Reputation: 49188
I'm trying to build GNU grep, and when I run make, I get:
[snip]
/bin/bash: line 9: makeinfo: command not found
What is makeinfo, and how do I get it?
(This is Ubuntu, if it makes a difference)
Upvotes: 308
Views: 345216
Reputation: 3453
A few words on "what is makeinfo" -- other answers cover "how do I get it" well.
The section "Creating an Info File" of the Texinfo manual states that
makeinfo
is a program that converts a Texinfo file into an Info file, HTML file, or plain text.
The Texinfo home page explains that Texinfo itself "is the official documentation format of the GNU project" and that it "uses a single source file to produce output in a number of formats, both online and printed (dvi, html, info, pdf, xml, etc.)".
To sum up: Texinfo is a documentation source file format and makeinfo
is the program that turns source files in Texinfo format into the desired output.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 6525
If it doesn't show up in your package manager (i.e. apt-cache search texinfo
) and even apt-file search bin/makeinfo
is no help, you may have to enable non-free/restricted packages for your package manager.
For ubuntu, sudo $EDITOR /etc/apt/sources.list
and add restricted
.
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic main restricted universe multiverse
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security main
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates main
For debian, sudo $EDITOR /etc/apt/sources.list
and add non-free
. You can even have preferences on package level if you don't want to clutter the package db with non-free stuff.
After a sudo apt-get udpate
you should find the required package.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 437
On SuSE linux, you can use the following command to install 'texinfo':
sudo zypper install texinfo
On my system, it shows it is downloading about 1000 MiB, so make sure you have enough free space.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 381
For Centos , I solve it by installing these packages.
yum install texi2html texinfo
Dont worry if there is no entry for makeinfo. Just run
make all
You can do it similarly for ubuntu using sudo
.
Upvotes: 38
Reputation: 101
Another option is to use apt-file (i.e. apt-file search makeinfo
). It may or may not be installed in your distro by default, but it is a great tool for determining what package a file belongs to.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 9715
In (at least) Ubuntu when using bash
, it tells you what package you need to install if you type in a command and its not found in your path. My terminal says you need to install 'texinfo' package.
sudo apt-get install texinfo
Upvotes: 490
Reputation: 21309
If you build packages from scratch:
Specifically, if you build bash
from source, install docs, including man pages, will fail (silently) without makeinfo
available.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 350
Need to install texinfo. configure will still have the cache of its results so it will still think makeinfo is missing. Blow away your source and unpack it again from the tarball. run configure then make.
Upvotes: 6