Thanks for your suggestions. (For the record, it didn't work---other stuff absent.) I'll continue with the package maintainer, and/or build boost myself. David On 01/07/2008, at 8:22 PM, David Abrahams wrote:
David Philp wrote:
On 01/07/2008, at 1:34 PM, Vladimir Prus wrote:
Is there a file called "Jamroot" in root directory -- specifically, in /sw/lib/boost-1_35 directory. If not, this is not a good Boost source tree.
There is not, though there is a Jamroot in the tutorial directory. (There is a boost-build.jam in the root directory. I thought might be equivalent, but soft-linking Jamfile or Jamroot -> boost-build.jam does not help.) Thanks.
The rest of boost (well, a few bits I've used here and there) seem to work, though, i.e. boost has built and installed into /sw. I've had no trouble with the unit test, program options, or threads frameworks from boost.
It may be that the fink package maintainer did not intend to install a Boost source tree. Does it follow that the examples will be broken but the installation might be otherwise correct?
It might be.
Or do I need to fix this before I can use Boost Python?
(My first attempt to use Boost Python doesn't work but that isn't surprising.)
If you want to use it according to the directions in the tutorial or supplied with Boost, you'll need the Boost Jamfiles. If you have a /sw/lib/boost-1_35/libs/python/build/Jamfile, then you could try downloading http://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/export/46943/tags/release/Boost_1_35_0/Jamro... to /sw/lib/boost-1_35. If you don't have any Jamfiles or the previous suggestion doesn't work, I suggest you get a clean Boost source tree and start with that. See http://www.boost.org/more/getting_started.html
-- Dave Abrahams BoostPro Computing http://www.boostpro.com _______________________________________________ Boost-users mailing list Boost-users@lists.boost.org http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost-users