October 25, 201510 yr Hi, I hope someone can help. I'm kind of new to ubuntu and probably just inexperienced with it but I can't find the answer and have spent a few hours on Google looking. So I put the disk in the laptop and no autorun. No problem, I find the readme and attempt to follow it's instructions but apparently I'm missing something as I've no idea what to do. The instructions for linux install: Insert the Linux Pillars of Eternity disc into your DVD drive. Pillars of Eternity is compressed as a .tar.gz file that was split into several smaller chunks in order to be compatible with the file system on the DVD. You must first reassemble those chunks to a temporary location, and then decompress the archive into the final desired location. To begin, enter the following at the terminal: cat <src>/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > <tmp>/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz substituting <src> for the location of the files on the DVD and <tmp> for a local temporary location to use. Open the resulting <tmp>/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz file with Archive Manager, and drag the 'Pillars of Eternity' folder to your desired install location. Once it has finished decompressing, you can delete <tmp>/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz file. So the command I'm entering looks like this (I've tried a few variations) cat /media/name/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > /home/name/Documents/PoE I get the error that /home/name/Documents/PoE is a directory. When I try something different it tells me that /media/name/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz* does not exist. What am I doing wrong? I know I need to use the terminal to assemble the files and then extract them but there's something I'm obviously meant to understand but don't. Thanks in advance, sorry if I'm being dim
October 25, 201510 yr Try cat /media/name/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > /home/name/Documents/PoE/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz Windows 10 x64 | Intel i7 920 @ 2.66GHZ | Gigabyte Geforce 760 4GB OC1 Windforce x3 | Integrated Audio | 8GB DDR3 RAM | ASUS P6T | Corsair AX760 PSU
October 26, 201510 yr If you don't want to muck around with the file paths you can probably just drag and drop all the chunks into your temporary location. Then, right click somewhere in that folder, pick "Open in terminal" and run cat PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz
October 26, 201510 yr Author Hi, If I try the first response (cat /media/name/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > /home/name/Documents/PoE/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz) I get this error: cat: /media/kieran/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.*: No such file or directory Second attempt I moved the chunks into my temp folder. When right clicking 'open in terminal' wasn't an option so I used a cd command to select the location (I think this is correct?). I then ran the command and received an error. This is the dialogue: kieran@kieran-M17xR3:~$ cd /home/kieran/Documents/PoE kieran@kieran-M17xR3:~/Documents/PoE$ cat PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz cat: PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.*: No such file or directory kieran@kieran-M17xR3:~/Documents/PoE$ It's like it is just telling me the files aren't there but they are and I'm sure I've checked for spelling erros a hundred times. So at the moment I have 'PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.Part1' etc (up to part 4) sitting in my temp folder, PoE, but I am unable to use the cat command to assemble them. Again, I apologise if I'm being slow and missing something here
October 26, 201510 yr Try cat /media/name/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.part* > /home/name/Documents/PoE/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz If that doesn't work, then I dunno because I don't use Linux (Am somewhat familiar with MS-DOS though) Edited October 26, 201510 yr by Nicholas Steel Windows 10 x64 | Intel i7 920 @ 2.66GHZ | Gigabyte Geforce 760 4GB OC1 Windforce x3 | Integrated Audio | 8GB DDR3 RAM | ASUS P6T | Corsair AX760 PSU
October 26, 201510 yr Solution Hey Treemuh89, Follow these steps and you should be golden; 1. Copy the contents of the DVD to a Folder on your Desktop (Name the Folder "Pillars") 2. Create a new Folder on your Desktop (Name it "tmp") 3. Open your Terminal 4. Type in "cat ~/Desktop/Pillars/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > ~/Desktop/tmp/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz" 5. Click the resulting file in your tmp folder (it will open in the Archive Manager) 6. Drag'n Drop the file from the Archive Manager to your Desktop Let me know if these instructions do not work.
October 26, 201510 yr Author Thanks for your responses. I have attempted both methods and am still getting the 'no such file or directory' response. Here is the dialog from the second attempt as suggested by QA Lead: kieran@kieran-M17xR3:~$ cat ~/desktop/pillars/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > ~/desktop/tmp/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz bash: /home/kieran/desktop/tmp/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz: No such file or directory kieran@kieran-M17xR3:~$ To confirm, I have two folders on my desktop. One named pillars with the four .tar.gz.part1 etc files in, the other named tmp which is empty
October 26, 201510 yr Hey Treemuh89, Mistake in step 4. The "D" in desktop needs to be capitalized. My bad. 4. Type in cat ~/Desktop/Pillars/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.* > ~/Desktop/tmp/PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz
October 27, 201510 yr Author Oh my goodness why didn't I see what was wrong. Feeling very dumb. Your instructions did actually have Desktop written correctly, however that wasn't the issue (I had got it wrong but correcting it still didn't work initially). The problem is that the chunks were labelled pillarsofeternity.tar.gz.part1 etc NOT PillarsOfEternity.tar.gz.part1. I'd checked for capitals on Part1 but not the main text. Thanks QA, if you hadn't spotted my mistake I'd never of thought to check my spelling for the thousandth time and seen it.
October 27, 201510 yr Glad to help. I edited my first post to be correct. Shh don't tell anyone, haha.
Create an account or sign in to comment