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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 01/21/2013 10:12 AM, Anton Kavalenka
wrote:<br>
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<blockquote cite="mid:50FD0678.3060209@tut.by" type="cite">
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<font face="Liberation Sans"><br>
X-libs and gtk2 libs installed.<br>
</font></blockquote>
<font face="Liberation Sans">This is what </font>I did suppose.<br>
<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:50FD0678.3060209@tut.by" type="cite"><font
face="Liberation Sans"> <br>
This is the list of debian packages </font><font
face="Liberation Sans">typical Lazarus-built </font><font
face="Liberation Sans">Linux GUI application depends</font><font
face="Liberation Sans">. <br>
It is useful in sense - what to download from public
repositories. The name of packages contain project name.<br>
</font></blockquote>
<font face="Liberation Sans">Unfortunately the Linux distribution
does not </font>not support Debian (apt-get) packages, but only
QNS ".qpkg" and Optware ".ipkg" packages. I’ll take a look if
something like "X-lib" and "gtk2" is provided by Optware. I already
have been able to install fpc by manually downloading, extracting
and "distributing" the Debian fpc package. But with the count of
packages you list in your message, this does not make much sense.
Especially it might be very tedious to find out all the
dependencies. <br>
<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:50FD0678.3060209@tut.by" type="cite"><font
face="Liberation Sans"> </font>Btw what says ldd for your
cross-compiled binary at your target system?<br>
</blockquote>
I did not yet try to cross-compile anything, but I happily did
install fpc.<br>
<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:50FD0678.3060209@tut.by" type="cite"> <br>
<font face="Liberation Sans"><br>
Is it so painful to run at your headless system GDB server - and
at client - full Lazarus connected to that GDB?<br>
</font></blockquote>
<font face="Liberation Sans">I don't know. This in fact is what I
initially suggested (as I do similar "embedded" remote-gdb
debugging using a Target PCB connected via a JTAG adapter and
Eclipse on the PC), but in fact remote gdb does not seem not to be
very "officially" supported by Lazarus. </font><br>
<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:50FD0678.3060209@tut.by" type="cite"><font
face="Liberation Sans"> <br>
But in both cases Xlibs and gtk2 libs have to be installed at
target system.<br>
</font></blockquote>
<font face="Liberation Sans">Not if the </font>target project does
not have a GUI. (This in fact is what I intend to do.)<br>
<br>
<font face="Liberation Sans">Thanks a lot,<br>
-Michael<br>
</font>
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