Hier enkele voorbeelden hoe een programma te installeren:
1 How to install Katalog (dit is een programma).
If you can find a package for your distribution in the download section, you can try to install Katalog from sources, it's not so difficult:
To compile the application use the standard sequence:
tar xzf katalog-xx.tar.gz (dit is gewoon uitpakken)
cd katalog-xx (ga naar map met terminal)
./configure (enter)
make (enter)
make install (you must be root here)(enter)
Nu kan er een icoon zijn , maar soms ook niet dus goed de tekst files lezen en de handleiding op de site.
2
How to Install Source Files in Ubuntu
Posted by jayaram on November 9th, 2007 EMail This Post
For all those who are beginners in any linux(ubuntu) find hard to find the package files of their distro and end up in finding an source package(which is either in tar.gz or .gz).. so now people think how to install these source files…..
lets now see how would you be installing source files in ubuntu…..
source files contain the programs and hence before the installation you need to compile them… so you need to install the build-essentials from the synaptic package manager…. else this build-essentials is already present in the cd.. and so you can install it…..else you can install it typing it in the terminal by
sudo aptitude install build-essentials
suppose you have a source file name src.tar.gz, what you do initially is that you need to extract the source files and then in the terminal….
navigate to the folder where the source file is extracted using the cd commands….. and then
type the following…
./configure
make
sudo make install
clean install
lets see what each one of them does…
./configure….. checks whether the required dependencies are available on your system or not….. if not an error is reported….
make compiles the source code and make install is used to install the program in to the location
if it asks for an installation location it is recommended to install all the source to /usr/src
clean install removes any temporary files created in the installation process of the source
and thats it your source file in installed in your system.
3
ftd (is een programma)
sudo apt-get install build-essential pkg-config \
libsqlite3-dev libsexy-dev \
libgtkspell-dev libgtkhtml3.8-dev \
libglib2.0-dev libdbus-glib-1-dev \
libcurl3-dev libpcre3-dev \
libxslt1-dev libnotify-dev libtool \
automake1.9 autoconf firefox-dev
cd /tmp
wget
http://ftd4linux.nl/releases/openftd-1.0.1.tar.bz2tar -xvjf openftd-1.0.1.tar.bz2
cd openftd-1.0.1
./configure
make
sudo make install
4
rpm file is een redhat linux file wat niet werkt op ubuntu, maar dmv alien kun je deze omschrijven.
How to install rpm files (omschrijven met alien)
sudo alien gtk-splitter-2.0-1.i386.rpm
then you get deb package and install (dubbel klik op deb file)
5
sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall
tar -xvzf example.tar.gz (uitpakken)
ga naar map die uitgepakt is
./configure
make
sudo make install
sudo check install
6 java program
Install java server
start java program with: java -jar /home/mzx47npi/hpt5/hjsplit/hjsplit_g.jar
How to Install Java Runtime Environment (JRE) in Ubuntu
Java is an object-oriented programming language developed by Sun Microsystems in the early 1990s. Java applications are compiled to bytecode, which at runtime is either interpreted or compiled to native machine code for execution.
The language itself derives much of its syntax from C and C++ but has a simpler object model and fewer low-levelfacilities. JavaScript, a scripting language, shares a similar name and has similar syntax, but is not directly related to Java.
Currently Ubuntu has the following Java packages
sun-java5-bin - Contains the binaries
sun-java5-demo - Contains demos and examples
sun-java5-doc - Contains the documentation
sun-java5-fonts - Contains the Lucida TrueType fonts from the JRE
sun-java5-jdk - Contains the metapackage for the JDK
sun-java5-jre - Contains the metapackage for the JRE
sun-java5-plugin - Contains the plug-in for Mozilla-based browsers
sun-java5-source - Contains source files for the JDK
Installing the Java Runtime Environment
First you need to check multiverse repository enabled or not after that open a terminal window. Since you are going to be installing the JRE and the web browser plug-in, you'll be using the following command from a terminal
sudo apt-get install sun-java5-jre sun-java5-plugin sun-java5-fonts
Once it downloads the packages and begins the installation, you'll get a screen that contains the Sun Operating System Distributor License for Java and hit Enter to continue. You'll see a dialog that asks you if you agree with the DLJ license terms. Select Yes, and hit Enter; the JRE will finish installing.
Testing Java Runtime Environment
You'll want to confirm that your system is configured properly for Sun's JRE. This is a two-step process.
First, check that the JRE is properly installed by running the following command from a terminal.
java -version
You should get similar output
java version "1.5.0_08"
Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.5.0_08-b03)
Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM (build 1.5.0_08-b03, mixed mode, sharing)
Testing Java Plugin for Firefox
open Firefox and typing about:plugins in the address bar and check for java plugin
7 vmware tools installeren in ubuntu:
nu moet het tar.gz bestand uitgepakt worden.
sudo tar zxf VMwareTools*
Open de directory waar de uitgepakte bestanden in staan
cd vmware-tools-distrib/
Start het installatie script (Let op je moet hier als root ingelogt zijn of sudo er voor starten).
sudo ./vmware-install.pl (dit is een programma die installeerd)