This is the recommended method to use. Simply download the installer on website, extract it, launch the ryzom_installer_linux.sh file (who will automatically launch the 32 or 64 bits based on your system), and follow the very easy step
See this page Linux generic installation
You are missing some dependencies for ryzom. If you are using the official client or the alternate static one, there is very few of them (the package name may vary on your distribution, these are the debian one) :
Install all theses packages and try to launch again your client.
You are missing some dependencies for ryzom. If you are using the official client or the alternate static one, there is very few of them (the package name may vary on your distribution, these are the debian one) :
Install all theses packages and try to launch again your client.
You are using a 32 bits executable on a 64 bits system and you don't have multiarch or 32 bits emulations activated. Easiest way is to use multiarch
# dpkg --add-architecture i386 # apt-get update && apt-get install libc6:i386
Try to run the client, you will probably miss some dependencies, install them ; if you want to install a package in a different architecture, type package:architecture instead of package. For example, if you miss libGL.so, type :
# apt-get install libgl1-mesa-glx:i386
The most common answer is probably that you are missing a good graphic driver. Check your distribution advices for your GPU. If you don't know what your GPU is, run :
$ lspci | grep "VGA"
An easy way to install the proprietary driver is to use the sgfxi script, it's very easy.
# cd /usr/local/bin && wget -Nc smxi.org/sgfxi && chmod +x sgfxi
Then, as root in a tty (use Ctrl + Alt + F1 to switch, Ctrl + Alt + F7 to switch back to your desktop), run :
Warning Installing the driver will close your session, make sure you save all your data
# sgfxi
And follow the instructions.
Static client with patch enabled, should work on any distribution, any kernel : full version with data (1.7 GB) or list of all versions
5 pages in Linux