On 04/25/10 15:03, [email protected] wrote:
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: James Richard Tyrer <[email protected]>
> To: BLFS Support List <[email protected]>
> Cc: [email protected]
> Sent: Sun, Apr 25, 2010 9:38 pm
> Subject: Re: Problem in cmake on kdeadmin-4.4.2
>
> On 04/25/10 09:03, [email protected] wrote:
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: James Richard Tyrer <[email protected]>
>> To: BLFS Support List <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Sun, Apr 25, 2010 4:37 pm
>> Subject: Re: Problem in cmake on kdeadmin-4.4.2
>>
>> On 04/25/10 07:35, [email protected] wrote:
>>> -----Original Message----- From: James Richard Tyrer<[email protected]>
>>
>>>> The actual finding is done by a Python script: "FindPyCups.py" in:
>>>
>>>> .../kdeadmin/system-config-printer-kde/cmake-modules
>>>
>>>> I would try running that manually. Change to that directory and:
>>>
>>>> python FindPyCups.py
>>>
>>>> If I read it correctly, it prints: "Groovy" to standard output if
>>>> it
>>> is
>>>> found. If not, the easiest way to check to see that PyCups is
>>> installed
>>>> correctly is to install it again.
>>>
>>> Doing this returns me to prompt, with no response
>>>
>>> OK, that is the problem. PyCups is not installed correctly
>>
>> Maybe, but see below. echo $? returned 1 by the way.
>>
>>> Maybe i need to install Pycups elsewhere as suggested by lux-integ?
>>>
>>> AFAIK, you can't do that. It will automatically be installed with the
>>> same prefix as Python.
>>
>>> I've tried editing FindSystemConfigPrinter.py with
>>> path/to/python/site-packages/cupshelpers - this doesn't help with
>>> system-config-printer either.
>>>
>>> That isn't going to help if the Python script doesn't find (py)cups.
>>
>>> So, I would try installing PyCups again
>>
>> Thanks James, done that twice now and the same two files, cups.so and
>> cups-1.0-py2.6.egg-info are installed under
>> /usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages. These are the only two expected I
>> assume? A file list on the web says yes.
>>
>> This makes little sense. It may be related to having Python installed
>> in: "/usr/local" but Python should know where it is installed. But,
>> perhaps, some symbolic links to: "/usr" could help
>
> No luck here, even tried a new FindPyCups.cmake script with advice from
> lux-integ but no go
>
>  >/usr/bin/python -> /usr/local/bin/python
>  >/usr/lib/python -> /usr/local/lib/python
>  >/usr/include/python -> /usr/local/include/python
>
>> IIRC, I had to do that when I still had Python installed in:
> "/usr/local".
>
>> If it was CMake that couldn't find something, you can set the two
> CMake
>> environment variables that very roughly correspond to the normal ones
>> for AutoTools (but ONLY for specifying paths!):
>
>  > CPPFLAGS CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
>  > LD_FLAGS CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH
>
> Also tried this, but cmake will not find cups.so
>
I am running out of ideas. :-(

Is it possible that PyCups requires other Python addons that you don't 
have installed?

-- 
James Tyrer

Linux (mostly) From Scratch
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