Please just try what @gyrfalcon@beehaw.org suggested in their top comment in your other thread.
Just go to the WIFI-FE-2(Other Driver)/Linux Driver/DPA_MT7601U_LinuxSTA_3.0.0.3_20130313/
folder and type make
. What happens?
The instructions you gave in your other thread are for a different driver.
This happens: $ sudo make install make: *** No rule to make target ‘install’. Stop.
This is what the MakeFile contains:
all: make -C UTIL/ osutil $(SHELL) cp_util.sh make -C MODULE/ build_tools make -C MODULE/ osdrv $(SHELL) cp_module.sh make -C NETIF/ osnet
clean: make -C UTIL/ clean make -C MODULE/ clean make -C NETIF/ clean
install: make -C UTIL/ install make -C MODULE/ install make -C NETIF/ install
uninstall: make -C UTIL/ uninstall make -C MODULE/ uninstall make -C NETIF/ uninstall- -
Just type make
. Why do you type make install
? If you can’t follow simple instructions, you won’t be happy with Linux.
You only need make and gcc. If you are using Ubuntu or Linux Mint you can try:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install make build-essential
make
sudo make install
You have to perform the last two commands in the directory where the file called Makefile
is.
gcc
will get installed as part of the build-essential
package that @ksynwa@lemmy.ml listed. And gcc
should get called automatically by the make
-command.
So, you actually don’t have to do a manual step to put gcc
somewhere.
Did you run those commands? Did it work?
I tried doing make it gives me an error. Also (if you have downloaded the file checked it out), if I do “sudo make install” even with the GCC compiler installed, it still does not work.