Hi Steven, On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 11:45:50AM +0000, Steven Chamberlain wrote: > On 22/01/14 10:49, Andreas Tille wrote: > > Well, for king we have another problem that it depends from the > > deprecated libjogl-java and should be replaced by libjogl2-java. > > I tried removing libjogl-java, and KiNG still seems to work?
I admit that I was quite astonished that the package builds despite the errors. > I don't > know if the graphics are being 'accelerated' or not, but: > > http://kinemage.biochem.duke.edu/kinemage/king-manual.html#tth_sEc3.3.2 > > This feature has been tested with various combinations of Java 1.4.2 > > through Java 1.6.0 and JOGL 1.1 through JOGL 1.1.1. JOGL is still > > under development, as is this feature, and interacting so directly > > with the hardware is always risky, so it's possible that OpenGL > > rendering may hang KiNG on your computer. You've been warned. > > > > Hopefully, a future version of Java (possibly the 1.6.x series) will > > use OpenGL behind the scenes for all graphics operations, making KiNG > > much faster and making this feature obsolete. Until then, this is a > > work-around for large kinemages where performance is an issue. > > So it may be that graphics rendering is fast enough in openjdk-6 and -7 > that KiNG's use of JOGL is obsolete anyway? This would be cool and I'd be very happy if somebody of the Java team would comment on this. > If the libjogl-java dependency is dropped, king should be installable on > kfreebsd and then so would qiime. And libjogl2-java transition can go > ahead. Most probably this would be the most simple solution. Kind regards Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org