Hal MacArgle wrote:
[...]
The guts of xine is a library. On Debian, the package is:
libxine1 - the xine video/media player library, binary files
The non-library package, called xine-ui, is just xine's own User
Interface, which totem substitutes for (there's also a gxine frontend
package). So look for something in Fedora with a similar name. The
underlying library should be something like:
/usr/lib/libxine.so.1.12.0
and there should also be an associated directory /usr/lib/xine/ with a
bunch of plugins. Probably some other stuff too.
Slackware 10.1 and 10.2 has this; Fedora Core 4 does not.. No
mention of anything Xine except in the Totem docs; then only
fleetingly..
I'm wondering now if Fedora 4 actually supports totem-xine, or if it
just supports totem-gstreamer. Or if it is a single version that somehow
supports both, at least potentially. You might check this; according to
FSF, here's how: "To see what backend you are using check the "About
box" of totem."
A bit of looking around led me to these additional details ...
1. The latest version of totem I can find in Fedora is
totem-1.4.0-2.i386.rpm (found at the update site
http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/core/updates/5/i386/
). I wonder if you have updated to that version.
2. Debian Sid (Unstable) reports totem-xine at version 1.2.1-3 and
totem-gstreamer also at version 1.2.1-3.
3. FSF lists 1.4.0 as the latest version; find it (as source) at
http://ftp.acc.umu.se/pub/GNOME/sources/totem/1.4/ . Here -- at
http://www.gnome.org/projects/totem/ -- FSF does confirm that totem
comes in xine and gstreamer flavors, and it seems to think that Fedora
(via yum) supports that form of the app.
4. I cannot find xinelib at the official Fedora update site, or at a
couple of mirrors, which suggests it is no longer part of "official"
Fedora for some (no doubt excellent) reason that Red Hat has failed to
mention. I did find it at
ftp://fr.rpmfind.net/linux/freshrpms/fedora/linux/4/xine-lib/ . The
current version there is xine-lib-1.0.1-2.2.fc4.i386.rpm, dated March
2005, a tiny bit newer that what Debian Sid offers (1.0.1-1.3).
FreshRPMs is where xine upstream home page says to go, incidentally, to
do Fedora installs.
5. For more distro-specific help, you might find is useful to read
http://stanton-finley.net/fedora_core_4_installation_notes.html#Xine
6. Downloading DVD images takes more time than I am willing to spend
just to satisfy curoisity. So I'll just speculate that Peter might have
an older image of Fedora than you do, and that xine was removed
somewhere along the way, rather than being missing from the outset.
I know that all fo this isn't that much help, but perhaps it will take
you in a useful direction.
(BTW, why are you using Fedora 4 and not Fedora 5? Since I don't use
Fedora here, there might well be some good reason I am unaware of ... so
I'm really just wondering.)
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs