If you're going to install from source, you need to read and follow this: http://www.mono-project.com/Parallel_Mono_Environments
Chances are that before, you installed your custom mono into a non-/usr prefix, and Banshee was looking for gtk-sharp and friends in the older /usr-installed Mono. But the best thing, as Alan suggests, is to use a recent distro with recent Mono packages. On openSUSE, for example, you can subscribe to a repository that gets you preview versions of Mono if you need them. Sandy On 03/08/2009 12:54 PM, b0wter wrote: > Hi, > > thats what i tryed before i posted here. Sorry that i missed to mention > that. > But i dont know what to do for an all new clean installation. I guessed i > have missed some steps the last time i tried (I just used my packet manger > to remove all packages that i found searching for mono and having to do > something with the framework). > > Johannes > > > Alan McGovern-2 wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Your best bet would be to undo everything you've done to install >> mono/monodevelop/gtk-sharp and then install the versions supplied in your >> package manager instead. You have a broken install and I couldn't even >> begin >> to offer any sort of hints on how to fix it unless i knew exactly what was >> on your system before and exactly what you did to 'download and install >> mono >> manually'. >> >> Alan. >> > _______________________________________________ Mono-list maillist - Mono-list@lists.ximian.com http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-list