Installing GNU Radio: Use binaries!

Hi all,

one point of yesterday’s developer’s call was the available binaries.

A while back, installing GNU Radio meant installing it from source.
Anything else wasn’t really an option, which is why Marcus wrote
build-gnuradio to make that as painless as possible.

Things have changed! I would like to point out the fantastic work that
has been done by Maitland, who makes our Debian (and therefore Ubuntu)
packages, as well as the guys from Ettus, who host binaries for Ubuntu,
Fedora and Windows.

Nowadays, you don’t need to install from source. In fact, if you’re new
to all of this, we recommend you don’t. If you install from binaries,
you have a GNU Radio version that’s just fine.

There’s only one caveat: On some systems, the distributed packages might
be a bit too old. If it’s older than 3.6.0, installing by hand is
better.

Of course, if you’re a developer and need the latest and greatest
features, you can still use our git or tarballs. But if you’re just
trying it all out, just make your own life easier by using the binaries.

Hopefully we can get rid of the myth that GNU Radio is hard to install!

MB


Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Communications Engineering Lab (CEL)

Dipl.-Ing. Martin B.
Research Associate

Kaiserstraße 12
Building 05.01
76131 Karlsruhe

Phone: +49 721 608-43790
Fax: +49 721 608-46071
www.cel.kit.edu

KIT – University of the State of Baden-Württemberg and
National Laboratory of the Helmholtz Association

Il 19/04/13 11:21, Martin B. (CEL) ha scritto:

packages, as well as the guys from Ettus, who host binaries for Ubuntu,
Of course, if you’re a developer and need the latest and greatest
Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
[email protected]
Discuss-gnuradio Info Page
Hi Martin, sorry to bother you. I was wondering if there is a way to
build the deb from the source tarball. I made some time an attemp with
the following commands :

$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake -DCPACK_GENERATOR=deb …/
$ make package

and i almost was successful in doing that, however i had some issues
with the control version and the correct naming of the file. I am asking
this because binaries for ubuntu 13.04 are not still available and i’d
like to build one on my own…are these ones I’ve listed all the
correct steps to perform to build a binary file of gnuradio or not ?

Thank you in advance

Kind Regards,

              Arturo

On Thu, Apr 25, 2013 at 3:56 PM, Arturo R. [email protected]
wrote:

the control version and the correct naming of the file. I am asking this
because binaries for ubuntu 13.04 are not still available and i’d like to
build one on my own…are these ones I’ve listed all the correct steps to
perform to build a binary file of gnuradio or not ?

The CMake package infrastructure inside the GNU Radio source code tree
is
maintained and supported by Ettus R., which also distributes their
generated .deb files on their website as a free service to the GNU Radio
community. The official GNU Radio packages for Debian (that also get
picked up by Ubuntu) are maintained by Maitland B., who has
published
his packaging tools repository on the list here.

If you have been using the Ubuntu packages in the past, I recommend you
use
Maitland’s scripts, as the two different approaches to package
generation
are not compatible.