Jacob Moorman (Quality of Service Manager, )īastian: at least someone else has the same problem! I mainly use PS on windows, since my scanner works there (and that's about all I use windows for nowadays.), so it's not a critical situation, but I would want to have 16-bit editing capability in Linux. While has quite an experienced set of users, for issues like this you are probably best off asking the software developers (CinePaint) or distributors (Debian). The Debian bug tracking system may be found at: These maintainers will work with the upstream software developers (in this case, the CinePaint developers) to work out problems like this. You should also consider reporting the problems to Debian they provide their own bug reporting facilities. The CinePaint project page can be seen at: Īs per the support page for this project, they offer a -users mailing list and a Bug Reporting Tracker either of these would be a good way to report the problems you've had: Before posting, you should check to see if similar problems hae already been reported (there may well be an answer to your problem in the mailing list archives). provides a common set of facilities to each project, including tools to help manage bug reports, as well as mailing lists. Have you reported the issue to the CinePaint project team? CinePaint (formerly FilmGimp) is hosted on, a web site that provides hosting for tens of thousands of different Open Source software development projects. I just long so much for 16bit support in the Gimp. Well, I guess that's why it is called like it's called. My 512MB ram are barely enough, it will swap out all the time. If it helps? I'll try it myself soon.īut the thing that bothers me the most is that clearly it is not optimized to handle large images (this may also be the root problem of the segfaults). Maybe also have a look at available configure options. That will build it against the libs on your system, and you still get a nice managed Debian-package to install. They seem to have pretty long release cycles (0.18 is from last July), so I guess another version won't help much.īut you could try to compile the package yourself with "apt-get source cinepaint" and doing "debian/rules binary" in the source directory. The Debian version I have is 0.18, so it's the same as the realease version on Sourceforge. But beware: saving in xcf does not seem to get layer masks right (they are just black when opened again). But usually I can do "enough" steps of editing before it crashes, so I just save often. I also use it, also with Debian (unstable), and have similar problems.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |