On Monday 22 January 2007 01:53, linux-audio-user-request(a)music.columbia.edu
wrote:
I never got
this working with just python. Segfaulted.
you can run aldrin off the unwrapped package. there is an "aldrindebug"
in the bin directory that starts aldrin in gdb. enter "run", when the
segfault happens, enter "bt", and send me the output.
I think I already
sent you this stuff. Not a new problem.
please also list your machine specs... cpu info, mostly.
Pentium III, 500mhz
running at 575mhz, Debian unstable (Sid).
Now it is
using llvm in addition. The llvm on Debian Sid is not good
enough so one must download sources and go to it. However, this does not
compile like other ./configure. make, make install.
yes, unfortunately. it totally sucks, i agree.
But at least it builds and installs
fine they way they tell you to do it. Just
stay off ./configure :-(
Follow their
instructions. Llvm itself will compile and install just
fine. Now go to the llvm-gcc front end (they recommend using binaries but
there are none for Debian and Debian's llvm is not recent enought so ...)
try some of the prepackaged binaries. i used the redhat ones with
ubuntu.
OK, I will get the redhat rpm and alien that into Debian (Ubuntu is built
on
Debian) and see it that works. Since their binary names conflict with generic
ones like gcc (why did they do such a thing?), they must install somewhere
else and symlink to an llvm-gcc as per their instructions. How does the rpm
take care of this?
never managed to build llvm-gcc itself.
--
Leonard Ritter