Fixed. Thanks for making me aware of this. Been coding projectM on the mac more than anywhere else lately and apple apparently has looser sensitivities to C++ syntax than linux.
Fixed. Thanks for making me aware of this. Been coding projectM on the mac more than anywhere else lately and apple apparently has looser sensitivities to C++ syntax than linux.
Well I have been slowly getting the ambition to install hardy on something for a variety of reasons, but before then it's not that easy to verify the FTGL problem until I get more feedback from users or I finally get access to an ubuntu machine.
- Carmelo
I compiled this on Hardy just fine on one computer, but it segfaulted on another when I tried to run projectM from a terminal.
Unfortunately it doesn't want to work after the first try like it did for the writer of this tutorial.
Any suggestions? I don't get anything other than 'Segmentation fault', so I don't know what to do here.
I tried following this guide, but at the ccmake step it tells me that there's no CMakeList.txt
Any ideas?
Great howto, I have it all running perfectly at 1920x1200 now
Next step, network visualisations
Okay, I got redownloaded the source, and it compiled.
However, I keep getting segmentation faults when I run projectM-test.
ditto
xzavier@Dragon:~/projectm/projectM-Trunk/src$ projectM-test
dir:/usr/share/projectM/config.inp
reading ~/.projectM/config.inp
Screen Resolution: 1680 x 1050
MAX SAMPLES:2048
Segmentation fault
Apr 28 22:04:45 Dragon kernel: [ 251.296999] projectM-pulsea[5858]: segfault at 00000000 eip 00000000 esp bfec05dc error 4
i'm
Last edited by Xzavier; April 29th, 2008 at 03:31 AM. Reason: more errors -
Have the people running projectm-test actually tried just running projectm-pulseaudio?
The test if probably only useful for developers and debugging anyway, I might remove it from the tutorial.
Sam
EDIT: Has been removed from the tutorial, it was a useless additonal step anyway. Why care if the test fails as long as the actual program works?
Last edited by sammydee; April 29th, 2008 at 01:48 PM.
Bookmarks