brotherred
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Post by brotherred on Sept 22, 2021 23:26:06 GMT
I have chirp in Flatpak but the IO errors cause it to not work. I keep getting IO errors that I was not getting anymore help with and I tend to like PPAs for things that I rely on so heavily, anyway I see now that I need python dependencies that I can not install. apt install chirp-daily Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable distribution that some required packages have not yet been created or been moved out of Incoming. The following information may help to resolve the situation:
The following packages have unmet dependencies: chirp-daily : Depends: python-libxslt1 but it is not installable Depends: python-gtk2 but it is not installable Depends: python-serial but it is not installable E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.
I have an active thread on this at chirp.danplanet.com/issues/9387 Regards
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Post by ylee on Sept 23, 2021 13:11:58 GMT
I have chirp in Flatpak but the IO errors cause it to not work. I keep getting IO errors that I was not getting anymore help with and I tend to like PPAs for things that I rely on so heavily, anyway I see now that I need python dependencies that I can not install. ... I have no investigated this and lack time right now but the ppa says: Python2 is depreciated and any application still using py2 or its libraries/modules needs to fix their code ... That said you need to find and install whatever this application needs that is no longer in Ubuntu's repo.
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brotherred
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Post by brotherred on Sept 23, 2021 21:12:52 GMT
I am still getting the same I/O error. I am now trying to run it in the terminal to get output.
My user is in the dial out group and I have 666 permissions to /dev/ttyS0 and /dev/ttyUSB0
Thanx for all the help, truly.
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Post by ylee on Sept 23, 2021 23:42:36 GMT
What are your IO errors? You need to post them or a link to pastebin containing them if they are really long.
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brotherred
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Post by brotherred on Sept 25, 2021 4:52:11 GMT
What are your IO errors? You need to post them or a link to pastebin containing them if they are really long. Yes sir, for some reason I don't like pastebin. I have a login there but I like Dropbox better, at least for pictures. I still have not found the command executable though.
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enigma9o7
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Post by enigma9o7 on Sept 25, 2021 13:52:13 GMT
I still have not found the command executable though.
If you are now using a version installed from PPA, it is most likely in /usr/share/bin, but to check just run
which chirp
Also FYI note pastebin is for pasting text, not pictures.
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brotherred
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Post by brotherred on Sept 25, 2021 19:10:33 GMT
I still have not found the command executable though.
If you are now using a version installed from PPA, it is most likely in /usr/share/bin, but to check just run
which chirp
Also FYI note pastebin is for pasting text, not pictures.
I am not finding it this way. I do not know why. Also about the pictures above, I guess I am having a storage space issue with dropbox. Hopefully I can get things synced. I just deleted some files there. Regards
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enigma9o7
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Post by enigma9o7 on Sept 25, 2021 19:20:29 GMT
I am not finding it this way. I do not know why. Either it's not named chirp, or its not in your path.
If the only way you know how to launch it is from the desktop shortcut (menu entry), open the shortcut itself and see what its pointing to. Maybe chirp uses one of those org.whatever.blahblah type filenames like Android, I've seen that before occasionally in regular linux apps. You can check the shortcut a couple differnet ways.
Method 1 (built-in Moksha stuff): while app is open, click on the top-left corner icon (or right click it's taskbar entry) and select 'edit icon', then look what Application is set for (on Basic tab).
Method 2 (generic method): open /usr/share/applications with your file manager (i.e thunar), find the associated .desktop file, right click and open it with text editor (i.e. leafpad) then ctrl-F to find the Exec= line (if its not obvious right away).
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brotherred
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Post by brotherred on Sept 26, 2021 5:33:04 GMT
I am not finding it this way. I do not know why. Either it's not named chirp, or its not in your path.
If the only way you know how to launch it is from the desktop shortcut (menu entry), open the shortcut itself and see what its pointing to. Maybe chirp uses one of those org.whatever.blahblah type filenames like Android, I've seen that before occasionally in regular linux apps. You can check the shortcut a couple differnet ways.
Method 1 (built-in Moksha stuff): while app is open, click on the top-left corner icon (or right click it's taskbar entry) and select 'edit icon', then look what Application is set for (on Basic tab).
Method 2 (generic method): open /usr/share/applications with your file manager (i.e thunar), find the associated .desktop file, right click and open it with text editor (i.e. leafpad) then ctrl-F to find the Exec= line (if its not obvious right away).
Ok, I got it. I have CLI output for both the user and under sudo as well. The are nearly if not completely identical as I am still having python issues even after adding the python dependency ppa that is just for chrip. I went ahead and did the sudo as well even though the readout was already complaining about drivers not being available or some thing do to Python issues. Thank you so much, as you clearly are not just helping me with Chirps python issues on Ubuntu type systems but getting used to working within Bodhi specifically. pastebin.com/LutteUGZThanx so much again, regards.
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