> Hey Mark, I get the same error with ubuntu 9.10, xilinx 11.4. At first I
> had a problem with perl looking for module with it's @INC variable, my fix
> was to add the following lines to my .bashrc file:
>
> export PERL5LIB=/opt/Xilinx/11.1/DSP_Tools/lin64/sysgen/scripts;$PERL5LIB
> export PERL4LIB=/opt/Xilinx/11.1/DSP_Tools/lin64/sysgen/scripts;$PERLLIB
>
> But that only got me down to line 329 of the masterscriptXXXX.pl The
> output to script_resultsXXXX I am now getting is 'Could not find the
> "coregen" executable. at masterScriptXXXX.pl line 329' . Did you find a
> solution or does anyone else have any ideas about this? Thanks.

One thing we found with 11.3 on Linux was that somthing in the system does
not like symbolic links.  Maybe that's part of this problem, but worse.

John

>
> -Griffin
>
> On Feb 3, 2010, at 10:30 PM, Tom Kuiper wrote:
>
>> Mark Wagner wrote:
>>> I have recently tried to install Xilinx 11.4 and have run into a
>>> standard exception error involving the System Generator generated perl
>>> script MasterScriptXXX.pl.  This error has occurred on Ubuntu 8.04,
>>> 9.10 and Fedora 12.  Xilinx support would not answer questions until I
>>> installed a supported OS (Red Hat Enterprise 5 or Suse Enterprise Linux
>>> 10).  I tried RHE5 and the error went away and my design compiled. A
>>> possible free alternative is CentOS and is supposed to follow the same
>>> distribution cycle and carry the same packages and versions as RHE5,
>>> but I have not tried this and I doubt Xilinx would support it.
>>>
>>> The cost of a RHE5 license is zero compared to say, a switch, so I
>>> think that's the option we're looking at here in Berkeley.
>> I have a feeling that if you dig a little deeper you may find that Perl
>> is trying to use a relocatable library that it can't find.  You probably
>> have it and can find it with 'locate'.  A symlink may then solve the
>> problem.
>>
>> Changing OS to RH will cause a big headache if you have locally compiled
>> headaches.
>>
>> I suspect that, like Microsoft, this is a game RH plays to freeze out
>> the competition.  I imagine that vendors like RH because they can have a
>> commercial relationship with them, especially technical support, unlike,
>> say, Debian.
>>
>> Cheers
>>
>> Tom
>>
>
>
>



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