I have linux ubuntu 12.04 32bit version installed on my system. I wanted to installed QT 5.7. But I am not able to find any download link for linux 32 bit version of QT5.7.
Where can I find QT5.7 32bit download?
Starting from Qt 5.6.0, pre-built binaries for Linux 32bit is not provided anymore. You need to compile it yourself.
Source: https://blog.qt.io/blog/2016/02/23/qt-5-6-0-release-candidate-available/#comment-1197215
Related
I want to run a new version of CMake on a 32-bit Linux distribution; but - I need to build it from source, since Kitware no longer provides 32-bit builds (of recent versions). I have access both to 64-bit Linux distros and to the target machine.
What do I need to do in order to perform and deploy the cross-build?
I am trying to run Nvidia rapids on a windows computer but haven't had any luck. I have installed docker desktop for windows and downloaded the rapids image. Cuda 10.0 is installed, and Nvidia-container-toolkit isn't. I haven't been able to make it run. Any thoughts or guidance?
I'm not sure if anyone has given a more definite 'updated' answer to the original question. At this point (August 2020) the answer is "Yes!". You definitely can run RAPIDS in WSL2 on Windows 10 subject to a few conditions:
Requirements
You must use RAPIDS in the Windows Subsystem for Linux version 2 (WSL2);
Windows 10 Version
2004 (OS Build 202001.1000 or later)
You have to sign up to get Windows Insider Preview versions, specifically the Developer Channel. This is required for the WSL2 VM to have GPU access. https://insider.windows.com/en-us/
CUDA version 455.41 in CUDA SDK v11.1
You must be using a special version of the NVIDA CUDA drivers (I'm using )
that you must get by a special download from NVIDIA's site. You must
join the NVIDIA Developer Program to get access to the version
-- then search for 'WSL2 CUDA Driver' and it should lead you to it.
Setup
Install the developer preview version of windows. Make sure to click the check box in 'update' that installs other recommended updates too.
Install the windows CUDA driver from the NVIDIA Developer Program
Enable WSL 2 by enabling the "Virtual Machine Platform" optional feature. You can find more steps here https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10
Install WSL from the Windows Store (Ubuntu-20.04 confirmed working)
Install python on the WSL VM, tested with Anaconda
Install Rapids AI (It's best to install this right now before you have hundreds of other packages for 'conda' to try to self-consistently reconcile with the rapids dependency graphs -- you can always install additional python packages via pip or conda later.)
After doing this, if you launch ipython...
Python 3.8.3 (default, May 19 2020, 18:47:26)
Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information
IPython 7.17.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for help.
>>> import cuml
>>> cuml.__version__
'0.15.0'
>>> import cudf
>>> cudf.__version__
'0.15.0'
>>> import dask_cudf
>>> dask_cudf.__version__
'0.15.0'
>>> import cupy
>>> cupy.__version__
'7.8.0'
...and you're good to go with RAPIDS AI.
Update 9/6/20: The answer written by Wesley is accurate with the latest Windows Insider Preview with WSL2. Rather than revising this answer, I've just made the edits to his. https://stackoverflow.com/a/59364773/6779504
No. As it exists now, RAPIDS requires a Linux host. This came up in a recent workshop by NVIDIA. It was also mentioned that RAPIDS won't work with WSL. It may work with WSL version 2, but I haven't tried it nor am aware of someone that as.
The only option would if you could assign a GPU to a Linux VM on the Windows host. This possible but sufficiently complex that dual-booting is a better solution.
Fedora have dynamic libs on /usr/lib64 and /usr/lib, for 64-bit and 32-bit libs separately; while 64-bit Debian install some 64-bit libraries on /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu, but seems some 64-bit libs are still in /usr/lib.
This looks pretty messy. So when I write a cmake file for my project, how to decide the place for installing the compiled libs?
use GNUInstallDirs, it will do everything for you.
I have just upgraded to Windows 8 Pro, mostly because my Windows 7 license has reached maximum activations and I have a free copy of 8, and partially so I can ensure my software is 8-compatible.
I seem to be incapable of installing the JDK. I just downloaded it from the Oracle website (jdk-7u21-windows-x64.exe).
Windows reports itself as: 64-bit Operating System, x64-based processor.
When I try and run it, either normally or as administrator is shows up with the message:
This app can't run on your PC
To find a version for your PC, check with the software publisher
Does anyone have any ideas on this, a quick Google indicates it should just install same as usual.
While 8 still insistently refuses to install the JDK even after re-downloading and checking the hash, the Netbeans + JDK bundle does install which includes the JDK so that solves this issue sufficiently for now.
Update: The 64-bit version now works fine.
Try the x86 version: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk7-downloads-1880260.html , I don't think there is a proper build for Windows 8 Pro.
Trying to move my development environment to Linux. And new to Curl. Can't get it to install the IDE & RTE packages on an AMD HP PC running Ubuntu x64. I tried to install the Debian package via the package installer and get "Error: Wrong architecture - i386". Tried using the --force-architecture switch but it errors out.
I'm assuming Curl IDE will just run under Intel processors? Anyone have any luck with this issue and can advise?
It's been a while since I ran linux, but try looking for the x64 version. There are also x64 to x86 compatibility libraries available that should make 32 bit programs work for most situations.
The ubuntu forums are a much better place for this question, however.