On Oct 22, 2014, at 8:43 PM, Tracy Hockenhull <Tracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I'm fairly new to Linux, and new to Wireshark, and I'm having problems with the ./configure part of the process to install Wireshark.
On Ubuntu, the standard process to install a program is "fire up Synaptics Package Manager, search for it, and install the package it finds".
If you want a version newer than the version in the Ubuntu repository - which you might, because my Ubuntu 12.04 (virtual) machine claims that the current version in the package repository is 1.6, which is, err, umm, *three major versions out of date* - then, if there isn't a convenient PPA with something less out-of-date, you would need to...
> The error I'm getting is this:
>
> checking for GTK+ - version >= 3.0.0... no
> *** Could not run GTK+ test program, checking why...
> *** The test program failed to compile or link. See the file config.log for the
> *** exact error that occured. This usually means GTK+ is incorrectly installed.
> configure: error: GTK+ 3 is not available
>
> To fix this, I tried sudo apt-get install gtk+3.0,
...install the *development* package for GTK+, which is called libgtk-3-dev, if Synaptics on my Ubuntu virtual machine is to be believed.
Most Linux distributions have separate "user" and "developer" packages for various libraries; the "user" package is sufficient to allow binary packages *using* the library to work, but not sufficient to allow you to *compile* programs using the library - you need the "developer" package to do that.