Installing XINE
Sergio Valdes-Flores
yellowdog-general@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com
Wed May 21 19:09:01 2003
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Ok, Matthias, I did the install YOUR WAY, i know from source is never
cleaner, because you can't use apt or the other guy for keeping your
system up-to-date on anything you do by hand...then you really have to
become a guru in VERSIONING...and that to me is a waste of time...I
don't do linux for a living ;-)
the codec problem is baffling...because you download your xine related
rpms and it comes with which codexes ????? (like i said I dont know
enough)
I don't get the video in the enterthe matrix trailer that Bill is
talking about.
I downloaded that same video that's he 's been using all along in this
list for the example
downloaded all that rpm xine stuff
I got the xine window to open
blah blah, i got the controller window to open and I am also able to
move it about on the screen and get it out of the way of the movie
window
but basically...if I was able to install xine from the rpms and thus NO
ERROR MESSAGES, meaning I fullfilled all the dependencies, in fact I
had to download glutt, which Bill didnt mention..in order to get
dependencies met.
now GUIDE me, which mov's can I play, and where can I download them
from?
that 320 enterthematrix trailer is useless it won't run and make the
xine crasch on a Pismo powerbook.
Sergio
On Wednesday, May 21, 2003, at 08:57 AM,
yellowdog-general-request@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com wrote:
> Message: 5
> Date: Wed, 21 May 2003 10:50:12 +0200
> From: Matthias Saou <matthias@rpmforge.net>
> To: yellowdog-general@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com
> Subject: Re: Installing XINE
> Organization: freshrpms.net / rpmforge.net
> Reply-To: yellowdog-general@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com
>
> Bill Fink wrote :
>
>>> This is what I did:
>>>
>>> tar -zxvf xine-lib-1-beta12.tar.gz
>>> cd xine-lib-1-beta12
>>> ./configure
>>> make
>>> su -c "make install"
>>> su -c "/sbin/ldconfig"
>>> tar -zxvf xine-ui-0.9.20.tar.gz
>>> cd xine-ui-0.9.20
>>> ./configure
>>> make
>>> su -c "make install"
>>> xine-check
>>> xine enterthematrix_020503_osiris320.mov
>>
>> It's even easier than that to build xine from source:
>>
>> rpm -ta xine-lib-1-beta12.tar.gz
>> rpm -U /usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/libxine1-1_beta12-1.ppc.rpm
>> /usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/libxine1-devel-1_beta12-1.ppc.rpm rpm -ta
>> xine-ui-0.9.21.tar.gz rpm -U
>> /usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/xine-ui-0.9.21-1.ppc.rpm
>
> Alright, this is by far the best "installing from sources" method, but
> still. I'll be quite partial on this, but I just want to mention some
> reasons for installing from binary packages :
>
> - You keep your system cleaner, easier to manage
> - Upgrading to the next version is much easier, no old libs in the way
> - Changed configuration files are automatically saved (n/a with xine)
> - You usually get something "known to work"
> - You usually get support for useful extra features (faad2, xvid,
> flac...)
> - You usually get better system integration (init script, menu entry)
> - You usually get apt/yum support for lightening quick installs! ;-)
>
> And there are many others IMHO.
>
> Matthias
>
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Ok, Matthias, I did the install YOUR WAY, i know from source is never
cleaner, because you can't use apt or the other guy for keeping your
system up-to-date on anything you do by hand...then you really have to
become a guru in VERSIONING...and that to me is a waste of time...I
don't do linux for a living ;-)
the codec problem is baffling...because you download your xine related
rpms and it comes with which codexes ????? (like i said I dont know
enough)
I don't get the video in the enterthe matrix trailer that Bill is
talking about.
I downloaded that same video that's he 's been using all along in this
list for the example
downloaded all that rpm xine stuff
I got the xine window to open
blah blah, i got the controller window to open and I am also able to
move it about on the screen and get it out of the way of the movie
window
but basically...if I was able to install xine from the rpms and thus
NO ERROR MESSAGES, meaning I fullfilled all the dependencies, in fact
I had to download glutt, which Bill didnt mention..in order to get
dependencies met.
now GUIDE me, which mov's can I play, and where can I download them
from?
that 320 enterthematrix trailer is useless it won't run and make the
xine crasch on a Pismo powerbook.
Sergio
On Wednesday, May 21, 2003, at 08:57 AM,
<underline><color><param>1998,1998,FFFE</param>yellowdog-general-request@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com</color></underline>
wrote:
<excerpt><fixed>Message: 5
Date: Wed, 21 May 2003 10:50:12 +0200
From: Matthias Saou
<<<underline><color><param>1998,1998,FFFE</param>matthias@rpmforge.net</color></underline>>
To:
<underline><color><param>1998,1998,FFFE</param>yellowdog-general@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com</color></underline>
Subject: Re: Installing XINE
Organization: freshrpms.net / rpmforge.net
Reply-To:
<underline><color><param>1998,1998,FFFE</param>yellowdog-general@lists.terrasoftsolutions.com</color></underline>
Bill Fink wrote :
<excerpt><excerpt>This is what I did:
tar -zxvf xine-lib-1-beta12.tar.gz
cd xine-lib-1-beta12
./configure
make
su -c "make install"
su -c "/sbin/ldconfig"
tar -zxvf xine-ui-0.9.20.tar.gz
cd xine-ui-0.9.20
./configure
make
su -c "make install"
xine-check
xine enterthematrix_020503_osiris320.mov
</excerpt>
It's even easier than that to build xine from source:
rpm -ta xine-lib-1-beta12.tar.gz
rpm -U /usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/libxine1-1_beta12-1.ppc.rpm
/usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/libxine1-devel-1_beta12-1.ppc.rpm rpm -ta
xine-ui-0.9.21.tar.gz rpm -U
/usr/src/rpm/RPMS/ppc/xine-ui-0.9.21-1.ppc.rpm
</excerpt>
Alright, this is by far the best "installing from sources" method, but
still. I'll be quite partial on this, but I just want to mention some
reasons for installing from binary packages :
- You keep your system cleaner, easier to manage
- Upgrading to the next version is much easier, no old libs in the way
- Changed configuration files are automatically saved (n/a with xine)
- You usually get something "known to work"
- You usually get support for useful extra features (faad2, xvid,
flac...)
- You usually get better system integration (init script, menu entry)
- You usually get apt/yum support for lightening quick installs! ;-)
And there are many others IMHO.
Matthias
</fixed></excerpt>
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