Hey man, we're living parallel lives. I literally just did this yesterday. The command you're looking for is gdebi. Try gdebi (name of the package's file, uncompressed to a .deb) if you downloaded the .Deb from the website. tic80 will now be a usable command. To uninstall the tic80 command / program you can use apt uninstall tic80. It worked with and without sudo.
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gdebi, apt can also do this these days.
Did you try
sudo dpkg -i path/to/tic80-v1.1-linux.deb
Will try, once I find the filepath
If the device has network access, then you can just wget it and install it.
Its not on apt, I tried that
So, as I understand you, you've got a copy of tic80-v1.1-linux.deb
on a USB stick and want to install this.
After you've mounted the USB-drive, cd
to the directory where the downloaded deb-package is located. Then run
sudo dpkg -i tic80-v1.1-linux.deb
sudo apt -f install
to install the package and missing dependencies.
Apt can install a .deb and its dependencies in one go.
Cool. Thank you. I haven't looked into the changelog ever. Obviously this works for quite a while now (~2017?) without moving the deb-file to /var/cache/apt/archives/
.
Now I'm looking for the directory. Would a USB be in /home?
Its a clockworkpi os machine
That depends on how you have mounted the device, as this is usually not done automatically. As I understand, your system doesn't have a desktop environment.
So the you need to search e.g. the output of sudo dmesg
after plugging in the USB stick, there should appear s.th. like /dev/sdb1
or alike. Then you can mount the partition e.g. to /mnt
directory
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt
You anyway can check the output of mount
(without arguments) if and where the device was mounted successfully.
You later can safely unmount the USB stick by
sudo umount /dev/sdb1
I did sudo mount /dev/sda1 it returned this:
/dev/sda1: can't find in /etc/fstab
Yes, you need to specify the path where it should be mounted to. I proposed using /mnt
.
Oh, thank you
Edit:
The solution worked, the software is for arm tho.
My dumbass water this time only to realise ita not riscv compatible
What kind of system do you have? I assumed it was a small RPi like device.
Its a uconsole r-01
As it is its kind of terrible but looks cool. Might upgrade to a cm4 but would like to use the machine
So you need to build from source, as I don't see a prebuild version for RISC-V on their Github-page. As your system probably is supposed to be slim, you can try cross building from source on another computer. But if you are interested in doing that, please ask in a separate post, as I've never done that.
So basically use the source code elsewhere? I'll ask later, thank you