Hi all,
This is the very first time I'm attempting to get AOLServer compiled and
going on Linux, after failing miserably using Solaris 8.
Have just installed a Linux Mandrake 8.0 system, and am attempting to
get AOLServer running on it. Are there any known issues with AOLServer
and Mandrake
and Mandrake Linux 8.0? This is a Linux Kernel 2.4.3 SMP machine if
that has any bearing on the situation.
Have followed this set of instructions :
a) Uncompressed the AOLServer 3.3.1 tar.gz archive to a temporary
location
b) Using an everyday, normal user, entered this directory and did
gmake
attempting to get AOLServer compiled and
going on Linux, after failing miserably using Solaris 8.
Have just installed a Linux Mandrake 8.0 system, and am attempting to
get AOLServer running on it. Are there any known issues with AOLServer
and Mandrake Linux 8.0? This is a Linux Kernel 2.4.3
to the mailing list, we could tell you what needs to happen ...
Have just installed a Linux Mandrake 8.0 system, and am attempting to
get AOLServer running on it. Are there any known issues with AOLServer
and Mandrake Linux 8.0? This is a Linux Kernel 2.4.3 SMP machine if
that has any bearing
Hi Dossy,
Allanah Myles wrote:
On 2001.05.15, Justin Clift [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
This is the very first time I'm attempting to get AOLServer compiled and
going on Linux, after failing miserably using Solaris 8.
How did you fail miserably? The only problem I had compiling
On 2001.05.16, Justin Clift [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I see from your email that AOLServer unconditionally puts in the
-mcpu=ultrasparc, so that's likely the problem. I hadn't noticed it
(didn't look real hard honestly). Just logged into the old sparc server
now, removed the -mcpu=ultrasparc
Hi Allanah,
Yep. AOLServer 3.3.1 runs fine on Solaris 8 SPARC (the old SPARC 20)
now that it's compiled without the -mcpu=ultrasparc option.
Thanks heaps for that pointer.
So... now AOLServer is working on both Solaris AND Mandrake. Cool.
Better to have choices eh!
:-)
Is anyone
There has to be something -- anyone have any ideas?
Is there a 'hostid' command?
Another shot in the dark: does *BSD have anything like /proc/cpuinfo on
linux? 'cat'ing it out gives you the CPU info. It would be a bit of a mess
to use in the Makefile, but if *BSD has something like it, it
There has to be something -- anyone have any ideas?
Is there a 'hostid' command?
Another shot in the dark: is there anything like /proc/cpuinfo
available? 'cat'ing it out gives you the CPU info. It would be a bit of a
mess to use in the Makefile, but if you have access to something like it,
it