Started vnc, runned ok but like the original fork, I could not use mouse/keyboard. I didn’t run the “sudo update-alternatives”. UPDATE: I removed the -4.7 and it went ok. adddefinitions(-msse2 -pthread -stdc++11 -fPIC -ffast-math) adddefinitions(-pthread -stdc++11 -fPIC. Makefile:26: recipe for target ‘main.o’ failed Build from source on ARM (Raspberry Pi 3). Main.cpp:18:25: fatal error: libconfig.h++: Arquivo ou diretório não encontrado G++ -Wall -std=c++11 -O3 -DHAVE_LIBBCM_HOST -DUSE_EXTERNAL_LIBBCM_HOST -DUSE_VCH IQ_ARM -I/opt/vc/include/ -I/opt/vc/include/interface/vcos/pthreads -I/opt/vc/in clude/interface/vmcs_host/linux -c main.cpp -o main.o Complete the following steps from a Bash prompt on the Raspberry Pi (local or SSH): Run the following command to install. NET on the Raspberry Pi using the dotnet-install scripts. This is a good place to get started if this is.
INSTALL PTHREAD C RASPBERRY PI MAC OS
The binary compiler was tested on Raspbian Stretch and Buster and it should work. Below are guides for installing on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.
INSTALL PTHREAD C RASPBERRY PI HOW TO
If needed, refer to Setting up an SSH Server in the Raspberry Pi documentation. How to install GCC 9 on your Raspberry Pi in order to build C++17 programs. This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, orĮ: Package ‘g+±4.7’ has no installation sudo make Ensure SSH is enabled on your Raspberry Pi. Package g+±4.7 is not available, but is referred to by another package. Note, selecting ‘gcc-4.7-base’ for regex ‘gcc-4.7’ Please note that I have added -mtune=native to the makeit file, in case it would disturb cross sudo apt-get install gcc-4.7 g+±4.7 libvncserver-dev libconfig+±dev If you would like to try it out you can get it here: GitHub - patrikolausson/dispmanx_vnc: VNC Server for Raspberry PI using dispmanx. As the original author has previously rejected to pull changes, so I have pushed most to the Na1w branch, but the last changes are still pending. I don’t really know how well received it will be, but it now requires c++11, so at least g+±4.7. It has some new features like using (almost) no CPU when no-one is connected, it is possible to specify port, display number, an optional password, a mode for limiting bandwidth and a few other things. It seems now to be completely stable, surviving changes in resolution and refresh rates (and if given the -f option, it will most likely not exhaust dispmanx while doing so). I have included and somewhat changed the performance improvements that Na1w committed some weeks ago. I have done some major changes to the dispmanx_vnc code.