How To Install celt051 on CentOS 7
Introduction
In this tutorial we learn how to install celt051
on CentOS 7.
What is celt051
CELT (Constrained Energy Lapped Transform) is an ultra-low delay audio codec designed for realtime transmission of high quality speech and audio. This is meant to close the gap between traditional speech codecs (such as Speex) and traditional audio codecs (such as Vorbis). The CELT bitstream format is not yet stable, this package is a special version of 0.5.1 that has the same bitstream format, but symbols and files renamed from ‘celt*’ to ‘celt051*’ so that it is parallel installable with the normal celt for packages requiring this particular bitstream format. CELT (Constrained Energy Lapped Transform) is an ultra-low delay audio codec designed for realtime transmission of high quality speech and audio. This is meant to close the gap between traditional speech codecs (such as Speex) and traditional audio codecs (such as Vorbis). The CELT bitstream format is not yet stable, this package is a special version of 0.5.1 that has the same bitstream format, but symbols and files renamed from ‘celt*’ to ‘celt051*’ so that it is parallel installable with the normal celt for packages requiring this particular bitstream format.
We can use yum
or dnf
to install celt051
on CentOS 7. In this tutorial we discuss both methods but you only need to choose one of method to install celt051.
Install celt051 on CentOS 7 Using yum
Update yum database with yum
using the following command.
After updating yum database, We can install celt051
using yum
by running the following command:
Install celt051 on CentOS 7 Using dnf
If you don’t have dnf installed you can install DNF on CentOS 7 first.
Update yum database with dnf
using the following command.
After updating yum database, We can install celt051
using dnf
by running the following command:
How To Uninstall celt051 on CentOS 7
To uninstall only the celt051
package we can use the following command:
References
Summary
In this tutorial we learn how to install celt051
on CentOS 7 using yum
and dnf
.