FYI, Frank's guide can be found here: https://lists.skewed.de/pipermail/graph-tool/2016-July/002490.html.
Thanks, Joe On 8 February 2018 at 12:28, Frank Takes <[email protected]> wrote: > I wrote a short tutorial about installing Graph-Tool on CentOS this a > while ago. > It should be findable in this mailinglist. > For example, to overcome the problem of the old GCC version, you should > yum install the devtoolset-4, which provides newer versions of a number of > important binaries. > > Good luck! > > Best regards, > > > Frank > > 2018-02-08 12:53 GMT+01:00 Tiago de Paula Peixoto <[email protected]>: > >> On 26.01.2018 15:36, P-M wrote: >> > Dear all, >> > >> > I know there has been some discussion on the mailing list from a few >> years >> > ago of getting graph-tool to run on CentOS which, based on a quick read, >> > seems to have concluded that it was difficult. I was wondering if >> people had >> > any experiences with the current state of play on that front. Has the >> > situation changed? Can I, in people's opinion, be confident that I can >> get >> > the latest version of graph-tool to run on CentOS without having to >> spend >> > large amounts of time trying to get it to work each time I need to >> update >> > the version? >> > >> > For context: I am having to rebuild my Ubuntu machine and it was >> suggested I >> > should look into moving to CentOS instead. I am unfamiliar with CentOS >> but >> > if graph-tool will be difficult to get to run on CentOS then that would >> be a >> > good reason for me not to move to CentOS. (Obviously there may be other >> > reasons for moving to CentOS but those are not my primary concern here.) >> > >> > Thank you for any opinions on this topic in advance! >> > >> >> AFAIK CentOS only ships with GCC 4.8, which is too old to compile >> graph-tool, and is the main bottle neck. On top of this there is the >> version >> of Boost, which I also think is too old there. In short, CentOS decides to >> stay 7 years behind everything else, and is difficult to maintain this >> kind >> of backward compatibility, given the recent speed with which C++ has been >> evolving (C++11, C++14, etc). >> >> >> -- >> Tiago de Paula Peixoto <[email protected]> >> _______________________________________________ >> graph-tool mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool >> > > > _______________________________________________ > graph-tool mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.skewed.de/mailman/listinfo/graph-tool > >
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