On Tuesday, November 22, 2011 03:30:02 AM Duncan did opine: > gene heskett posted on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 19:40:23 -0500 as excerpted: > > But the kde there is 4.3.5, not the best by a stretch. > > > > Back in the kde-3 days there was a konstruct utility that worked > > fairly well, and I used that several times on a fedora box > > > > Is there such a beast that would build and install 4.6.5 on a 64 bit > > centos-6 box? > > There's a couple scripted build methods available. Note that I use > Gentoo so haven't used these, and that kde has only recently switched > mostly to git, so to some extent these scripts may be in transition as > well, but here's the links: > > General page (see that disclaimer): > > http://techbase.kde.org/Getting_Started/Build > > In particular (an anchor further down the same page): > > http://techbase.kde.org/Getting_Started/Build#Scripted_Builds > > There's quite a bit more linked from there or available by simply > wandering around techbase in general. > > Meanwhile, some months ago I was helping someone try to build and > install, maybe it was 4.5.x at that point (only kdelibs, but once > kdelibs installs, the rest is far easier, since kdelibs sets the base > for everything else and has similar dependencies), on a CentOS, I > believe it was 5.x, so even older. He was running into quite a few > version-too-low issues on dependencies and was building them from > scratch as well. However, he made quite some progress over several > days, conquering one problem at a time, and I believe ultimately must > have gotten it installed, as he seemed pretty close by the last. He'd > ask questions about what was required, listing what he had, and I'd > look up the Gentoo dependencies to see what the minimum they required > for their building was. Together, with help from others at times as > well, we surmounted a number of obstacles, with him either building the > required versions, or for at least one, passing an configure option so > it didn't build the component that would have required that dependency. > > However, as an alternative, you may find either the binary rpms or the > srpms as available on sites like rpmfind.net will work better for you, > with the srpms at least helping navigate the dependency issues if you > end up using them to build from sources. Years ago when I was back on > Mandrake, I used rpmfind a *LOT*, often installing various rpms from > rawhide, etc, on Mandrake, since rawhide was the only thing with rpms > of the quite new versions I wanted, available. > > Good luck whichever way you go. You may need it. =:^\ (Actually, not > so much luck, as quite some patience and persistence, tackling and > overcoming one problem at a time.) OTOH, as I said, I've not used > those scripts. Perhaps they're actually better than I'm thinking, and > it'll be set it up and come back a half day to perhaps 3 days later, > depending on the speed of your system and how many dependencies you > need to build as well, to have it all built and installed. =:^) Thanks Duncan, it looks as if there might be a chance, message duly marked for future reference. Cheers, Gene -- "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) My web page: <http://coyoteden.dyndns-free.com:85/gene> Q: What do monsters eat? A: Things. Q: What do monsters drink? A: Coke. (Because Things go better with Coke.) ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.