Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-22 Thread Murray Thomson
Hi Marcus,

I used a new installation of 12.04. I got the sources for 3.7.7.1 instead
of 3.7.7 this time. The generated debian package works fine.
My previous environment could have been wrong or maybe it was something in
3.7.7.
In any case, thanks a lot for your help.

Cheers,
Murray

2015-06-19 16:36 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

  Hi Murray,

 that's strange:

  ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object file:
 No such file or directory

 contradicts

 libboost_system.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71d8000)


 There's something seriously wrong about this situation. If not
 gnuradio-config-info was linked against boost 1.58 symbols, then one of the
 libraries it tries to use one your second PC is. That error comes from
 *somewhere*. Maybe you'd want to compare the ldd $(...) output of both
 systems, especially the individual paths of the libraries. Did you happen
 to build a custom boost on the second machine at some point?

 Best regards,
 Marcus


 On 06/19/2015 05:27 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:

 Hello again

 2015-06-19 14:35 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

  Hi!

 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
  ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object file:
 No such file or directory


  This means that the gnuradio-config-info was definitely built with
 another version of boost (1.58) than what is found at the moment you start
 it.

 This is what I thought too but  sudo find / -name libboost* only finds
 libraries for boost 1.46 and 1.48.

   The point about distributions is that they strive to keep all their
 libraries coherent in one release. So, although the install script might
 have installed the modern boost version correctly and set up some paths so
 that on your first PC, linux knows where to look for boost 1.58, on the
 other, this won't work automatically.
 You can find out where the libboost_system.so.1.58.0 is on the system
 where it works by running ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info).

  The system works but win a Gnuradio installed from the build_gnuradio
 script, not the debian package that I built.
 user@pc:~$ ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info)
 linux-gate.so.1 =  (0xb776)
 libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
 /usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb7671000)
 libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 =
 /usr/lib/libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 (0xb7612000)
 libpthread.so.0 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0 (0xb75f6000)
 libstdc++.so.6 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6 (0xb7511000)
 libgcc_s.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 (0xb74f3000)
 libc.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0xb7349000)
 libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
 /usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb730b000)
 libvolk.so.1.0 = /usr/local/lib/libvolk.so.1.0 (0xb71fa000)
 libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0 =
 /usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0 (0xb71dc000)
 libboost_system.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71d8000)
 libboost_thread.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_thread.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71bf000)
 librt.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/librt.so.1 (0xb71b6000)
 libm.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libm.so.6 (0xb7189000)
 /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb7761000)
 liborc-0.4.so.0 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/liborc-0.4.so.0 (0xb70f9000)


 So the question is: which tool did you exactly use to install GNU Radio?

 I used cmake with the following parameters:
 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr SYSCONFDIR=/etc
 -DENABLE_STATIC_LIBS=False \
 -DENABLE_DOXYGEN=False -DENABLE_GR_WXGUI=OFF -DENABLE_GR_VOCODER=OFF \
 -DENABLE_GR_DTV=OFF -DENABLE_GR_ATSC=OFF ..


  If you use pyBOMBS, you get the ability to install everything, including
 updated versions of boost etc., into a specific private directory, and
 generate a script that sets up all paths accordingly. You can then just
 copy that prefix and script over to the other PC; that's pretty
 distribution agnostic, but to be honest: If you wanted to make packages for
 all the things that GNU Radio likes to have a bit more recent, you'd be
 basically producing packages for half the development libraries that GNU
 Radio needs -- 12.04 is 3 years old...

 I wish I could upgrade my Ubuntu but I'm stack with 12.04 for other
 reasons. I'll try the pybombs way and also the same method for gnuradio
 3.7.5 to check that I get the same error



 Best regards,
 Marcus


  Thank you for your help
  Murray


 On 06/19/2015 02:52 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:

   Thanks for that Marcus, I got around that first step.

 My computer runs Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48 and it has a working
 gnuradio installation v3.7.7.1-120-g67463e74 from the script in the web.
 I used that computer to create the debian package based on
 https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio.git tag v3.7.7 and I installed it
 in another Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48.
  get the following error message when running this command or any 

Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Marcus Müller
Hi!
 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
 ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object
 file: No such file or directory

This means that the gnuradio-config-info was definitely built with
another version of boost (1.58) than what is found at the moment you
start it.
The point about distributions is that they strive to keep all their
libraries coherent in one release. So, although the install script might
have installed the modern boost version correctly and set up some paths
so that on your first PC, linux knows where to look for boost 1.58, on
the other, this won't work automatically.
You can find out where the libboost_system.so.1.58.0 is on the system
where it works by running ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info).

So the question is: which tool did you exactly use to install GNU Radio?

If you use pyBOMBS, you get the ability to install everything, including
updated versions of boost etc., into a specific private directory, and
generate a script that sets up all paths accordingly. You can then just
copy that prefix and script over to the other PC; that's pretty
distribution agnostic, but to be honest: If you wanted to make packages
for all the things that GNU Radio likes to have a bit more recent, you'd
be basically producing packages for half the development libraries that
GNU Radio needs -- 12.04 is 3 years old...

Best regards,
Marcus

On 06/19/2015 02:52 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:
 Thanks for that Marcus, I got around that first step.

 My computer runs Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48 and it has a working
 gnuradio installation v3.7.7.1-120-g67463e74 from the script in the web.
 I used that computer to create the debian package based on
 https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio.git tag v3.7.7 and I installed it
 in another Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48.
  get the following error message when running this command or any
 simple gnuradio script:

 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
 ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object
 file: No such file or directory

 I first thought that 3.7.7 must depend on libboost 1.58 but it works
 well with 1.48 when I use the script to install it so, how did that
 dependency get there?

 My debian has installed files into the folders /etc, /usr/bin,
 /usr/lib, /usr/share, /usr/include and my control file depends on the
 following packages:

 Depends: libfftw3-3, libpulse0, python, python-numpy, python-gtk2,
 python-wxgtk2.8, python-qwt5-qt4, python-lxml, python-cheetah,
 python-qt4, python-qwt5-qt4, libpulse0, libasound2, alsa-base,
 libboost-program-options1.48.0, libboost-filesystem1.48.0,
 libboost-thread1.48.0, libqtcore4, libsdl1.2debian, libgsl0ldbl,
 liborc-0.4-0, libusb-1.0-0, sdcc

 I'm using

 PATH = /usr/bin
 LD_LIBRARY = /usr/lib
 PYTHONPATH =
 /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/:/usr/lib/python2.7/:/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
 PKG_CONFIG_PATH = /usr/lib/pkgconfig

 Could someone point me in the right direction please?

 Cheers,
 Murray

 2015-06-19 10:42 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com
 mailto:marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

 Hi Murray,

 you'd typically do something like:

 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr ..

 to match what debian expects.
 Then, instead of simply installing stuff there, you install into
 your fake root directory using
 make
 make install DESTDIR=/home/murray/fake_root/whatever

 That will only bend around the paths where files are copied to,
 not the paths contained in the files themselves

 Best regards,
 Marcus


 On 06/19/2015 11:06 AM, Murray Thomson wrote:
 Hi,

 I need a GnuRadio debian package for version 3.7.7.1 to be
 installed in many different computers. I've tried creating it
 myself but I run into many difficulties. For example the command
 gnuradio-config-info --prefix --prefsdir --sysconfdir was
 pointing to the folder where I created the debian.

 I found a package for Arch linux in
 https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/gnuradio/
 And I was going to try to convert it to a debian. Before I do
 that. Is there a repo where I can find this? Ideally
 gnuradio-companion (including gnuradio) version 3.7.7.1 for both
 x86_64 and i636 debian package that will be installed in an
 Ubuntu 12.04 system.

 Thanks a lot,
 Murray


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Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Murray Thomson
Thanks for that Marcus, I got around that first step.

My computer runs Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48 and it has a working
gnuradio installation v3.7.7.1-120-g67463e74 from the script in the web.
I used that computer to create the debian package based on
https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio.git tag v3.7.7 and I installed it in
another Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48.
 get the following error message when running this command or any simple
gnuradio script:

user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object file: No
such file or directory

I first thought that 3.7.7 must depend on libboost 1.58 but it works well
with 1.48 when I use the script to install it so, how did that dependency
get there?

My debian has installed files into the folders /etc, /usr/bin, /usr/lib,
/usr/share, /usr/include and my control file depends on the following
packages:

Depends: libfftw3-3, libpulse0, python, python-numpy, python-gtk2,
python-wxgtk2.8, python-qwt5-qt4, python-lxml, python-cheetah, python-qt4,
python-qwt5-qt4, libpulse0, libasound2, alsa-base,
libboost-program-options1.48.0, libboost-filesystem1.48.0,
libboost-thread1.48.0, libqtcore4, libsdl1.2debian, libgsl0ldbl,
liborc-0.4-0, libusb-1.0-0, sdcc

I'm using

PATH = /usr/bin
LD_LIBRARY = /usr/lib
PYTHONPATH =
/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/:/usr/lib/python2.7/:/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
PKG_CONFIG_PATH = /usr/lib/pkgconfig

Could someone point me in the right direction please?

Cheers,
Murray

2015-06-19 10:42 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

  Hi Murray,

 you'd typically do something like:

 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr ..

 to match what debian expects.
 Then, instead of simply installing stuff there, you install into your fake
 root directory using
 make
 make install DESTDIR=/home/murray/fake_root/whatever

 That will only bend around the paths where files are copied to, not the
 paths contained in the files themselves

 Best regards,
 Marcus


 On 06/19/2015 11:06 AM, Murray Thomson wrote:

   Hi,

  I need a GnuRadio debian package for version 3.7.7.1 to be installed in
 many different computers. I've tried creating it myself but I run into many
 difficulties. For example the command gnuradio-config-info --prefix
 --prefsdir --sysconfdir was pointing to the folder where I created the
 debian.

 I found a package for Arch linux in
 https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/gnuradio/
  And I was going to try to convert it to a debian. Before I do that. Is
 there a repo where I can find this? Ideally gnuradio-companion (including
 gnuradio) version 3.7.7.1 for both x86_64 and i636 debian package that will
 be installed in an Ubuntu 12.04 system.

  Thanks a lot,
  Murray


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[Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Murray Thomson
Hi,

I need a GnuRadio debian package for version 3.7.7.1 to be installed in
many different computers. I've tried creating it myself but I run into many
difficulties. For example the command gnuradio-config-info --prefix
--prefsdir --sysconfdir was pointing to the folder where I created the
debian.

I found a package for Arch linux in
https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/gnuradio/
And I was going to try to convert it to a debian. Before I do that. Is
there a repo where I can find this? Ideally gnuradio-companion (including
gnuradio) version 3.7.7.1 for both x86_64 and i636 debian package that will
be installed in an Ubuntu 12.04 system.

Thanks a lot,
Murray
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Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Marcus Müller
Hi Murray,

you'd typically do something like:

cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr ..

to match what debian expects.
Then, instead of simply installing stuff there, you install into your
fake root directory using
make
make install DESTDIR=/home/murray/fake_root/whatever

That will only bend around the paths where files are copied to, not the
paths contained in the files themselves

Best regards,
Marcus

On 06/19/2015 11:06 AM, Murray Thomson wrote:
 Hi,

 I need a GnuRadio debian package for version 3.7.7.1 to be installed
 in many different computers. I've tried creating it myself but I run
 into many difficulties. For example the command gnuradio-config-info
 --prefix --prefsdir --sysconfdir was pointing to the folder where I
 created the debian.

 I found a package for Arch linux in
 https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/gnuradio/
 And I was going to try to convert it to a debian. Before I do that. Is
 there a repo where I can find this? Ideally gnuradio-companion
 (including gnuradio) version 3.7.7.1 for both x86_64 and i636 debian
 package that will be installed in an Ubuntu 12.04 system.

 Thanks a lot,
 Murray


 ___
 Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
 Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org
 https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio

___
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Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Murray Thomson
Hello again

2015-06-19 14:35 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

  Hi!

 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
  ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object file:
 No such file or directory


 This means that the gnuradio-config-info was definitely built with another
 version of boost (1.58) than what is found at the moment you start it.

This is what I thought too but  sudo find / -name libboost* only finds
libraries for boost 1.46 and 1.48.

The point about distributions is that they strive to keep all their
 libraries coherent in one release. So, although the install script might
 have installed the modern boost version correctly and set up some paths so
 that on your first PC, linux knows where to look for boost 1.58, on the
 other, this won't work automatically.
 You can find out where the libboost_system.so.1.58.0 is on the system
 where it works by running ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info).

The system works but win a Gnuradio installed from the build_gnuradio
script, not the debian package that I built.
user@pc:~$ ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info)
linux-gate.so.1 =  (0xb776)
libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
/usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb7671000)
libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 =
/usr/lib/libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 (0xb7612000)
libpthread.so.0 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0 (0xb75f6000)
libstdc++.so.6 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6 (0xb7511000)
libgcc_s.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 (0xb74f3000)
libc.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0xb7349000)
libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
/usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb730b000)
libvolk.so.1.0 = /usr/local/lib/libvolk.so.1.0 (0xb71fa000)
libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0
(0xb71dc000)
libboost_system.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.48.0
(0xb71d8000)
libboost_thread.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_thread.so.1.48.0
(0xb71bf000)
librt.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/librt.so.1 (0xb71b6000)
libm.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libm.so.6 (0xb7189000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb7761000)
liborc-0.4.so.0 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/liborc-0.4.so.0 (0xb70f9000)


 So the question is: which tool did you exactly use to install GNU Radio?

I used cmake with the following parameters:
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr SYSCONFDIR=/etc
-DENABLE_STATIC_LIBS=False \
-DENABLE_DOXYGEN=False -DENABLE_GR_WXGUI=OFF -DENABLE_GR_VOCODER=OFF \
-DENABLE_GR_DTV=OFF -DENABLE_GR_ATSC=OFF ..


 If you use pyBOMBS, you get the ability to install everything, including
 updated versions of boost etc., into a specific private directory, and
 generate a script that sets up all paths accordingly. You can then just
 copy that prefix and script over to the other PC; that's pretty
 distribution agnostic, but to be honest: If you wanted to make packages for
 all the things that GNU Radio likes to have a bit more recent, you'd be
 basically producing packages for half the development libraries that GNU
 Radio needs -- 12.04 is 3 years old...

I wish I could upgrade my Ubuntu but I'm stack with 12.04 for other
reasons. I'll try the pybombs way and also the same method for gnuradio
3.7.5 to check that I get the same error



 Best regards,
 Marcus


Thank you for your help
Murray


 On 06/19/2015 02:52 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:

   Thanks for that Marcus, I got around that first step.

 My computer runs Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48 and it has a working
 gnuradio installation v3.7.7.1-120-g67463e74 from the script in the web.
 I used that computer to create the debian package based on
 https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio.git tag v3.7.7 and I installed it in
 another Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48.
  get the following error message when running this command or any simple
 gnuradio script:

  user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
  ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object file:
 No such file or directory

  I first thought that 3.7.7 must depend on libboost 1.58 but it works well
 with 1.48 when I use the script to install it so, how did that dependency
 get there?

 My debian has installed files into the folders /etc, /usr/bin, /usr/lib,
 /usr/share, /usr/include and my control file depends on the following
 packages:

 Depends: libfftw3-3, libpulse0, python, python-numpy, python-gtk2,
 python-wxgtk2.8, python-qwt5-qt4, python-lxml, python-cheetah, python-qt4,
 python-qwt5-qt4, libpulse0, libasound2, alsa-base,
 libboost-program-options1.48.0, libboost-filesystem1.48.0,
 libboost-thread1.48.0, libqtcore4, libsdl1.2debian, libgsl0ldbl,
 liborc-0.4-0, libusb-1.0-0, sdcc

  I'm using

  PATH = /usr/bin
  LD_LIBRARY = /usr/lib
  PYTHONPATH =
 /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/:/usr/lib/python2.7/:/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
  PKG_CONFIG_PATH = /usr/lib/pkgconfig

 Could someone point me in the right direction please?

 Cheers,
  Murray

 2015-06-19 10:42 

Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] gnuradio-companion-3.7.7.1 debian package

2015-06-19 Thread Marcus Müller
Hi Murray,

that's strange:

 ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object
file: No such file or directory

contradicts
 libboost_system.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71d8000)

There's something seriously wrong about this situation. If not
gnuradio-config-info was linked against boost 1.58 symbols, then one of
the libraries it tries to use one your second PC is. That error comes
from /somewhere/. Maybe you'd want to compare the ldd $(...) output of
both systems, especially the individual paths of the libraries. Did you
happen to build a custom boost on the second machine at some point?

Best regards,
Marcus

On 06/19/2015 05:27 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:
 Hello again

 2015-06-19 14:35 GMT+01:00 Marcus Müller marcus.muel...@ettus.com
 mailto:marcus.muel...@ettus.com:

 Hi!
 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
 ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object
 file: No such file or directory

 This means that the gnuradio-config-info was definitely built with
 another version of boost (1.58) than what is found at the moment
 you start it.

 This is what I thought too but  sudo find / -name libboost* only
 finds libraries for boost 1.46 and 1.48.

 The point about distributions is that they strive to keep all
 their libraries coherent in one release. So, although the install
 script might have installed the modern boost version correctly and
 set up some paths so that on your first PC, linux knows where to
 look for boost 1.58, on the other, this won't work automatically.
 You can find out where the libboost_system.so.1.58.0 is on the
 system where it works by running ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info).

 The system works but win a Gnuradio installed from the build_gnuradio
 script, not the debian package that I built.
 user@pc:~$ ldd $(which gnuradio-config-info)
 linux-gate.so.1 =  (0xb776)
 libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
 /usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-runtime-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb7671000)
 libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 =
 /usr/lib/libboost_program_options.so.1.48.0 (0xb7612000)
 libpthread.so.0 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0 (0xb75f6000)
 libstdc++.so.6 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6 (0xb7511000)
 libgcc_s.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libgcc_s.so.1 (0xb74f3000)
 libc.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0xb7349000)
 libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 =
 /usr/local/lib/libgnuradio-pmt-3.7.8git.so.0.0.0 (0xb730b000)
 libvolk.so.1.0 = /usr/local/lib/libvolk.so.1.0 (0xb71fa000)
 libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0 =
 /usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.so.1.48.0 (0xb71dc000)
 libboost_system.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_system.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71d8000)
 libboost_thread.so.1.48.0 = /usr/lib/libboost_thread.so.1.48.0
 (0xb71bf000)
 librt.so.1 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/librt.so.1 (0xb71b6000)
 libm.so.6 = /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libm.so.6 (0xb7189000)
 /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb7761000)
 liborc-0.4.so.0 = /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/liborc-0.4.so.0
 (0xb70f9000)


 So the question is: which tool did you exactly use to install GNU
 Radio?

 I used cmake with the following parameters:
 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr SYSCONFDIR=/etc
 -DENABLE_STATIC_LIBS=False \
 -DENABLE_DOXYGEN=False -DENABLE_GR_WXGUI=OFF -DENABLE_GR_VOCODER=OFF \
 -DENABLE_GR_DTV=OFF -DENABLE_GR_ATSC=OFF ..
  

 If you use pyBOMBS, you get the ability to install everything,
 including updated versions of boost etc., into a specific private
 directory, and generate a script that sets up all paths
 accordingly. You can then just copy that prefix and script over to
 the other PC; that's pretty distribution agnostic, but to be
 honest: If you wanted to make packages for all the things that GNU
 Radio likes to have a bit more recent, you'd be basically
 producing packages for half the development libraries that GNU
 Radio needs -- 12.04 is 3 years old...

 I wish I could upgrade my Ubuntu but I'm stack with 12.04 for other
 reasons. I'll try the pybombs way and also the same method for
 gnuradio 3.7.5 to check that I get the same error
  


 Best regards,
 Marcus


 Thank you for your help
 Murray


 On 06/19/2015 02:52 PM, Murray Thomson wrote:
 Thanks for that Marcus, I got around that first step.

 My computer runs Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48 and it has a
 working gnuradio installation v3.7.7.1-120-g67463e74 from the
 script in the web.
 I used that computer to create the debian package based on
 https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio.git tag v3.7.7 and I
 installed it in another Ubuntu 12.04 with libboost 1.48.
  get the following error message when running this command or any
 simple gnuradio script:

 user@pc:~$ gnuradio-config-info
 ImportError: libboost_system.so.1.58.0: cannot open shared object
 file: No such file or directory

 I first thought that 3.7.7