Re: Buliding DSFML2? (64-bit Linux) (New info)

2011-03-18 Thread Sean Eskapp
== Quote from Jonathan M Davis (jmdavisp...@gmx.com)'s article
 On Friday, March 18, 2011 17:56:44 Sean Eskapp wrote:
  I've been trying for weeks to build the D bindings of SFML2, but
with
  little success. The main issue is that I get a myriad of linker
errors
  (documented at http://www.sfml-dev.org/forum/viewtopic.php?
p=28345#28345),
  but I can't figure out what linking options would solve them.
 
  Can anybody shed some light on this?
 Just glancing at it, it looks like you might be missing pthreads,
though that
 would be pretty weird. You don't normally need to specify -
lpthread. But those
 symbols sure look like they're likely pthread-related.
 - Jonathan M Davis

I've tried -lpthread and -lm, and neither seemed to help. Is it
possible there are platform issues, since D (to my knowledge) is 32-
bit, and I'm 64-bit?


Re: Buliding DSFML2? (64-bit Linux) (New info)

2011-03-18 Thread Jonathan M Davis
On Friday, March 18, 2011 18:58:49 Sean Eskapp wrote:
 == Quote from Jonathan M Davis (jmdavisp...@gmx.com)'s article
 
  On Friday, March 18, 2011 17:56:44 Sean Eskapp wrote:
   I've been trying for weeks to build the D bindings of SFML2, but
 
 with
 
   little success. The main issue is that I get a myriad of linker
 
 errors
 
   (documented at http://www.sfml-dev.org/forum/viewtopic.php?
 
 p=28345#28345),
 
   but I can't figure out what linking options would solve them.
   
   Can anybody shed some light on this?
  
  Just glancing at it, it looks like you might be missing pthreads,
 
 though that
 
  would be pretty weird. You don't normally need to specify -
 
 lpthread. But those
 
  symbols sure look like they're likely pthread-related.
  - Jonathan M Davis
 
 I've tried -lpthread and -lm, and neither seemed to help. Is it
 possible there are platform issues, since D (to my knowledge) is 32-
 bit, and I'm 64-bit?

Well, as of dmd 2.052, if you pass -m64 to dmd, it'll compile in 64-bit on 
Linux, but if you don't pass it -m64 (or if you explicitly pass it -m32), it 
will compile in 32-bit. And if it's compiling in 32-bit, then you need the 32-
bit versions of whatever libraries that you're using. pthread is one of them. 
So, if you don't have a 32-bit version of pthread installed, then that would 
explain it.

- Jonathan M Davis