On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 01:55:24PM +0400, alex stone wrote: > Joel, After a complete cleanout and start again, nama is up and running. > > I've used all ebuilds for the perl modules, and only used cpan for > nama itself. (Gentoo to the rescue....:) ) Yes, it's generally smoother to install perl modules via distro method than using cpan, where that's possible. 'local::lib' is the new perl shiny for handling non-distro- supplied modules. It allows you to install them in a directory such as ~/perl5. That seems to be better than the historical /usr/local hierarchy, because - it allows multiple indepedent local libs (for example to test or support specific apps) - modules can be installed using cpan without root permissions Digression The only (slightly) fiddly thing is the initial bootstrap phase. After you've installed local::lib perl -Mlocal::lib -e 1 # sets up ~/perl5 Assuming installation in ~/perl5, you end up needing to add the following lines to .bashrc eval $(perl -I$HOME/perl5/lib/perl5 -Mlocal::lib) # everything but MANPATH export MANPATH="/home/jroth/perl5/man/:$MANPATH" Okay, and then re-initializing cpan client to install to the new path. > This was an experiment to access the ecasound engine with something i > could manipulate fairly quickly as a user. Text mode is as useable as > a gui, so i have something to work with. Great, that's exactly what Nama seeks to provide. > Thanks for the clues, they helped. > > I'll ask the pro-audio overlay team if they can consider adding Nama > to the overlay, then it's even easier. Thanks! That would be a help, in which case I'd like to make sure they get the latest and greatest version. :-) Joel > Alex. -- Joel Roth _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user