Before you compile MythTV from the current source tarball or from CVS, you may need to modify your system configuration in a few ways.
In general, if you install MythTV from pre-packaged binaries for your Linux distribution/version, you don't need to be too concerned about the issues in this section of the HOWTO - the install script for the packages should take care of them. However, this section is still recommended reading which may help if the packager skipped a step in their packaging.
MythTV is written in C++ and requires a fairly complete, but standard,
compilation environment, including a recent g++ compiler, make
, and
appropriate headers files for shared libraries. Any standard Linux
distribution should be able to install a suitable compilation environment
from its packaging system. Section 3.2 of this HOWTO provides some details
of how to install the required environment for many distributions.
Subsequent sections of this chapter address the few oddities that you may have to adjust by hand before you compile MythTV.
The reference compilation system for MythTV is Debian.
None
The runtime manager for shared libraries, /lib/ld.so, gets
information about the locations and contents of shared libraries from
/etc/ld.so.cache
, a file created by ldconfig from
information in /etc/ld.so.conf
. Because MythTV installs some
shared libraries in /usr/local/lib
, that directory needs to be
added to the list of directories for ld.so to search when doing
runtime linking of programs. You do this, as root, by editing
/etc/ld.so.conf
, then running ldconfig. There are many
ways to do this; one that works is to enter this series of commands:
$ su -
# echo /usr/local/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf
# /sbin/ldconfig
# exit
$
It appears that Red Hat Linux 8.0 requires that the ldconfig command be run twice. Red Hat will also frequently "forget" about the path. It's recommended to run /sbin/ldconfig after installing every package. Failing that, always run it if you get an unexpected error about not finding libraries.
The compiler needs to be able to locate QT binaries and libraries in order
to compile MythTV. QTDIR needs to be set and /usr/lib/qt3/bin
must be
added to your path. Your distribution may already be making these changes
as a part of the installation of the software prerequisites detailed
earlier.
One way to do this is as follows:
Open a new shell and switch to superuser mode.
$ su
# set
[lots of text]
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:/usr/games:/usr/lib/qt3/bin:/home/mythtv/bin:/usr/lib/qt3/bin
QTDIR=/usr/lib/qt3
[lots more text]
You should see QTDIR
and /usr/lib/qt3/bin
in your path.
If you don't, do not proceed past this step until you have resolved this error. You may need to manually specify the QTDIR and PATH at the shell prompt before compiling.
Also, check that there has been a link created in
/usr/lib/qt3/mkspecs
called default
. If not, you'll get
errors during the compile. See the Troubleshooting Section for more
information.
The following instructions work for Mandrake 9.0 and 9.1 using
bash as the shell, and may be applicable for a distribution which
uses /etc/profile.d
.
As root, create the following file in /etc/profile.d
The example
filename is "mythtv.sh". Use what you feel is appropriate.
Open a shell, and switch to superuser mode. NOTE: ^D means press CTRL and d at the same time.
$ su
# cd /etc/profile.d
cat > mythtv.sh
export QTDIR=/usr/lib/qt3
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/lib/qt3/bin
^D
# chmod a+x mythtv.sh
# exit
$ exit
The last two commands are to exit out of the shell. This way, when you next
open a shell your new commands
will take effect.
Red Hat Linux 9/8.0 use a default locale with UTF-8 encoding. Date::Manip, a perl module used by XMLTV, is not UTF-8 safe. As a result, whenever you run setup or mythfilldatabase you will get a lot of UTF-8 warnings. There is an http://membled.com/work/patches/DateManip/ updated version of Date::Manip at the XMLTV site fixing this and other XMLTV related bugs.