Summary: | Testing profile 2005.0 multilib enabled | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | Gentoo Linux | Reporter: | Christian Roessner <c> |
Component: | Current packages | Assignee: | AMD64 Project <amd64> |
Status: | RESOLVED INVALID | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | maze, ua_gentoo_bugzilla |
Priority: | High | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Hardware: | AMD64 | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Package list: | Runtime testing required: | --- |
Description
Christian Roessner
2005-02-04 03:55:38 UTC
AFAIK only the glibc ebuild is currently multilib aware and based on what I have read so far until 2005.0 is released, not much work is going in on making a wider multilib support. That is being defered to after the 2005.0 release when the general multilib situation has stabilized. To solve your problem, you *could* try emerging the required emul packages and append the required lib paths to your ldpath. This may or may not work... but it should actually. Hope that helps... Could you be a bit more specific please? LDPATH does not seem to do a thing... # skype skype: error while loading shared libraries: libpthread.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory # ls -l /lib32/libpthread.so.0 rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 18 Apr 8 22:17 /lib32/libpthread.so.0 -> libpthread-0.10.so # LDPATH="/lib32" export LDPATH # echo $LDPATH /lib32 # skype skype: error while loading shared libraries: libpthread.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory glibc currently is the only lib that really builds native 32bit too, so it's completely save to use the other emul-libs. the final goal will be to get every library in portage built native, but we're still pretty far from that. |