These three directories happened to be everything under /rev/ in my case (this is what they prepared for me, I suppose). In my case, I downloaded all inside the following directories (into separate directories on my own computer): In essence, three parts are needed: Synopsys’ installer program, the tool to run and the licensing manager. As the title implies, this should be considered as a cheat sheet, nothing more. Synopsys offers extensive documentation for all this, of course. But once that is over with, all was fine. I should point out, that Synopsys officially supports only Red Hat based distributions (SUSE and RHEL), which explains why small tweaks were necessary. Consider everything below as run om Mint 18.1 x86_64 (which is an Ubuntu derivative), except for the licensing manager, which I eventually ran directly on the Fedora 12 oldie (x86_64 as well). And I have a full Mint 18.1 as a chroot jail on that machine for installing contemporary software. I needed to run Synplify Pro for a short trial period on my Fedora 12 machine (yup, it’s 2018, and still). Posted Under: FPGA, Linux, Software Introduction This post was written by eli on July 8, 2018
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