Hello - I'm not a Unix guru, but I can get around okay. I'm trying to build icecast on my system, but when I run the configure program, it ends with the following error: "XSLT configuration could not be found" I could send you the config.log, if that helps. I'm not sure how to solve this error -- can you provide any pointers? I do have libxslt.so on my system. Much thanks. -Christopher christopher@barsuk.com
On Tuesday, 08 March 2005 at 16:03, Christopher Possanza wrote:> Hello - > > I'm not a Unix guru, but I can get around okay. I'm trying to build icecast > on my system, but when I run the configure program, it ends with the > following error: > > "XSLT configuration could not be found"you need the headers and the xslt-config program as well as the library. These are probably in a package called something like libxslt-devel or libxslt-dev, depending on your distribution. Also make sure that xslt-config is in your PATH before you run configure (in case you're not using a libxslt package).> -Christopher > christopher@barsuk.comGreat label, by the way.
Hi folks: this is my second question at this list and I wanted to mention that with answers and guides I got from 2 persons last time, I got a quite low rate stream in vorbis ogg, in about 5 minutes after reading what you wrote- Thanks! Well after that, I pointed my attention to the so called AAC, and after tweaking a bit I got my AAC stream up and connected to Icecast serv. I was a bit dissapointed about AAC, as I thought this was better encoding/compression than OGG. I alpologise if I express my selv badly about the technical detail, but the thing is that at low bitrates (lets say between 20 and 80 kbps) OGG sounds a lot better than AAC. As I still believe AAC is a really good one, maybe somebody can tell a little about where or how I can get the best result with it. (I can hear an anoying sound "behind" the good one, something like metal/glass chorus at low rates with aac). Thanks: CC