and when testing from a terminal you just have to type CinGG, then hit tab, and complete it to
the desired date release.
-For 64-bit systems you can choose between an image with up-to-date libraries or one that supports older libraries, which you should use only if the first image gives you problems with unsupported libs. There is also a 32-bit older distro available that has \textit{i686} as part of the filename and a 8/10/12 bit newer distro that handles 8 or 10 or 12 bits that has \textit{multibit} as part of the filename. Installing the appimage is simple:
+For 64-bit systems you can choose between an image with up-to-date libraries or one that supports older libraries, which you should use only if the first image gives you problems with unsupported libs. There is also a 32-bit older distro available that has \textit{i686} as part of the filename that currently works on older distros but may not work on the latest distros and
+definitely does now work on Debian version 11.00 (most of the popular Linux distributions such
+as Arch, Ubuntu, and Fedora have dropped support for this older architecture). And there is a 8/10/12 bit newer distro that handles 8 or 10 or 12 bits that has \textit{multibit} as part of the filename. Installing the appimage is simple:
Download the file from:
CinGG-20210731-x86_64-older-distros.AppImage
(currently based on Ubuntu 16.04, libc version 2.23)
CinGG-20210731-i686.AppImage
- (currently based on Debian 9, linux kernel 4.9)
+ (currently based on Debian 9, linux kernel 4.9, does not work on Debian 11.0)
CinGG-20210731-x86_64-multibit.AppImage
(currently based on Fedora Core 32, libc version 2.31)
\end{lstlisting}
\label{fig:download-distros}
\end{figure}
+All of these images are dated 10/31/2020 and are no longer being maintained. They
+will still work on the version of the O/S in use at that time but will have none of
+the latest features. You should use the simpler AppImage instead as described previously.
+
If you prefer to not have to take the time to build \CGG{} Infinity
yourself, there are pre-built dynamic or static binaries for various
versions of Ubuntu, Mint, Suse, Fedora, Debian, Centos, Arch, and
single possible distro yet so you might expect to have to make
some minor changes. Also works on a somewhat limited basis on
FreeBSD and Windows 10 with the bsd.patch for FreeBSD and the
-cygwin.patch for Windows 10.
+cygwin.patch for Windows 10. As of 10/31/2020, FreeBSD and Windows
+10 builds and patches are no longer being maintained so that they
+will work using the GIT version in use at that time but you will
+have to create new patches for arising problems on later GITs.
NOTE: as of May 31, 2021 when Context Help was added, to include
this Context Help you will need to download the corresponding
\label{sec:ms_windows10}
\index{windows 10}
+As of 10/31/2020, this is no longer being maintained. It should
+still work using an older GIT version with Windows 10 but it is
+possible with some effort to modify the patch file to work with the
+latest updated GIT.
+
To run \CGG{} on a Windows 10 computer, you will need to have
Cygwin installed on your system, along with the \CGG{} static tar
and a patched library: libxcb. This setup has been tested with
window) will hang cygwin (and cin) when it hits a breakpoint. You
must run from an external console window to avoid this issue.
+\section{Android Tablet or Phone with TERMUX}%
+\label{sec:android_termux}
+\index{Android}
+
+CinGG can be run on Android (without audio), a non-x86 mostly posix system,
+tablet or phone after installing TERMUX, the \textit{terminal emulator}.
+You will have to do your own build using the file in Cinelerra's
+\textit{blds} subdirectory, \textit{termux.bld}.
+Because this is a relatively new capability and of lesser use, some
+additional effort may have to be exerted on your part to get it going
+but it is easy to get help by contacting the mailing list.
+In addition, there is currently no known procedure for hearing audio.
+
+\begin{figure}[htpb]
+ \centering
+ \includegraphics[width=1.0\linewidth]{android.png}
+ \caption{Screencast of an Android tablet running \CGG{} using TERMUX.}
+ \label{fig:android}
+\end{figure}
+
+Some requirements include;
+\begin{enumerate}
+\item Termux runs with X on Android 7+.
+\item Install takes 5 GB of internal storage. In addition you can download videos,
+and other files with wget to one specific location at sdcard after running termux-setup-storage
+inside termux (it will prompt you to give access to sdcard graphically the first time used).
+\item If you have empty versions of locale.alias, locale.dir,
+ and
+\newline \$PREFIX\/share/X11\/locale\/en\_US.UTF-8\/en\_US.UTF-8\/XLC\_LOCALE
+ you will have to request non-empty versions via the mailing list.
+\item Some helpful information on installing the X environment is at:
+ \url{https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/Graphical\_Environment}
+\item To prevent crashing when loading a video file that has audio, use the guide
+ \url{https://www.reddit.com/r/termux/comments/bpa8jz/pulseaudio\_streaming\_client/}
+ which explains vnc/pulseaudio setup.
+\end{enumerate}
+
+A little more about Audio is presented next because you will need to have this running
+in order to prevent a crash (even though you still will not be able to hear audio) -
+there does not seem to be a simple PA client in termux itself.
+Some information is available at:
+ \url{https://android.stackexchange.com/questions/205576/how-to-play-sound-from-termux-when-using-linux} .
+
+The next few lines show a successful setup/usage.
+\begin{lstlisting}[style=sh]
+$ pulseaudio --start
+$ ps axv
+ PID TTY STAT TIME MAJFL TRS DRS RSS %MEM COMMAND
+ 7003 pts/28 S<s 0:00 637 532 9039 1716 0.0 /data/data/com
+13684 ? S<l 0:00 0 49 123898 16616 0.8 pulseaudio --
+13692 pts/28 R<+ 0:00 0 63 7500 1420 0.0 ps axv
+\end{lstlisting}
+\begin{lstlisting}[style=sh]
+$ pactl load-module module-native-protocol-tcp auth-ip-acl=127.0.0.1 auth-anonymous=116
+$ PULSE_SERVER=127.0.0.1 pactl info
+Server String: 127.0.0.1
+Library Protocol Version: 34
+Server Protocol Version: 34
+Is Local: no
+Client Index: 2
+Tile Size: 65496
+User Name: u0_a116
+Host Name: localhost
+Server Name: pulseaudio
+Server Version: 14.2
+Default Sample Specification: s16le 2ch 44100Hz
+Default Channel Map: front-left,front-right
+Default Sink: OpenSL_ES_sink
+Default Source: OpenSL_ES_sink.monitor
+Cookie: c659:c1b7
+\end{lstlisting}
+
+Now to start up \CGG{}, type in:
+\begin{lstlisting}[style=sh]
+ $ cd (your cinelerra directory)/cinelerra/cinelerra-5.1/
+ $ PULSE_SERVER=127.0.0.1 ./cin.sh
+\end{lstlisting}
+
+You can even build a package version similiar to Debian, just with 'pkg search\/pkg install'
+instead of 'apt search/install' and with '*-static' instead of '-dev\/-devel packages'. For more
+information on this, see:
+
+\url{https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/Package\_Management}
+\newline \url{https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/Building\_packages}
\section{Distro with \CGG{} Included}%
\label{sec:distro_with_cinelerra_included}