I'm not running SLIP or PPP, but just dialing in to an ordinary login account ("shell account"). I have problems using WinBoard on ICS with a modem. If so, the system administrator at your site might know how to fix or work around the problem. If all else fails, check whether anyone else at your site has been able to compile any X programs on your system. See the FAQ on for more information about problems of this kind. The configure script includes a workaround for a bug of this kind that exists in some SunOS 4.x.x installations. Some linkers have bugs that cause bogus error messages when you try to link X programs. That is, if your X.h file has full pathname /odd/place/X11R6/include/X11/X.h, then you must give the argument -x-includes=/odd/place/X11R6/include. The directory named in the argument to -x-includes must have a subdirectory "X11" that contains the actual. For example:Ĭonfigure -x-includes=/odd/place/include \ You can work around these problems by telling the configure script where the files are. If you have more than one version of X installed on your system, it may find the "wrong" one, or occasionally it may find libraries from one version and incompatible header files from another. Sometimes it fails: If yours are installed in an odd place, it may not find them at all. The configure script for XBoard looks for X libraries and header files in some common places. If you are using some other kind of Unix, ask your system administrator where to find the X header files and link-time libraries. If you are using RedHat, install the XFree86-devel package. Many GNU/Linux distributions put the headers and libraries in a separate package, which you might not have installed. In this case the XBoard configure script will fail and will tell you to look at this question in the FAQ. If so, you can run existing X programs, but you cannot compile a new X program from source code. Perhaps you have the X server and client programs installed on your machine, but not the X header files and link-time libraries. Configuring or building XBoard fails due to missing header files, missing libraries, or undefined symbols. If you have the Xaw header files installed in a different place than the other X11 headers, you may need to configure XBoard with an extra flag to help it find them. Thanks to Richard Lloyd for this information. Unpack the archive using gzip and follow the instructions in its README and/or HPUX.Install files. (But first check with your system administrator to see if someone else at your site has already done this.) Get the archive file /hpux9/X11R5/Core/Xaw-5.00.tar.gz (Xaw header files) via anonymous FTP from the site .uk (138.253.42.172), or one of the other official sites-Germany: (129.13.200.57), US: (144.92.4.15), France: (192.70.79.53) or Netherlands: (130.161.140.100). You can get them by anonymous FTP as follows. HP-UX users are missing only the header files. Note that you may be missing only the header files, or you may be missing the libraries themselves too. Some versions of Unix don't supply these files, but they are part of the standard X distribution, freely available from MIT.įor general information on getting missing X sources, see the FAQ on. These are the header files for the Athena Widgets library, which XBoard uses heavily. I can't build XBoard because the X11/Xaw/.
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