Bug#874853: [cmtk] Future Qt4 removal from Buster

2019-10-31 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
No plans for Qt5 whatsoever. The only thing to note here is that Qt is actually optional for the vast majority of CMTK's tools. The package config could probably be changed to build without GUI support, which would remove the dependency on Qt. Am Do., 31. Okt. 2019 um 15:57 Uhr schrieb Moritz

Bug#919727:

2019-01-24 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
Hello again - So I don't know how you guys pull CMTK sources, but I just published a new release with the DCMTK compile errors fixed. Download here: https://www.nitrc.org/frs/download.php/11132/CMTK-3.3.1p1-Source.tar.gz Or from SVN at NITRC via https://nitrc.org/svn/cmtk/releases/3.3.1p1

Bug#919727: cmtk /dcmtk

2019-01-21 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
=== On Mon, Jan 21, 2019 at 8:08 PM Yaroslav Halchenko wrote: > > On Mon, 21 Jan 2019, Torsten Rohlfing wrote: > > >Hi there - > >Upstream owner of CMTK here. It looks like DCMTK in release 3.6.4 > changed > >their API for locking/

Bug#919727: cmtk /dcmtk

2019-01-21 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
Hi there - Upstream owner of CMTK here. It looks like DCMTK in release 3.6.4 changed their API for locking/unlocking the global data dictionary. I am going to look into fixing this, but it'll take a while since I'll have to set up a suitable Debian VM for testing first. Best, Torsten

Bug#772217: fixed in cmtk 3.2.2-1.1

2014-12-15 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
Thanks from me as well. It seems that your patch is more sophisticated than my upstream fix (which essentially just switches the scripts shebang to /bin/bash). Please let me know if you want me to deploy your patch instead. Best, Torsten On Dec 15, 2014 6:36 AM, Yaroslav Halchenko

Bug#713341: cmtk: FTBFS: CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:53 (INCLUDE): include could not find load file: /«PKGBUILDDIR»/obj-x86_64-linux-gnu/CMakeFiles/CMakeSystem.cmake

2013-06-24 Thread Torsten Rohlfing
the archive rebuild: The rebuild was done on EC2 VM instances from Amazon Web Services, using a clean, minimal and up-to-date chroot. Every failed build was retried once to eliminate random failures. -- Torsten Rohlfing, PhD SRI International, Neuroscience Program Program Director