I did opam init and it was already initialised. It has been for months.  Debug 
didn't work. I got too many arguments for install liquodsoap and command not 
found for putting it after the install liquidsoap statement.
> On Apr 4, 2016, at 11:10 AM, Nicholas Vrtis <nick.vr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I am sorry to be picky, but you have not confirmed that you have installed 
> the necessary packages from jessie.
> 
> you also need to make sure you have run:
> 
> opam init
> 
> also, you can try:
> 
> opam --debug install liquidsoap
> 
> (I don't remember if the --debug goes before or after).
> 
> The log you posted did not help much. :(
> 
> On Mon, Apr 4, 2016 at 1:22 PM, Sarah Alawami <marri...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:marri...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> Any progress here? I don't mind beeing down, I have until the second week of 
> June to solve this, but I don't want to solve this last minute. Lol! After 
> doing the steps you outlined the compilation still failed as hopefully my 
> output file I linked to showed.
> 
> Take care.
>> On Apr 3, 2016, at 1:34 PM, Nicholas Vrtis <nick.vr...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:nick.vr...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> Did you move the liquidsoap binary to /usr/bin/ (I think that is normally in 
>> your path).  The opan install leaves it buried deep under the install 
>> directory.
>> 
>> Here are the notes I took when I did the install on a Pi.  Note the part 
>> about updating bashrc and logging out and back in.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Well, I figured out how to get it compiled on the Raspberry Pi 2 (the 
>> process will probably work on a B+, but I do not have a spare one of those 
>> to try it on).
>> 
>> Here is what I did.  A number of steps, but pretty simple, and all worked 
>> 'out of the box'.
>> 
>> 1) I started with 2015-11-21-raspbian-jessie-lite ( didn't need the GUI, and 
>> office etc.)
>> 2) SSH in as user 'pi' (if you have a keyboard and monitor attached, that 
>> will work just as well).
>> 3) sudo raspi-config at minimum you will need to expand the file system to 
>> the whole SD card.  And you SHOULD change the password.
>> 4) sudo aptitude (I like to use aptitude instead of apt-get just because it 
>> is easier to search, and has a simple menu).
>> 5) u (lowercase u) will update all the repository information
>> 6) U (uppercase u) will make anything that is upgradeable.
>> 7) g to review the upgrades
>> 8) g (again) to apply the upgrades.
>> 
>> Cool.. now we have an up to date raspbian jessie system. On to installing 
>> liquidsoap.  There are a number of debian packages that need to be installed 
>> befor OPAM will work
>> 
>> 1) sudo aptitude
>> 2) a slash (/) will bring up the aptitude search.
>> 3) search for opam (you will find opam-doc and opam) install them both (hit 
>> the plus (+) on each line
>> 4) search for camlp4-extra and + it
>> 5) search for libpcre-ocaml-dev + it
>> 6) search for libmad-ocaml-dev + it
>> 7) search for m4 (you will find a bunch you do NOT want.. you want m4-doc 
>> and m4 + those two.
>> 8) press g to review
>> 9) press g again to apply..  get a coffee (or beverage of choice).  This 
>> will take about 15-30 minutes.
>> 
>> Eventually, you will get a message 'press return to continue'..  do that, q 
>> to quit aptitude, and y to really quit.
>> 
>> whew....
>> 
>> now make a backup copy of .bashrc (note.. there is a period at the beginning 
>> of the name).
>> cp .bashrc NoOPAMbashrc
>> Technically, this is optional, but OPAM init will need to add to the PATH 
>> environment and that can be confusing if you try to run liquidsoap under a 
>> different user.
>> 
>> Now set up opam
>> 
>> opam init
>> 
>> this will do a 'bunch of stuff' and eventually ask you if you want to update 
>> .bashrc  (you MUST reply 'y' - the default is N).
>> 
>> logout and log back in to pick up the changes to your environment.
>> 
>> then it is simply
>> 
>> opam install liquidsoap
>> 
>> once that completes, you should be able to just type liquidsoap --version 
>> and see the beauty...
>> 
>> eventually, we will need to move liquidsoap from deep inside the ~.opam 
>> directory to a more normal directory to put it in the usual path.  but this 
>> is enough to work with as long as you are running under the user pi.
>> 
>> Your milage may vary, but figure about 2 hours from writing the SD card to 
>> running liquidsoap (which isn't too bad).
>> 
>> Nick
>> 
>> 
>> On Sun, Apr 3, 2016 at 4:08 PM, Sarah Alawami <marri...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:marri...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> Hello to all. I installed via opam liquidsoap 1.2. The installation went 
>> good, or seemed to, except I get the command not found when trying to enter 
>> any liquidsoap commands.  For what it's worth here is my messages log file.
>> https://www.dropbox.com/s/uf3bt4lbsreu3fs/messages.txt?dl=1 
>> <https://www.dropbox.com/s/uf3bt4lbsreu3fs/messages.txt?dl=1>
>> 
>> I don't remember receiving any error messages  during install, but I don't 
>> also remember seeing all of the plugins the apt-get version instlled to 
>> allow playback of mp3, wav and aac files. did I brake it?
>>  If the link brakes change it to a 0 then see if you can still dl the text 
>> file.
>> 
>> hope that helps a bit.
> 
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