![]() If with those dependencies satisfied Maya still does not work, you need to open a case with Autodesk to request support for RHEL 9. ![]() There's also pcre2-utf16 for the PCRE 2.x version of the library. libprcre16: This may be a typo for libpcre16, which is provided by pcre-utf16. Luckily there's the compat-openssl11 package for providing the OpenSSL 1.1 runtime libraries for applications that need it. openssl-libs: that's because RHEL 9 uses OpenSSL 3.x as the platform runtime/devel. I just went through the documented dependency list, and the only packages not available are: Also shouldn't be necessary to begin with since the application bundles the interpreter itself. If I'm not mistaken, Maya 2022 uses Python 3 by default now, so the Python 2 dependency (which will never be shipped in RHEL 9) isn't necessary. Autodesk does support RHEL 8 for running Maya 2022, so I wonder if using CentOS Stream 8 is an option for you ValorCat? ![]() The VFX community fairly strictly follows the VFX Reference platform which requires applications to be built on RHEL 7 at the moment. If I still had my Autodesk licenses available to me I'd give this a That won't exist at the present point in time. Sorry if this is a big ask, I just know so many IT people in VFX would be so relieved if all these dependencies were part of the out-of-the-box repos in RHEL9 And I figured it would be really nice to have support upstream for when everyone when the whole industry gets to Maya 2022. ![]() I figured this was worth mentioning since Disney Feature Animation, Pixar, Digital Domain (and countless others) use Autodesk Maya as part of their 3D suite using RHEL. I can't really get to anything when the home screen is blank. I was able to salvage a lot through through, but the new Maya home screen (New as of Maya 2022.1) does not display for some reason. I wanted to try CentOS 9 Stream on my main rendering machine, and I had a lot of difficulty getting the proper dependencies:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |