dirkdej Posted April 2, 2021 Report Posted April 2, 2021 Since the last update, I seem to have lost mouse control on panel switches. The pointer changes to a hand, but when clicking, nothing happens. I can take off, retract the gear (g), fly with the mouse in the square in the windscreen, but I cannot activate any control using the mouse. The propeller also is very weird. Other aircraft are not affected. Log.txt Quote
Goran_M Posted April 2, 2021 Report Posted April 2, 2021 Just curious, if no switches work, how did you get it started and flying? If nothing works, but cursors change to what they're supposed to be, it means it's an activation issue. Quote
dirkdej Posted April 3, 2021 Author Report Posted April 3, 2021 The engine was running when I start a new flight. Maybe I should reinstall the TBM, it started misbehaving after the last update. Quote
Goran_M Posted April 3, 2021 Report Posted April 3, 2021 If the engines are running when you load it, it means the TBM is almost definitely not activated. The aircraft should be C+D. Quote
dirkdej Posted April 4, 2021 Author Report Posted April 4, 2021 I reinstalled TBM. No change. Prop looks like waffle pattern. TBM900_Log.txt Log.txt Quote
skiselkov Posted April 4, 2021 Report Posted April 4, 2021 (edited) What distro are you running? The issue is in missing symbols in some basic libs: OpenGPWS.xpl: undefined symbol: _ZTINSt6thread6_StateE X-TCAS.xpl: undefined symbol: _ZTINSt6thread6_StateE systems.xpl: undefined symbol: __cxa_thread_atexit_impl _ZTINSt6thread6_StateE is normally found in libstdc++.so (the standard C++ library) and __cxa_thread_atexit_impl is found in libc.so (the standard C library). I build & test on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. Edited April 4, 2021 by skiselkov Quote
dirkdej Posted April 4, 2021 Author Report Posted April 4, 2021 I am running the latest CentOs 7, up to date. Quote
skiselkov Posted April 4, 2021 Report Posted April 4, 2021 Yeah, Centos7 may be just a bit too old on the libs being shipped. Looking at the release info, it came out in 2014, which means the lib major revisions are from that year. Afterwards Centos only ships bugfixes & backported security patches, not new functionality. I usually test as far back as Ubuntu 16.04, but really 18.04 (i.e. around 2018) is the cutoff for how old of a distro we support. Quote
dirkdej Posted April 5, 2021 Author Report Posted April 5, 2021 (edited) It is Centos 7.8, I run two other heavy-duty professional programs on the same workstation. My aim is to have the most stable OS possible. CentOS certainly fits that bill. I have a total of four workstations running it. I may have to change in the future since Redhat will no longer support the Centos community but rather use it as a proving ground. There are other distros on the horizon to take CenOs place. I don't remember if the current TBM problem started after a CentOS upgrade or a TBM upgrade. All other aircraft including several Carenado are just fine. Edited April 5, 2021 by dirkdej Quote
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