On Feb 16, 2008 9:59 PM, Ryan Schmidt <ryandesign@macports.org> wrote:
On Feb 16, 2008, at 21:52, AngelaZhu wrote:
Ryan Schmidt wrote:
Thanks, I have fixed this problem and now "gdk-pixbuf" is successfully upgraded.
How did you fix the problem?
Well, I simply change the mode of files to "rw" and change every #include <GL/glut.h> to its full path. #include </usr/X11R6/include/GL/glut.h> And then "port upgrade gdk-pixbuf" work correctly.
That's probably a bad idea. It shouldn't be necessary to change these files by hand.
Ok... But I didn't have a better idea how to do that at the time. :)
I still don't know how that /opt/local/include/GLUT/glut.h got on your system if it wasn't provided by a MacPorts port.
Perhaps gtk-pixbuf is now part of some other part of gnome, and it's finding that on your system? Looking at the entire dependency tree of lablgtk2, gtk-pixbuf does not seem to be listed.
Wait, I think I got it: I have /opt/local/lib/ libgdk_pixbuf-2.0.0.1200.4.dylib on my system and it's provided by the gtk2 port. I have gtk2 2.12.4 installed. What version do you have installed?
I think I have the same version: $ port info gtk2 gtk2 2.12.4, x11/gtk2 (Variants: universal, darwin_6, darwin_7, quartz, x11)
"port info gtk2" just tells you that the currently-available version of gtk2 is 2.12.4. It doesn't say anything about what version you have installed. What does "port installed gtk2" say?
It says: $ port installed gtk2 The following ports are currently installed: gtk2 @2.10.13_0 (active) Probably I should also upgrade this? -- Thanks and Regards, Angela Zhu ------------------------------------------ Dept. of CS, Rice University http://www.cs.rice.edu/~yz2/ ------------------------------------------