Bertalan Fodor (LilyPondTool) wrote:
The goal of this iso to make it usable on a virtualization tool. The
open source Sun VirtualBox can for example mount this as the virtual
hard disk.
Once it's ready maybe I can create a torrent? I've never done that
before but it's probably the best way to transfer it. It'll take a
while.
I can also give you FTP access to one of the servers run by me where you
could upload it. That would be the easiest.
Success! Ok here's what I have:
lilybuntu.iso (717 MB)
It's based on standard Ubuntu 9.04 with GNOME desktop environment.
I figured this would be the most user-friendly interface for
Linux newbies. Almost all desktop applications have been removed.
The only big one left is Firefox. It has Gedit, nano, or
vim-tiny text editors, Evince document viewer, gnome-terminal, and
the nice GUIs for package management and all repos enabled if
users want to install anything else.
It has all dependencies necessary to build Lilypond and the
Documentation, including texi2html 1.82, which I compiled myself
and is a few versions newer than what's available in the Ubuntu
repo.
I tried hard to get it under 700 MB but couldn't get it there. I
got it down to 717 from 853 by removing all the texlive
documentation (I didn't realize that for every package
"texlive-foo" it was also installing "texlive-foo-doc").
After making the .iso I tested it in Sun VirtualBox OSE and
everything worked perfectly. Here are the exact steps I followed
(see if you think they're noob-friendly enough):
1. Install the OS in VirtualBox, then restart the virtual machine
and log in
2. open a terminal
3. open firefox
4. Get lilypond source code from git by copying the terminal
commands in CG (have to use Ctrl+Shift+V to paste into terminal)
5. run ./autogen.sh, then "make all" and "sudo make install"
6. cd Documentation/user
7. make doc
8. use Evince to view pdf output
It took a while for everything to build since I only allocated 384
Mb of RAM to the VM, but it worked flawlessly.
Bert, if you send me ftp login info privately I can upload it to
your server. Maybe I can do it at the office in evening hours and
it'll go a lot faster. I only have 256K upload speed at home. :(
Jon
--
Jonathan Kulp
http://www.jonathankulp.com
_______________________________________________
lilypond-devel mailing list
lilypond-devel@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel