Hello,
I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >= 2.0.0) library development package. However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. Any idea what is missing? Robert _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10.
Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, there is a cmake option to turn on... Gilles Caulier 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: > Hello, > > I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; > digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: > > I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: > > CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): > kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>= 2.0.0) library development package. > > However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: > > kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 > libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 > libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 > > I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems > with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. > Any idea what is missing? > > Robert > > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Robert Zeller
Am Freitag, 12. Oktober 2012, 13:32:22 schrieb Robert Zeller:
> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems > with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. > Any idea what is missing? If you want a package you can get it from the KDE Playground repo. It's updated at least once a week. http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/KDE:/Unstable:/Playground/openSUSE_12.1 if you are using openSUSE 12.1. Sven _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gilles Caulier-4
Thanks, Gilles, for the hint. I could successfully compile
digikam-3.0.0-beta1a now, and it starts. But, in the settings menu I don't see any kipi-plugins, though they were obviously compiled correctly and I also see that they were installed in the correct directories. What is wrong? On 10/12/2012 01:45 PM, Gilles Caulier wrote: > This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10. > > Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on > local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, > there is a cmake option to turn on... > > Gilles Caulier > > 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >> Hello, >> >> I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; >> digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: >> >> I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: >> >> CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): >> kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>> = 2.0.0) library development package. >> However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: >> >> kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 >> libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 >> libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 >> >> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >> Any idea what is missing? >> >> Robert >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gilles Caulier-4
Thanks, Gilles, for the hint. I could successfully compile
digikam-3.0.0-beta1a now, and it starts. But, in the settings menu I don't see any kipi-plugins, though they were obviously compiled correctly and I also see that they were installed in the correct directories. What is wrong? On 10/12/2012 01:45 PM, Gilles Caulier wrote: > This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10. > > Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on > local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, > there is a cmake option to turn on... > > Gilles Caulier > > 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >> Hello, >> >> I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; >> digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: >> >> I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: >> >> CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): >> kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>> = 2.0.0) library development package. >> However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: >> >> kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 >> libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 >> libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 >> >> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >> Any idea what is missing? >> >> Robert >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
Look here :
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=307213 Gilles Caulier 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: > Thanks, Gilles, for the hint. I could successfully compile > digikam-3.0.0-beta1a now, and it starts. But, in the settings menu I > don't see any kipi-plugins, though they were obviously compiled > correctly and I also see that they were installed in the correct > directories. What is wrong? > > > > On 10/12/2012 01:45 PM, Gilles Caulier wrote: >> This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10. >> >> Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on >> local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, >> there is a cmake option to turn on... >> >> Gilles Caulier >> >> 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >>> Hello, >>> >>> I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; >>> digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: >>> >>> I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: >>> >>> CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): >>> kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>>> = 2.0.0) library development package. >>> However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: >>> >>> kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 >>> libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 >>> libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 >>> >>> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >>> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >>> Any idea what is missing? >>> >>> Robert >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Digikam-users mailing list >>> [hidden email] >>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
This have been fixed in 3.0.0-beta2, but tarball is not yet
published... I t will be done when this one will be closed by KDE admin team : https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=308237 Gilles Caulier 2012/10/12 Gilles Caulier <[hidden email]>: > Look here : > > https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=307213 > > Gilles Caulier > > 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >> Thanks, Gilles, for the hint. I could successfully compile >> digikam-3.0.0-beta1a now, and it starts. But, in the settings menu I >> don't see any kipi-plugins, though they were obviously compiled >> correctly and I also see that they were installed in the correct >> directories. What is wrong? >> >> >> >> On 10/12/2012 01:45 PM, Gilles Caulier wrote: >>> This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10. >>> >>> Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on >>> local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, >>> there is a cmake option to turn on... >>> >>> Gilles Caulier >>> >>> 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >>>> Hello, >>>> >>>> I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; >>>> digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: >>>> >>>> I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: >>>> >>>> CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): >>>> kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>>>> = 2.0.0) library development package. >>>> However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: >>>> >>>> kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 >>>> libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 >>>> libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 >>>> >>>> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >>>> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >>>> Any idea what is missing? >>>> >>>> Robert >>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Digikam-users mailing list >>>> [hidden email] >>>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Digikam-users mailing list >>> [hidden email] >>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >>> >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by S. Burmeister
Thanks for pointing me to this repo; it is a little confusing that in
the repos directory digikam seems to be 2.9 version though in reality it is 3.0 beta 2. But I can live with the little fake. On 10/12/2012 02:45 PM, Sven Burmeister wrote: > Am Freitag, 12. Oktober 2012, 13:32:22 schrieb Robert Zeller: >> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >> Any idea what is missing? > If you want a package you can get it from the KDE Playground repo. It's > updated at least once a week. > > http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/KDE:/Unstable:/Playground/openSUSE_12.1 > if you are using openSUSE 12.1. > > Sven > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users > > _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On Fri, 12 Oct 2012 15:11:27 +0200
Robert Zeller wrote: > Thanks for pointing me to this repo; it is a little confusing that in > the repos directory digikam seems to be 2.9 version though in reality > it is 3.0 beta 2. But I can live with the little fake. Just bear in mind that it is a beta and may not be the best thing to use for important work. -- Brian Morrison _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Robert Zeller
Am Freitag, 12. Oktober 2012, 15:11:27 schrieb Robert Zeller:
> Thanks for pointing me to this repo; it is a little confusing that in > the repos directory digikam seems to be 2.9 version though in reality it > is 3.0 beta 2. But I can live with the little fake. That's how it is supposed to be. 3.0 was not released yet, hence anything before that is not 3.0. As with other KDE software packages get a number below the not yet release version e.g. 4.9.40 for a KDE 4.10 alpha. The digikam package in Playground is not a beta or alpha release but just a git snapshot so 2.9+git is accurate. One thing to notice about digikam > 2.9 is that it will crash other apps that use kipi-plugins with KDE 4.9, e.g. ksnapshot. It's a known issue, not sure what the digikam devs are going to do about it. Sven _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Robert Zeller-2
3.0.0-beta2 is published :
http://download.kde.org/unstable/digikam/digikam-3.0.0-beta2.tar.bz2.mirrorlist Please download and try... Gilles Caulier 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: > Thanks, Gilles, for the hint. I could successfully compile > digikam-3.0.0-beta1a now, and it starts. But, in the settings menu I > don't see any kipi-plugins, though they were obviously compiled > correctly and I also see that they were installed in the correct > directories. What is wrong? > > On 10/12/2012 01:45 PM, Gilles Caulier wrote: >> This is due to use new libkipi which will be published officially with KDE 4.10. >> >> Libkipi source code is included in digiKam SC tarball. Just turn on >> local shared lib to use instead system one. Look README for details, >> there is a cmake option to turn on... >> >> Gilles Caulier >> >> 2012/10/12 Robert Zeller <[hidden email]>: >>> Hello, >>> >>> I just tried to compile digikam-3.0.0-beta1a on a SUSE 12.1 system; >>> digikam 2.9 was compiled without any problems on the identical system: >>> >>> I am getting the following error message within the cmake phase: >>> >>> CMake Error at extra/kipi-plugins/CMakeLists.txt:88 (MESSAGE): >>> kipi-plugins needs libkipi. You need to install the libkipi (version >>>> = 2.0.0) library development package. >>> However, within my SUSE system the following packages are installed: >>> >>> kipi-plugins 2.5.0-146.12 >>> libkipi-devel 4.8.5-42.2 >>> libkipi8 4.8.5-42.2 >>> >>> I am confused by the fact that digikam 2.9 compiles without problems >>> with these libraries and digikam-3.0.0-beta1a doesn't. >>> Any idea what is missing? >>> >>> Robert >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Digikam-users mailing list >>> [hidden email] >>> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> _______________________________________________ >> Digikam-users mailing list >> [hidden email] >> https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > Digikam-users mailing list > [hidden email] > https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
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