'no' to the command line
when compiling for vamp. g++ therefore says "no: no such file or
directory" because the command line is feeding it 'no' and so it
thinks 'no' is the name of a compilable file. Try configuring without
the Vamp_CFLAGS define.



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