Ops sorry, so you experiences errors with 'sudo' also...

Well, no idea :(

I hope someone will tell the solution and we can fix it
or update INSTALL as needed.

Brgds,
Viktor

On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 9:39 PM, Viktor Szakáts <harbour...@syenar.hu> wrote:
> That is because make_gnu.sh tries to 'install' Harbour into system
> dirs by default. So by default you have to use 'sudo'. Or to avoid that
> you can redefine HB_INSTALL_PREFIX before build:
>
> export HB_INSTALL_PREFIX=`pwd`/`dirname $0`
> [ NOTE: I didn't test above line, just assembled it from some local settings. 
> ]
>
> IMO current default isn't very convenient, but that's how it is now,
> and that's also how it is with other Linux applications AFAIU.
>
> Brgds,
> Viktor
>
> On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 9:21 PM, Teo Fonrouge <t...@windtelsoft.com> wrote:
>>
>> On 02/06/2009, at 01:41 p.m., Angel Pais wrote:
>>
>>> Finally I've got crazy enought to try to build harbour from svn on UBUNTU
>>> 9.04
>>>
>>> Followed INSTALL Instructions but failed in ./make_gnu install
>>>
>>> This is the log:
>>>
>>> abu...@abuntu:~/src/harbour$ sudo ./make_gnu.sh install
>>> [sudo] password for abuntu:
>>> make -C doc install _HB_BLD=yes
>>> make[1]: se ingresa al directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/doc'
>>> make -C en-EN install _HB_BLD=yes
>>> make[2]: se ingresa al directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/doc/en-EN'
>>> make[2]: No se hace nada para `install'.
>>> make[2]: se sale del directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/doc/en-EN'
>>> make[1]: se sale del directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/doc'
>>> make -C include install _HB_BLD=yes
>>> make[1]: se ingresa al directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/include'
>>> ! Can't install, path not found: '/usr/local/include/harbour'
>>> make[1]: *** [install] Error 1
>>> make[1]: se sale del directorio `/home/abuntu/src/harbour/include'
>>> make: *** [include.inst] Error 2
>>>
>>
>> Hello Angel,
>>
>>>
>>> Any Clue ?
>>
>> No, but I got the same errors with make_gnu.sh under MacOS
>>
>> But, now that you are using a DEB based linux distro, you should try to
>> build the *.deb package, it's more easy to install/uninstall
>>
>> just type in the harbour dir:
>>
>> ./mpkg_deb.sh
>>
>> Once that you have the package created harbour****.deb you can install it
>> with:
>>
>> sudo dpkg -i harbour****.deb
>>
>>
>> best regards,
>>
>> Teo
>>
>>
>> PD: You need to install debhelper and fakeroot packages too:
>> sudo apt-get install debhelper fakeroot
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> Harbour@harbour-project.org
>> http://lists.harbour-project.org/mailman/listinfo/harbour
>>
>
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