Installing Painstorm Studio on Linux (Ubuntu 18.04) Guide
Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2018 8:53 am
I bought Paintstorm Studio on Windows and love it, so I wanted to try it out on Linux. It's a bit of an ordeal to get it installed if you don't have the right dependencies, so I thought I'd write up a little guide so you don't have to go in blindly like I did XD.
Note: Because I installed PSS on Ubuntu 18.04, this guide will probably only work as written for Ubuntu and other Debian-based distros. You may need to modify some of the commands to suit your distro.
Before installing anything on Linux it may be a good idea to update your system so you have the latest repositories/dependencies. Open a Terminal and run this command:
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sudo apt udpate && upgrade
The instructions for installation that PSS provides (http://paintstormstudio.com/linuxfaq.html) work fine, but a simpler way to install under Ubuntu 18.04 is to, after extracting the .run file from the archive, right-click it and choose Properties; go to the Permissions tab, and then check the option for "Is executable", click OK, then you can just double-click on the .run file to install it. Punch in your password on the prompt that comes up and hit enter.
PSS is installed now, but when you try to launch it from your distro's main menu you will get this error in the terminal window that pops up:
This is because you either do not have libGLEW installed or the version you have installed is more up-to-date than the one that PSS requests.error while loading shared libraries: libGLEW.so.1.13: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Open a terminal and install this dependency with the command:
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sudo apt install glew-utils
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locate libGLEW
You need to create a symbolic link so that any program that requests libGLEW.so.1.13 like PSS does can use the more up-to-date-version instead. Use this command to do that:
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sudo ln -s /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libGLEW.so.2.0 /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libGLEW.so.1.13
Tip: if typing out the full directories is annoying, you can simply start typing them and then hit TAB to autocomplete. For example, if you type "/us" and then hit TAB, it'll fill in "/usr/" for you, same goes for the "x86..." directory.
Now if you try to run PSS from your main menu in Ubuntu, it should work fine!