Thanks for the suggestion. I tried your suggestion and got the same error message as before.
As a note, even though this is being done on a computing cluster, I logged into a single compute node and am not using the -j N flag to do parallel make. I am simply running the normal make command without any flags, and so I think everything should be acting serially as though I was just on a normal computer. On Monday, June 29, 2015 at 12:08:11 PM UTC-5, Tony Kelman wrote: > > I'm guessing, but this might be due to some fragility with parallel make > in the deps/Makefile on the release-0.3 branch. You can try make -C deps > distclean-openlibm && make cleanall && make, see if things work better a > second time around (cleanall does not clear out the large dependencies like > llvm and openblas, so this shouldn't take too long). > > > On Monday, June 29, 2015 at 11:35:07 AM UTC-4, Garrett Jenkinson wrote: >> >> I am trying to install 0.3.10 from source on a RHEL 6.5 cluster, but keep >> getting an error. Here are the commands I used: >> >> mkdir julia >> ls >> cd julia/ >> git clone git://github.com/JuliaLang/julia.git >> git checkout release-0.3 >> make >> >> This fails with the error: >> >> cp: preserving permissions for >> `~/julia/julia/usr/lib/libopenlibm.so.1.0': Operation not supported >> make[3]: *** [install] Error 1 >> make[2]: *** [~/julia/julia/usr/lib/libopenlibm.a] Error 2 >> make[1]: *** [julia-release] Error 2 >> make: *** [release] Error 2 >> >> where I have replaced my directory structure (that has username details, >> etc) with "~" in the above error message. Here is the file permissions of >> the libopenlibm.so.1.0: >> >> -rwxr-xr-x+ >> >> It seems that the error is related to the ACL permissions (+ sign at end >> of permissions). I tried various setfacl commands (using -b and -k flags) >> to see if I could remove these acl permissions, but it does not correct the >> problem. Also, if it is relevant, I do not have root permissions on this >> machine since it is a computing cluster. >> >> Am I doing something wrong? Any thoughts on correcting this? >> >> Thanks, >> Garrett >> >> P.S. Here are my gcc specs (since I know you need the updated compiler, >> which I have): >> >> gcc -v >> Using built-in specs. >> COLLECT_GCC=gcc >> >> COLLECT_LTO_WRAPPER=/cm/shared/apps/gcc/4.8.1/libexec/gcc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/4.8.1/lto-wrapper >> Target: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu >> Configured with: ../gcc-4.8.1/configure >> --prefix=/cm/shared/apps/gcc/4.8.1 --enable-languages=c,c++,fortran >> --with-gmp-include=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-gmp >> --with-gmp-lib=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-gmp >> --with-mpc-include=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-mpc/src >> >> --with-mpc-lib=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-mpc/src/.libs >> >> --with-mpfr-include=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-mpfr/src >> >> --with-mpfr-lib=/usr/src/redhat/BUILD/gcc-4.8.1-obj/../gcc-4.8.1/our-mpfr/src/.libs >> Thread model: posix >> gcc version 4.8.1 (GCC) >> >>
