David, >From what you are saying, it looks like I may have screwed up my system. I have rebuilt all the X libraries manually to the newer versions from www.x.org because other stuff that I was building were complaining about having older versions. And as you have suspected, I overwrote the old X-libs stuff. Everything seem to work fine until I tried to build GTK+. I built everything from [.gz] files, not [.rpm] OK, let's take one thing at a time, because I am somewhat of a Linux newbie. >But first of all restore the system to a sane state. Restore >the overwritten files from rpm (--replacepkgs --replacefiles) >and then remove the bits that were not replaced by anything >from rpm (removing libs can render your system unusable >therefore the reverse order is likely to cause troubles). How do I do this, specifically? Is there a howto link? Thanks Achilles David Nečas (Yeti) <yeti@xxxxxxxxxxx To i.cz> gtk-list@xxxxxxxxx, Sent by: avassilicos@xxxxxxx gtk-list-bounces@ cc gnome.org Subject Re: Problem when running 02/19/2007 02:37 "./configure" - gtk+-2.10.9 PM Please respond to gtk-list@xxxxxxxx g On Mon, Feb 19, 2007 at 12:08:35PM -0500, Achilles Vassilicos wrote: > > I have encountered the following problem when I run: > > "./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --libdir=/usr/lib" So you are subverting the packaging system, overwritting system libs and have probably already done this for more than couple of them? Uh, oh. > ...checking Pango flags... > > Configure error: > *** can't find Pango Is the exact error message? Gtk+'s configure does not seem to be able of printing this. > No other error messages during configure. Please include the exact error message. Include also the relevant parts of config.log (while looking for the relevant parts are you can also find out what the problem is, but include all of it in the worst case). > I am running Redhat W4/UPD4 on an intel-64 box. But first of all restore the system to a sane state. Restore the overwritten files from rpm (--replacepkgs --replacefiles) and then remove the bits that were not replaced by anything from rpm (removing libs can render your system unusable therefore the reverse order is likely to cause troubles). Then choose a non-system prefix and install everything there, see for example http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-list/2006-December/msg00113.html > I have installed Pango successfully. I tried several versions of Pango, > from the latest 1.15.6 to earlier versions of 1.14.10 with the same > problem. Pango is installed with --prefix=/usr. Latest version of Cairo > is installed as well as the latest versions of [pkgconfig] and [glib-2.0]. > > The directory /usr/lib/pkgconfig contains all the .pc files for Pango. > > Any suggestions? Don't do that. But if you insist, look up the error in the configure script and either insert some debugging messages or try to manually reproduce what it does to see why it does not like what it gets. > Please reply to me directly at <avassilicos@xxxxxxx> because my company's > firewall does not allow to go to the list web page to view replies. Citing the e-mail header: List-Subscribe: <http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list>, <mailto:gtk-list-request@xxxxxxxxx?subject=subscribe> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Yeti -- Whatever. _______________________________________________ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list _______________________________________________ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list