The installer doesn’t provide any help at all however after launching LabVIEW from the command line, you’ll notice a number of errors regarding missing libraries. LabVIEW 2014 SP1 64bit installs and runs just fine (aside from some minor graphics glitches) but 32bit doesn’t run at all out-of-the-box. Although CentOS 7 is finally supported with LabVIEW 2015 SP1, what about earlier versions? The only officially supported distributions of Linux has been Red Hat Enterprise, Scientific, and openSUSE ( link). In this article, we’ll discuss installing 32bit LabVIEW on CentOS 7. apt-get? zypper? yum? Even after you get the main LabVIEW packaged installed, why doesn’t it launch? The most common problem is missing libraries. So many commands on the terminal and so many variations of package management depending on the distribution. Installing LabVIEW onto Linux distributions isn’t the easiest process if you’re using to installing applications in Windows.
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