Maple
From the official website:
- Maple is a high-level language and interactive environment for numerical computation, visualization, and programming. Using Maple, you can analyze data, develop algorithms, and create models and applications. The language, tools, and built-in math functions enable you to explore multiple approaches and reach a solution faster than with spreadsheets or traditional programming languages, such as C/C++ or Java.
Maple is proprietary software produced by Maplesoft and requires a license to obtain, install, and activate. Arch is not officially supported, but the installer provided by Maplesoft may work in some cases.
Installation
Maplesoft provides an installer script that may work on some Arch Linux installations. Version 18 is supported by maple18AUR, later versions use the year as a version: e.g. maple2021AUR. Make sure that you have a working Java installation before beginning.
After purchasing your license, download the appropriate Maple release package and unpack it in a location of your choosing. Open a terminal, change to the directory in which you unpacked the files, and run the installer script as a normal user. Installing the program's files inside of a user's home directory is the default option, and allows for easy removal of all components at a later time.
Once the package is installed, you will need to provide a license activation code. This should have been included in your installation archive.
Troubleshooting
Failed to determine Host ID of license server
In order to get Maple to accept your activation code, you may need to install the ld-lsb package. This will fake a standard Linux standard base runtime and convince the authentication server to accept your valid activation code. The lsb-release package does not solve this issue, as the MapleSoft installation support site might lead one to believe.
Blank main window with tiling window managers
See Java#Gray window, applications not resizing with WM, menus immediately closing.
3D plots failing
Maple ships with its own C++ runtime, which seems to cause issues with 3D rendering (plot3d, implicitplot3d, ...).
Linking the system's gcc-libs instead seems to fix the problem, for example for Maple 2016 on x64 systems, go to
maple2016/bin.X86_64_LINUX/system
and link libstdc++.so.6.0.20
and libstdc++.so.6
to your system's version:
libstdc++.so.6 -> /usr/lib64/libstdc++.so.6 libstdc++.so.6.0.20 -> /usr/lib64/libstdc++.so.6.0.22
Another problem with 3D plots, when using Intel graphics, unrelated to the libstdc++: if the method described above does nothing, you should run the following command before launching Maple:
export MESA_LOADER_DRIVER_OVERRIDE=i965
You can modify the .desktop file, so that this command is ran automatically when Maple is launched.
Offline activation
If activation by license key does not work, you may try Offline Activation.
Enter your license key in the Purchase Code field, and select either Host ID or Disk Serial Number as the hardware activation method.
To obtain your Host ID, run the following command:
ip address show | grep link/ether | awk '{ print $2; }' | sed 's/://g'
and use one of the resulting IDs.
Enter your e-mail address (or use a disposable one), then copy the contents into maplehome/license/license.dat
.
This should activate Maple on next startup.
Use while offline
Your Maple license is bound to your MAC address (they call it host ID).
For NetworkManager 1.2.0 and newer, MAC address randomization while not connected to a network is enabled by default, which interferes with Maple's ability to verify the license.
To fix this, add the following to NetworkManager.conf and restart NetworkManager.
[device] wifi.scan-rand-mac-address=no