Hello, On Wed, 26 Aug 2009, Bob S wrote: [..]
bob@Easystreet:~> rpm -qa|fgrep gcc gcc-gij-4.1.3-29 gcc41-4.1.2_20061115-5 gcc-4.1.3-29 libgcc41-4.1.2_20061115-5 gcc41-gij-32bit-4.1.2_20061115-7 libgcc41-32bit-4.1.2_20061115-5 gcc41-gij-4.1.2_20061115-7 bob@Easystreet:~>
I see a slight discrepancy there. Shouldn't these all be either 4.1.2 or 4.1.3? Also, you might want to run rpm -V gcc-4.1.3-29 gcc41-4.1.2_20061115-5
The second link from David, ln -s `which gcc` /usr/local/bin/cc, created a link to "which gcc" which i guess means nothing.
Then you did not use the backticks ``. And of course, to be useful, "which gcc" must return the path to gcc.
But nvidia installer still complains. Where is gcc actually installed? rpm -qa finds it, but I can't. This is on my old 10.2 that I really want to keep for awhile and is 64 bit.
Hm. is the nvidia-driver 64bit? You might want to also install gcc-32bit. And gcc-c++ gcc41-c++. I'm just guessing wildly here though. You are aware, that 10.2 is out of support and there's quite a bunch of security bugs discovered since then? Have you updated/patched all affected packages? HTH, -dnh, having upgraded to 11.1 in Jan. for exactly that reason and also keeping an old system, so I know well what's involved in keeping a system secure. It's quite a bit of work. And not really worth it if you have not changed a whole lot. And the upgrade from 10.2 to 11.1 was quite smooth. -- "I can't go on meeting you like this. One of your faux pas seems to have wounded me deeply... in fact, I'm barely conscious. Please fix it and try again." -- a TeX message -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org