Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "cdlabelgen".
2018 Jan 02
3
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
Hi,
I've been using the nifty little application Gtkcdlabel for making CD
and DVD covers since 2005, if I remember correctly. Later versions are
written in Python, and it's a graphical frontend to the cdlabelgen utility.
The application doesn't look very well maintained, since the 1.15
release dates back to 2011. Nevertheless, I've been successfully running
it on Slackware Linux until the latest 14.2 release.
I'm currently trying to install it on CentOS 7, and I'm only having a
partial su...
2018 Jan 02
3
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
..., Frank Cox a ?crit :
> Since you say this worked before, can you inspect one of the pdf
> files that was created when it was working and see what font(s) it's
> trying to use?
I searched some more and I *think* I found a bit of valuable
information. The problem seems to come from the cdlabelgen backend. As
far as I can tell, it uses the /usr/share/cdlabelgen/template.ps file
(shipping with the cdlabelgen package) to produce a CD/DVD cover. But
the fonts are not available.
Now what?
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7, place de l'?glise - 30730 Montpezat
Site : https:...
2018 Jan 03
2
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
...e next step would be to either find and install the missing
> fonts, or re-write template.ps to use the fonts that you have
> available.
I did some more research, and it looks like the problem is NOT related
to missing fonts.
I installed a vanilla CentOS 7 desktop, activated EPEL, installed
cdlabelgen, downloaded Gtkcdlabel, installed it, ran it... and it worked
out of the box. Now what happened?
I *think* the culprit here may be fontconfig-infinality and
freetype-infinality, which I installed from the Nux-Dextop repository. I
have a much nicer font rendering on my CentOS desktop using these tw...
2018 Jan 03
0
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
...find and install the missing
>> fonts, or re-write template.ps to use the fonts that you have
>> available.
> I did some more research, and it looks like the problem is NOT related
> to missing fonts.
>
> I installed a vanilla CentOS 7 desktop, activated EPEL, installed
> cdlabelgen, downloaded Gtkcdlabel, installed it, ran it... and it worked
> out of the box. Now what happened?
>
> I *think* the culprit here may be fontconfig-infinality and
> freetype-infinality, which I installed from the Nux-Dextop repository. I
> have a much nicer font rendering on my CentO...
2018 Jan 02
0
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
On Tue, 2 Jan 2018 18:11:52 +0100
Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> (libspectre) ghostscript reports: invalidfont -10
Since you say this worked before, can you inspect one of the pdf files that was created when it was working and see what font(s) it's trying to use?
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~ www.melvilletheatre.com
2018 Jan 02
0
Gtkcdlabel + cdlabelgen on CentOS 7 ?
On Wed, 3 Jan 2018 00:28:53 +0100
Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> Now what?
I guess the next step would be to either find and install the missing fonts, or re-write template.ps to use the fonts that you have available.
--
MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~ www.melvilletheatre.com
2006 May 14
1
Requirements for building source RPM's?
...9;Personal Desktop' option without
bothering about customizing. I'm on dialup, so I try to choose a mixture of rpm
and yum, e. g. I do 'yum install something', take a peek at what is needed, and
then install as much as I can from the CD's using rpm -ivh.
I want to build an app (cdlabelgen and its frontend gtkcdlabel) from a source
RPM, since the binary has a few encoding weirdnesses. I've never built a source
RPM (using Slack before), now I wonder: what tools (packages) do I need for
this, besides rpm-build, gcc, autoconf etc.?
Niki Kovacs