Hi, Rene, I am sure that I have put $ROOTSYS/bin in my path and it comes the first of all. Even I entered the directory $ROOTSYS/bin, then type "./root", not, the machine gave the same message. ./root: Command not found. I checked its file attribute via "file root", it is root: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1, dynamically linked, not stripped No problem. ls -lF root gave -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 162327 Jul 28 14:06 root* It is executable. I can not understand why it does not work. Best regards --Shuwei On Wed, 26 Aug 1998, Rene Brun wrote: > You shoulkd include $ROOTSYS/bin in your command search path. > > Rene Brun > > Ye Shuwei wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > Now I have a new machine--Linux. I am happy to have it. But problem came > > when I tried to install root2.00/10 of Linux-glibc at my machine, that is, > > root_v2.00.Linux.2.0.33.glibc.tar.gz > > My machine is Linux S.u.S.E 5.3 with glibc inside under kernel of 2.0.35. > > It always complained that > > > > root: "command not found" > > > > if try to run root, similar for cint, rootcint, etc. > > > > And more strange that the version of root with libc works at my machine > > (root_v2.00.Linux.2.0.33.tar.gz). But I can not use it "rootcint" to get right > > result. It always dump. > > > > So I have no way to play with "root" at my machine now. > > > > Do anyone have any ideas on it ? Thanks. > > > > Best regards --Shuwei >
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