You might want to try an unaltered Gargoyle compile & save the entire build output to a text file for reference. The patch scripts employ some fuzzy logic, so they can handle changes it wasn't expecting, but it might not be able to handle a huge jump in the base OpenWrt version. Having had to figure out why a Mac OS X build was failing (turns out the Gargoyle build scripts require updated utilities), I see that there some deep source modifications to OpenWrt for things like bandwidth (the netfilter-match-modules folder). Gargoyle automatically pulls the desired OpenWrt version which in turn pulls the desired versions of the linux kernel & such. compile (with for example make V=99 b_large) No further input is required. get the gargoyle source from the git repositoryģ. set up the build environment with apt-get (you install mostly binaries, precious little compiling)Ģ. I wouldn't be elated to try & do a native Windows/mingw build.ġ. A full build on native Mac OS X took be I think 70 minutes (more like 3 hours under Linux Mint 14 VM with 4 cores - long, but an easy compile). I failed first at compiling on Mac OSX (I've got it now), so I compiled under a Parallels 7 VM with Linux Mint 14. The most recent gargoyle sources have to do with the web interface.Īs to how easy Gargoyle is to compile depends wholly on the build platform. I believe the builds available here comprise the majority of Gargoyle updates since the last front-page release:
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