Difference between revisions of "Tonido"
From Amahi Wiki
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{{Code|yum install glibc.i686}} | {{Code|yum install glibc.i686}} | ||
* Download the 32-bit Ubuntu .deb package from Tonido | * Download the 32-bit Ubuntu .deb package from Tonido | ||
− | {{Link| | + | {{Link|http://www.tonido.com/download.php?TonidoSetup_i686.deb|TonidoSetup_i686.deb}} |
* Install ar: | * Install ar: | ||
{{Code|yum install ar}} | {{Code|yum install ar}} |
Revision as of 22:27, 7 June 2011
WARNING | |
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Not recommended for beginners. Proceed with caution! |
Tonido does not support Fedora nor is there a 64-bit version. I managed to make it work and thought I'd share how for those interested. A similar process should work on 32-bit Amahi installs.
NOTE: The 32-bit version has been packaged for Amahi and currently in Alpha status.
How to Install
- As root user, get some of the 32-bit libraries needed:
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yum install glibc.i686
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- Download the 32-bit Ubuntu .deb package from Tonido
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http://www.tonido.com/download.php?TonidoSetup_i686.deb
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- Install ar:
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yum install ar
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- Extract the contents of the Tonido .deb package:
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ar vx TonidoSetup_i686.deb
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You will have a data.tar.gz file after this; install its contents:
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tar xzf data.tar.gz -C /
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- Now we need to get a bunch of missing dependencies which we can do with an Ubuntu install disc.
- Download Ubuntu 32-bit CD install image and burn it
- make a couple of directories under /mnt:
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mkdir /mnt/tmp mkdir /mnt/tmp2
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- Insert the Ubuntu disc and mount it. You can either let it automount or in my case I did it explicitly:
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umount /dev/sr0 mount /dev/sr0 /mnt/tmp
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- Go to the "casper" directory on the Ubuntu CD and mount filesystem.squashfs:
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mount /mnt/tmp/casper/filesystem.squashfs /mnt/tmp2 cd /usr/local/tonido
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- Try to start Tonido with:
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./tonido.sh start
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- It will fail. To see the missing dependency, use:
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cat /tmp/tonido_root.log
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You'll see something like:
/usr/local/tonido//tonidoconsole: error while loading shared libraries: libz.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
- Find the missing dependency in the lib or usr/lib directory of the mounted Ubuntu squashfs. I would typically do something like:
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find /tmp2/lib /tmp2/usr/lib | grep libz.so.1
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- Copy the file you find (and if it is a symlink, the file it links to) to the /usr/local/tonido directory
Try start Tonido again. Keep doing these last few steps (start, check for failure, copy missing dependencies) until instead of an error in the log you see:
Tonido: v2.28.0.13941
- Now you can open a browser window and go to http://localhost:10001 to continue with Tonido. If you have problems with Tonido (e.g. if playing music doesn't work) check the log again for further dependencies (I needed libncurses for example for music playack).
- When I was done with this I had added the following libraries to /usr/local/tonido:
libcrypto.so.0.9.8 libexpat.so.1 libexpat.so.1.5.2 libfontconfig.so.1 libfontconfig.so.1.4.4 libfreetype.so.6 libfreetype.so.6.6.2 libgd.so libgd.so.2 libgd.so.2.0.0 libjpeg.so.62 libjpeg.so.62.0.0 libncurses.so.5 libncurses.so.5.7 libpng12.so.0 libpng12.so.0.44.0 libssl3.so libssl.so.0.9.8 libssl.so.10 libssl.so.1.0.0a libstdc++.so.6 libstdc++.so.6.0.14 libz.so.1 libz.so.1.2.3.4
Create web-app (OPTIONAL)
- Enable Advanced Settings in the Amahi Dashboard (Settings-->Settings)
- Select apps-->web-app
- Create web app named tonido
- As root user do the following:
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ll /etc/httpd/conf.d
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- Edit the file below based on the previous command:
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vi /etc/httpd/conf.d/####-tonido.conf
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- Add this after the ServerAlias line and save:
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RedirectPermanent / http://localhost:10001
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- Restart the web server:
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service httpd restart
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- You can now access it via http://tonido