Jafar,
 
Thank you very much! Now I succeed! Graphics is included and working. So I could build xmarkup and get graphical output. I use Xming as X Windows server too. It's recommended by MS itself. BTW, you need to set DISPLAY environemnt variable to open Xming window from bash:
export DISPLAY=:0.0
 
Sergey
 
22.09.2016, 18:30, "Jafar Al-Gharaibeh" <to.ja...@gmail.com>:
Sergey,
 
  I believe you want to  "apt-get libx11-dev" as I don't think X11-common include the development library.  I did configure with graphics a few weeks ago on my Windows/Bash, I forgot if I did something else.  The build went OK but I coudn't get  (ui) to run out of the box. I didn't try to debug further at the time. I used xming as an X server.
 
--Jafar
 
 
 
On Thu, Sep 22, 2016 at 10:18 AM Sergey Logichev <slogic...@yandex.ru> wrote:
Dick,
I used sudo actually. I have following output:
 
slog@G780:~$ sudo apt-get install x11-common
[sudo] password for slog:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
x11-common is already the newest version.
x11-common set to manually installed.
The following package was automatically installed and is no longer required:
  os-prober
Use 'apt-get autoremove' to remove it.
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 53 not upgraded.
 
It seems as I have X11 installed already.
Please, try to build Unicon with graphics. What result you will get?
I used "make X-Configure name=x86_64_linux" to configure.
 
22.09.2016, 17:18, "Richard H. McCullough" <r...@pioneerca.com>:
Sergy,
You must use sudo for apt-get.
This completed with no errors for me:
     sudo apt-get install x11-common

Dick McCullough
 

From: slogic...@yandex.ru
To: rhmccullo...@outlook.com; unicon-group@lists.sourceforge.net
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 16:12:11 +0300
Subject: Re: [Unicon-group] Bash on Ubuntu on Windows
 
Dick,
Thank you for such useful comments.
Do you know how to install X11 binaries on Win10? I discovered that to run X11 application from bash you need to instal Xming server from sourceforge. That's working, really. But when I try to build Unicon with graphics "make X-Configure" says that X11 libraries and headers are missed. "apt-get install x11-common" doesn't install anything due to some access error. So, now I can use bash only for pre-builded graphical Ubuntu applications.
Sergey
 
22.09.2016, 14:45, "Richard H. McCullough" <rhmccullo...@outlook.com>:
A few comments which you may find useful.
 
1. Windows Subsystem for Linux is a beta version, only available in Windows 10 version 1607 and later.
2. The current version does not allow you to execute Windows .exe files.
     You can access any Windows files via /mnt/c/, limited by Windows permissions.
3. The Windows Bash command (C:/Windows/System32/bash.exe) is a little different from
     the Ubuntu bash command (/bin/bash).
     "bash.exe ~" opens the Bash window in your Ubuntu home directory (e.g. /home/rhm)
     "bash.exe ~ --login" also executes your .profile or .bash_profile
4. ssh from a remote machine will put you in your Windows home directory (e.g. C:/Users/rhm)
    running the Windows shell (cmd.exe).
    Executing "/windows/system32/bash.exe ~ --login" then works as described above.
    If your SSH Server services disappear, you need to rerun the enable WSL command in PowerShell.

Dick McCullough
 
 
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