Error: vx_tensor and VX_TYPE_TENSOR undeclared when installing OPENVX tuorial package - openvx

I am a newbie of OpenVX and am trying to install the tutorial package for learning. I follow the instruction in Khronos OpenVX Tutorial Material to build it on my Ubuntu 16.4, the process is as followed.
1----- Download the tutorial package at the above link and extract it to ~/openvx_tutorial directory
2----- Download and install OpenCV 3.1 library: successful. The output files are placed at ~/opencv/build.
3----- Install CMAKE: successful
4----- Download and install Open-source OpenVX from AMD: successful
4.1. Download the open source at Open-source OpenVX on GitHub and extract it to ~/openvx_tutorial/tutorial_exercises/amdovx-core directory.
4.2. Compiling
cd ~/openvx_tutorial/tutorial_exercises/amdovx-core
cmake ../amdovx-core/ -DOpenCV_DIR="~/opencv/build/ -DCMAKE_DISABLE_FIND_PACKAGE_OpenCL=TRUE
make
Here is the log.
5----- Download and Install Khronos OpenVX Resources
5.1. Download the OpenVX 1.1 Sample Implementation at Khronos OpenVX Resources and extract it to ~openvx_sample
5.2. Installing
cd ~/openvx_sample
make
make install
The output files are at ~/openvx_sample/out/LINUX/x86_64/release. Then the following test commands are successful
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="~/openvx_sample/out/LINUX/x86_64/release"
cd raw
../out/LINUX/x86_64/release/vx_test
../out/LINUX/x86_64/release/vx_query
../out/LINUX/x86_64/release/vx_example
Compile the tutorial package
cd ~/openvx_tutorial
mkdir build-open-source
cd build-open-source
cmake ../tutorial_exercises
make
The the errors happen, reporting that the variable type vx_tensor and the value VX_TYPE_TENSOR are not declared.
I have also tried to build the package with QT but the same errors happened. Is there anyone encountered these errors before? How can I fix it?
Thank you.

you have to use the khronos headers v1.2
Copy this headers into your tutorial_exercises/include/VX and rebuild all.
PS. some variables are undefined eg. VX_TENSOR_FIXED_POINT_POS & VX_TENSOR_NUM_OF_DIMS this should be VX_TENSOR_FIXED_POINT_POSITION & VX_TENSOR_NUMBER_OF_DIMS respectively.

Related

Qt Creator qt.qpa.plugin: Could not load the Qt platform plugin "xcb" on Ubuntu 20.04 [duplicate]

I wrote application for linux which uses Qt5.
But when I am trying to launch it on the linux without Qt SDK installed, the output in console is:
Failed to load platform plugin "xcb". Available platforms are:
How can I fix this? May be I need to copy some plugin file?
When I use ubuntu with Qt5 installed, but I rename Qt directory, the same problem occurs. So, it uses some file from Qt directory...
UPDATE:
when I create in the app dir "platforms" folder with the file libqxcb.so, the app still doesnot start, but the error message changes:
Failed to load platform plugin "xcb". Available platforms are:
xcb
How can this happen? How can platform plugin be available but can't be loaded?
Use ldd (man ldd) to show shared library dependencies. Running this on libqxcb.so
.../platforms$ ldd libqxcb.so
shows that xcb depends on libQt5DBus.so.5 in addition to libQt5Core.so.5 and libQt5Gui.so.5 (and many other system libs). Add libQt5DBus.so.5 to your collection of shared libs and you should be ready to move on.
As was posted earlier, you need to make sure you install the platform plugins when you deploy your application. Depending on how you want to deploy things, there are two methods to tell your application where the platform plugins (e.g. platforms/plugins/libqxcb.so) are at runtime which may work for you.
The first is to export the path to the directory through the QT_QPA_PLATFORM_PLUGIN_PATH variable.
QT_QPA_PLATFORM_PLUGIN_PATH=path/to/plugins ./my_qt_app
or
export QT_QPA_PLATFORM_PLUGIN_PATH=path/to/plugins
./my_qt_app
The other option, which I prefer is to create a qt.conf file in the same directory as your executable. The contents of which would be:
[Paths]
Plugins=/path/to/plugins
More information regarding this can be found here and at using qt.conf
I tried to start my binary, compiled with Qt 5.7, on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS where Qt 5.5 is preinstalled. It didn't work.
At first, I inspected the binary itself with ldd as was suggested here, and satisfied all "not found" dependencies. Then this notorious This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin "xcb" error was thrown.
How to resolve this in Linux
Firstly you should create platforms directory where your binary is, because it is the place where Qt looks for XCB library. Copy libqxcb.so there. I wonder why authors of other answers didn't mention this.
Then you may want to run your binary with QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 environment variable set to check which dependencies of libqxcb.so are not satisfied. (You may also use ldd for this as suggested in the accepted answer).
The command output may look like this:
me#xerus:/media/sf_Qt/Package$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 ./Binary
QFactoryLoader::QFactoryLoader() checking directory path "/media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms" ...
QFactoryLoader::QFactoryLoader() looking at "/media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms/libqxcb.so"
Found metadata in lib /media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms/libqxcb.so, metadata=
{
"IID": "org.qt-project.Qt.QPA.QPlatformIntegrationFactoryInterface.5.3",
"MetaData": {
"Keys": [
"xcb"
]
},
"className": "QXcbIntegrationPlugin",
"debug": false,
"version": 329472
}
Got keys from plugin meta data ("xcb")
loaded library "/media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms/libqxcb.so"
QLibraryPrivate::loadPlugin failed on "/media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms/libqxcb.so" : "Cannot load library /media/sf_Qt/Package/platforms/libqxcb.so: (/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5DBus.so.5: version `Qt_5' not found (required by ./libQt5XcbQpa.so.5))"
This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin "xcb"
in "".
Available platform plugins are: xcb.
Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.
Aborted (core dumped)
Note the failing libQt5DBus.so.5 library. Copy it to your libraries path, in my case it was the same directory where my binary is (hence LD_LIBRARY_PATH=.). Repeat this process until all dependencies are satisfied.
P.S. thanks to the author of this answer for QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1.
I tried the main parts of each answer, to no avail. What finally fixed it for me was to export the following environment variables:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib:~/Qt/5.9.1/gcc_64/lib
QT_QPA_PLATFORM_PLUGIN_PATH=~/Qt/5.9.1/gcc_64/plugins/
Ubuntu 16.04 64bit.
I got the problem for apparently no reasons. The night before I watched a movie on my VideoLan instance, that night I would like to watch another one with VideoLan. VLC just didn't want to run because of the error into the question.
I google a bit and I found the solution it solved my problem: from now on, VLC is runnable just like before. The solution is this comand:
sudo ln -sf /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/plugins/platforms/ /usr/bin/
I am not able to explain what are its consequencies, but I know it creates some missing symbolic link.
Since version 5, Qt uses a platform abstraction system (QPA) to abstract from the underlying platform.
The implementation for each platform is provided by plugins. For X11 it is the XCB plugin. See Qt for X11 requirements for more information about the dependencies.
There might be many causes to this problem. The key is to use
export QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1
before you run your Qt application. Then, inspect the output, which will point you to the direction of the error. In my case it was:
Cannot load library /opt/nao/plugins/platforms/libqxcb.so: (/opt/nao/bin/../lib/libz.so.1: version `ZLIB_1.2.9' not found (required by /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpng16.so.16))
But that is solved in different threads. See for instance https://stackoverflow.com/a/50097275/2408964.
Probably this information will help. I was on Ubuntu 18.04 and when I tried to install Krita, using the ppa method, I got this error:
This application failed to start because it could not find or load the Qt platform plugin "xcb" in "".
Available platform plugins are: linuxfb, minimal, minimalegl, offscreen, wayland-egl, wayland, xcb.
Reinstalling the application may fix this problem.
Aborted
I tried all the solutions that I found in this thread and other webs without any success.
Finally, I found a post where the author mention that is possible to activate the debugging tool of qt5 using this simple command:
export QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1
After adding this command I run again krita I got the same error, however this time I knew the cause of that error.
libxcb-xinerama.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory.
This error prevents to the "xcb" to load properly. So, the solution will be install the `libxcb-xinerama.so.0" right? However, when I run the command:
sudo apt install libxcb-xinerama
The lib was already installed. Now what Teo? Well, then I used an old trick :) Yeah, that one --reinstall
sudo apt install --reinstall libxcb-xinerama
TLDR: This last command solved my problem.
I ran into a very similar problem with the same error message. First, debug some by turning on the Qt Debug printer with the command line command:
export QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1
and rerun the application. For me this revealed the following:
"Cannot load library /home/.../miniconda3/lib/python3.7/site-packages/PyQt5/Qt/plugins/platforms/libqxcb.so: (libxkbcommon-x11.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory)"
"Cannot load library /home/.../miniconda3/lib/python3.7/site-packages/PyQt5/Qt/plugins/platforms/libqxcb.so: (libxkbcommon-x11.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory)"
Indeed, I was missing libxkbcommon-x11.so.0 and libxkbcommon-x11.so.0. Next, check your architecture using dpkg from the linux command line. (For me, the command "arch" gave a different and unhelpful result)
dpkg --print-architecture #result for me: amd64
I then googled "libxkbcommon-x11.so.0 ubuntu 18.04 amd64", and likewise for libxkbcommon-x11.so.0, which yields those packages on packages.ubuntu.com. That told me, in retrospect unsurprisingly, I'm missing packages called libxkbcommon-x11-0 and libxkbcommon0, and that installing those packages will include the needed files, but the dev versions will not. Then the solution:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libxkbcommon0
sudo apt-get install libxkbcommon-x11-0
So, I spent about a day trying to figure out what was the issue; tried all the proposed solutions, but none of that worked like installing xcb libs or exporting Qt plugins folder. The solution that suggested to use QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 to debug the issue didn't provide me a direct insight like in the answer - instead I was getting something about unresolved symbols within Qt5Core.
That gave me a hint, though: what if it's trying to use different files from different Qt installations? On my machine I had standard version installed in /home/username/Qt/ and some local builds within my project that I compiled by myself (I have other custom built kits as well in other locations). Whenever I tried to use any of the kits (installed by Qt maintenance tool or built by myself), I would get an "xcb error".
The solution was simple: provide the Qt path through CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH and not though Qt5_DIR as I did, and it solved the problem. Example:
cmake .. -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/home/username/Qt/5.11.1/gcc_64
I faced the same problem when after installing Viber. It had all required qt libraries in /opt/viber/plugins/.
I checked dependencies of /opt/viber/plugins/platforms/libqxcb.so and found missing dependencies. They were libxcb-render.so.0, libxcb-image.so.0, libxcb-icccm.so.4, libxcb-xkb.so.1
So I resolved my issue by installing missing packages with this libraries:
apt-get install libxcb-xkb1 libxcb-icccm4 libxcb-image0 libxcb-render-util0
I like the solution with qt.conf.
Put qt.conf near to the executable with next lines:
[Paths]
Prefix = /path/to/qtbase
And it works like a charm :^)
For a working example:
[Paths]
Prefix = /home/user/SDKS/Qt/5.6.2/5.6/gcc_64/
The documentation on this is here: https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt-conf.html
All you need to do is
pip uninstall PyQt5
and
conda install pyqt
Most of the problem of pyqt can be fixed by this simplest solution.
In my case, I needed to deploy two Qt apps on an Ubuntu virtualbox guest. One was command-line ("app"), the other GUI_based ("app_GUI").
I used "ldd app" to find out what the required libs are, and copied them
to the Ubuntu guest.
While the command-line executable "app" worked ok, the GUI-based executable crashed, giving
the "Failed to load platform plugin "xcb" error. I checked ldd for libxcb.so, but this too had no missing dependencies.
The problem seemed to be that while I did copy all the right libraries I accidentally had copied also libraries that were already present at the guest system.. meaning that (a) they were unnecessary to copy them in the first place and (b) worse, copying them produced incompatibilities between the install libraries.
Worse still, they were undetectable by ldd like I said..
The solution? Make sure that you copy libraries shown as missing by ldd and absolutely no extra libraries.
In my case missing header files were the reason libxcb was not built by Qt. Installing them according to https://wiki.qt.io/Building_Qt_5_from_Git#Linux.2FX11 resolved the issue:
yum install libxcb libxcb-devel xcb-util xcb-util-devel mesa-libGL-devel libxkbcommon-devel
Folks trying to get this started on Ubuntu 20.04 please try to run this and see if this solves the problem. This worked for me
sudo apt-get update -y
sudo apt-get install -y libxcb-xinerama0
I link all Qt stuff statically to the generic Linux builds of my open source projects. It makes life a bit easier. You just need to build static versions of Qt libraries first. Of course this cannot be applied to closed source software due to licensing issues. The deployment of Qt5 apps on Linux is currently a bit problematic, because Ubuntu 12.04, for example, doesn't have Qt5 libraries in the package repositories.
I had this problem, and on a hunch I removed the Qt Configs from my environment. I.e.,
rm -rf ~/.config/Qt*
Then I started qtcreator and it reconfigured itself with the existing state of the machine. It no longer remembered where my projects were, but that just meant I had to browse to them "for the first time" again.
But more importantly it built itself a coherent set of library paths, so I could rebuild and run my project executables again without the xcb or qxcb libraries going missing.
I faced the same situation, but on a Ubuntu 20.04 VM.
TL;DR: Check file permissions.
What I did:
I copied the Qt libs required to /usr/local/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ and added it to LD_LIBRARY_PATH
I copied the platforms folder from Qt to my application directory and added it to QT_PLUGIN_PATH
I ran ldd on the executable and in the offending libqxcb.so (ldd libqxcb.so), and it complains about some dependencies although ldconfig listed them as found.
linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffee19af000)
libQt5XcbQpa.so.5 => not found
libfontconfig.so.1 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libfontconfig.so.1 (0x00007f7cb18fb000)
libfreetype.so.6 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libfreetype.so.6 (0x00007f7cb183c000)
libz.so.1 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libz.so.1 (0x00007f7cb1820000)
libQt5Gui.so.5 => /usr/local/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libQt5Gui.so.5 (0x00007f7cb0fd4000)
libQt5DBus.so.5 => not found
I used export QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 for further info. It complains about missing files, although they are there.
What I found:
For some reason, when copying to the VM through the shared folder the files permissions were not the correct ones.
Thus, I ran: sudo chmod 775 * on the libs and voilĂ .
I solved the issue through this https://github.com/NVlabs/instant-ngp/discussions/300
pip uninstall opencv-python
pip install opencv-python-headless
This seems to have been a problem with the cv2 Python package and how it loops in Qt
sudo ln -sf /usr/lib/...."adapt-it"..../qt5/plugins/platforms/ /usr/bin/
It creates the symbolic link it's missed. Good for QT ! Good for VLC !!

ACE/TAO build an rpm after sucessful make

ACE and TAO is used for our deployment and they will be required to be packaged as RPM from now on (for SUSE platform if it matters).
While I know there are RPM files available we have some specific "$ACE_ROOT/include/makeinclude/platform_macros.GNU" file that we use and we would like to have the RPM build out of the binaries resulted from our own build.
Can we create an RPM after following the steps from ACE-INSTALL.html, based on that build output?
See ACE_wrappers/rpmbuild for the spec file that is used for all RPMs on OpenSuSE Build service. Couldn't you extend that script with the options you need and contribute that back into the main github repo?

Can't install libwdi on windows

I am trying to run the escpos javasript package (escpos) but can't install this libwdi thing. After downloading it and unrar it there is no intstallable file. Only bash files (.sh) and .c files. This is what is in the libwdi.tar.gz:
You should see README.md.
The installation / compile procedure, usage, FAQ are described in the following URL.
Installation and Compilation
See: https://github.com/pbatard/libwdi/wiki/Install
API usage
See: https://github.com/pbatard/libwdi/wiki/Usage
FAQ
See: https://github.com/pbatard/libwdi/wiki/FAQ
The homepage of the above explanation is here.
https://github.com/pbatard/libwdi/wiki
In these explanations, source code is supposed to be compiled, but there are already install packages, which are distributed on the following pages.
Zadig | USB driver installation made easy
Download
Updated 2018.07.26:
Zadig 2.4 (4.9 MB)
If you can not install with this installation package or if the driver does not work, please follow the instructions on the explanation page above.

Source of qt5 cmake Config-file Packages

Trying to build qt5 with buildroot. I need to download the source so that everything is compiled through the cross-compiler.
One of my project relies on the 'Config-file Packages' (CMake helper config file) provided by Qt5 in the binary tarball at this location Qt5.8.0/5.8/gcc_64/lib/cmake.
Problem: I can't find that folder anywhere in the source. When I take one example file (e.g. Qt5Config.cmake), I can't find any git repo hosting it.
Had a look at Ubuntu packages and it is being distributed in qtbase5-dev. When I look at this package documentation, it says it is using qtbase-opensource-src 5.5.1+dfsg-16ubuntu7.4 as the source package. Had a look at the source package for 5.8 but the cmake files are not there.
I could upload those files in an ad-hoc git repo, but that just seems weird that those files are not hosted by the qt repo.
What am I missing?
The cmake files are generated while build. On Linux the results are installed to qt/lib/cmake.

Unable to configure Qt for static building

Essentially this is a repost of this question which was never answered. I am trying to set up Qt for static linking following these instructions.
So far, all I've done is go to where my Qt version is, and run
configure -static
I get some output, ending in:
Sources are in..............C:\QtSDK\Desktop\Qt\4.8.0\msvc2010
Build is done in............C:\QtSDK\Desktop\Qt\4.8.0\msvc2010
Install prefix..............C:\QtSDK\Desktop\Qt\4.8.0\msvc2010
Headers installed to........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/include
Libraries installed to......C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/lib
Plugins installed to........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/plugins
Imports installed to........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/imports
Binaries installed to.......C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/bin
Docs installed to...........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/doc
Data installed to...........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010
Translations installed to...C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/translations
Examples installed to.......C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/examples
Demos installed to..........C:/QtSDK/Desktop/Qt/4.8.0/msvc2010/demos
WARNING: Using static linking will disable the use of plugins.
Make sure you compile ALL needed modules into the library.
Running syncqt...
I couldn't find a pro file for QtCore module
syncqt failed, return code 9
Please help
It's a known issue compiling Qt 4.8.0 from source.
Just delete syncqt.* in qt bin folder :
http://labs.qt.nokia.com/2011/12/15/qt-4-8-0-released/#comment-49942
http://labs.qt.nokia.com/2011/12/15/qt-4-8-0-released/#comment-49951
http://labs.qt.nokia.com/2011/12/15/qt-4-8-0-released/#comment-49953
I'm in the same situation of user963258 and I get the same error.
I deleted syncqt.* from qt bin folder, but I then get the same error
qmake gives code 3 when attempting to configure qt for static building
Why Qt4.8 has so many issues?

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