Fedora :: Wine Broken Dependencies - X64 ?
Dec 8, 2009Code:
running on fedora 12 x64 and glibc-common is installed (glibc-common-2.11.4.x86_64)
Also, if im running a x64 system, why are most of the packages listed i686?
Code:
running on fedora 12 x64 and glibc-common is installed (glibc-common-2.11.4.x86_64)
Also, if im running a x64 system, why are most of the packages listed i686?
A couple of weeks ago, I went to run a yum update, but got this message:
Loaded plugins:
I've been running yum with --skip-broken since, but I'd like to know what package I need to get to the service level that xulrunner and firefox need. I'm running Fedora 12.
This has been bothering me for a while. I thought if I waited a dependency would get fixed and the update would work, but it hasn't for a while now. I have included the error when trying to update gcc and the libraries. Skip broken skips everything so no dice there.
View 1 Replies View RelatedEclipse cannot start and I can see the following in the log:
java.version=1.6.0_22
java.vendor=Sun Microsystems Inc.
BootLoader constants: OS=linux, ARCH=x86_64, WS=gtk, NL=en_US
Command-line arguments: -os linux -ws gtk -arch x86_64
!ENTRY org.eclipse.osgi 2 0 2011-07-09 15:01:23.881
!MESSAGE One or more bundles are not resolved because the following root constraints are not resolved: .....
and etc. those files are actually in /usr/lib64/eclipse/plugins/ but system cannot find them as I see.
It happened after I played with Eclipse's software configs and broke some dependencies there. After I tried removing and reinstalingl eclipse I notices that /usr/lib64/eclipse files don't change and I have the same broken sortware install configuration. So I deleted the folder usr/lib64/eclipse and reinstalled Eclipse. It didn't work. I restored usr/lib64/eclipse from eclipse~ and now see that error log. What is the way to fix it or probably remove eclipse completely and reinstall that /usr/lib64/eclipse/ becomes as it was by default.
seems like after a recent upgrade of stretch, i get a message (in italian)
Code: Select all
$ sudo apt-get install kde-full
Lettura elenco dei pacchetti... Fatto
Generazione albero delle dipendenze
Lettura informazioni sullo stato... Fatto
Alcuni pacchetti non possono essere installati. Questo può voler dire
che è stata richiesta una situazione impossibile oppure, se si sta
usando una distribuzione in sviluppo, che alcuni pacchetti richiesti
non sono ancora stati creati o sono stati rimossi da Incoming.
Le seguenti informazioni possono aiutare a risolvere la situazione:
[CODE]..
I have a fairly old debian distribution running on the linux Kernel 2.6.18-4-686 and I did something silly which has broken multiple packages. I use the manual package installation command (sudo dpkg -i filename.deb) to install a single package (gcc base) however I did this using the latest version of the package which seems to have broken my GCC package completely and I am unable to compile c++ anymore.
When I now load the Synaptic Package Manager it tells me that I have 10 broken packages and when I use the fix feature it tells me I need to update other packages to fix the depencies (it selects almost every single package on my system to be removed at this point!).
I cant change the system too much because the software packages are set up specifically to run a certain application and I don't want to change anything incase I make it stop working!
So my question is this:
If I go to the synaptic Package Manager and uninstall the broken packages (they are all gcc related), will I be able to use the aptitude command to install GCC again? If so will it automatically install the version of GCC that will work with my system? or will it try and install the latest version and then update the rest of my system?
I've been trying all morning to update from a working 9.10 to 10.04 and unfortunately every time I try it blocks me.
An unresolvable problem occurred while calculating the upgrade: E:Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.
This can be caused by:
* Upgrading to a pre-release version of Ubuntu
* Running the current pre-release version of Ubuntu
* Unofficial software packages not provided by Ubuntu
If none of this applies, then please report this bug against the 'update-manager' package and include the files in /var/log/dist-upgrade/ in the bug report.
Restoring original system state
I've uploaded the full apt log to pastebin here:
[URL]
I have a computer with 128 ko of RAM (a very old one). I installed yesterday ubuntu 8 because ubuntu 9 requires 512 ko of RAM and was very slow. Now, I have problems to update packages and to install every thing. I changed the sources.list because it seems that links are no more available according to the error messages. (I have put many adresses for ubuntu 9 because I think the kernel is the same not as the kernel for ubuntu 10). But new problems have occurred like "broken dependencies". Now I want to correct, and I don't know how? I'm still a beginner with this OS.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have Ktorrent installed via the repositories and its always worked perfectly. Today I ran software update with KPackageKit and it installed updates. It told me that KTorrent had to be removed to continue and without thinking I hit ok. Now my KTorrent is gone. When I try to install it on the terminal with
Code:
sudo apt-get install ktorrent
it gives me this error.
Code:
$ sudo apt-get install ktorrent
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
[code]...
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
ktorrent : Depends: ktorrent-data (= 4.0.3-0ubuntu1) but 4.0.5-3ubuntu1~maverick1~ppa1 is to be installed
E: Broken packages If I remove and reinstall ktorrent-data it doesn't help. build-dep doesn't help. autoremove and then trying to reinstall doesn't help. I'm not running some strange dev version of anything. I have a standard Kubuntu 10.10 amd64 installation and my KDE version is 4.6.2 from the regular repositories. I run updates (standard repositories) almost every day and have never seen anything like this before.
I've just tried to install amarok 1.4 with the bogdan sources, but now I've broken dependencies in Kubuntu 10.04.
When trying to sudo apt-get -f install, I got the following output:
I tried several tricks to repair the broken dependencies, but couldn't suceed.
I am attempting to setup an ftp server as a first project to get me going in the world of Linux however when I run the command apt-get install proftpd-basic ....
View 14 Replies View RelatedA couple of days ago, I upgraded my Kubuntu to Lucid. In this phase, the system reported that it was impossible to upgrade samba-common, and the installation aborted on 90%. Nevertheless everything is working but KPakageKit, which reports:
"There are broken dependecies on your system. Please use an advanced package manage e.g. Synaptic or aptitude to resolve this situation."
Neither "sudo aptitude safe-upgrade" nor "sudo apt-get -f install" solved the problem:
omen@darkstar:~$ sudo aptitude safe-upgrade
[..]:
samba-common
kubuntu-desktop .....
So the problem is really samba-common.
So i upgraded from 9.10 to 10.04. when i ran update manager after the install, it had some stuff for OpenOffice and during the update it hung. I powered off the laptop and turned it back on, booted into ubuntu and tried over but it didn't list the updates again.
View 8 Replies View Relatedwhen I have a broken packages on the system and want to apt-get install something (completely unrelated to the broken package) apt-get starts giving me crap about the broken stuff and won't download and install the packages I'm asking for. How can I make it ignore the completely unrelated stuff about missing deps on my system and download what I want?
View 3 Replies View RelatedI can't update, download packages, or even diagnose due to an elusive error.
If I try to update or check using terminal I get this:
I even tried to restart in recovery mode to check for broken packages and I got this error:
I usually find answers in the documentation but this time I'm really stumped. I am Running 64 bit Ubuntu 9.04.
My recent borked upgrade to -current inspired me to try to come up with a way to sanity-check the lib and bin dirs for broken library symlinks (possibly indicating missing libs) and for binaries and libraries that belong to no installed package, as well as missing dependencies.
This script is the result.
I've checked the script results manually, and it appears to be accurate, so I figured I'd post it here for a second opinion, and/or because others may find it useful too. I'm not aware of another popular method of doing this on Slackware, so here it is:
Code:
I have been unable to update due to "broken dependencies". Please take a look at the message:
Fetched 8904kB in 1min29s (99.7kB/s)
Reading package lists... Done
XXXXXX@MDdesktop:~$ sudo apt-get upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
[Code]...
I have never done anything as root. I posted this request in absolute beginner talk, because I am, but there has been no resolution after three weeks or so.
I am new to fedora and installed wine to see if I could get the sony reader software working (required to access sony bookstore from my sony ereader). Well the program did not work though it did create icons on my desktop. wine kept crashing and I said lets just get rid of it. I uninstalled wine via yum remove and nothing appeared to happen so I did rpm -qa |grep wine and saw lots of stuff. So I simply did yum remove wine* and then a rpm -qa |grep wine was empty. however wine is still under applications on my desktop and still has a category for programs--reader. I should also mention that while wine was installed I attempted to remove the reader via the wine uninstalller but a) wine gave a message of a core crash and b) all the uninstaller did was give me the option to reinstall the reader program. so now when I attempt to open an epub it tries with the sony reader software. I know I can just right click to use another program but for now I want wine gone completely from my pc and the sony program gone.
View 2 Replies View Relatedwhen I tried to install wine I got "Missing Dependency: wine-gecko is needed by package wine"so I looked for wine-gecko and download it but also when I tried to install it I got "Missing Dependency: wine-gecko is needed by package wine"it seems that I am in loop each package need the other what to do please?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI am trying to install gdb 7 because gdb 6.8 has been freezing quite a bit on me lately.
Code:
[doriad@davedesktop ~]$ sudo rpm -ihv gdb-7.0-3.fc12.i686.rpm
warning: gdb-7.0-3.fc12.i686.rpm: Header V3 RSA/SHA256 signature: NOKEY, key ID 57bbccba
error: Failed dependencies:
libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.11) is needed by gdb-7.0-3.fc12.i686
libreadline.so.6 is needed by gdb-7.0-3.fc12.i686
It looks like the latest version of readline in F11 is 5.2 and glibc is 2.10. Is there an easy way to get these dependencies installed in Fedora 11?
i`m pretty new in Fedora 13 and linux as well. I installed a Fedora 13 xfce on an elder e series livebook.
Then I tried to install the rpm packages for vlc from ATrpms - by Distribution > Fedora 13 vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686.rpm
Quote:
could not do simulate: vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686 requires libdca.so.0
vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686 requires libavutil.so.50(LIBAVUTIL_50)
vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686 requires libx264.so.92
vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686 requires libfaad.so.2
vlc-1.0.6-53.fc13.i686 requires libavcodec.so.52
[Code]...
I have a problem with yum on fedora 11. When I ran yum install mplayer/vinagre.i586/ or whatever, It always process dependancies and then at some point returns an error like
or
I tried installing different applications but yum always comes with the above errors.
This is my yum repolist
My fedora.repo file
And my yum.conf
I have tried:
When I run the rpm package to install mediainfo software I get this warning: mediainfo-gui-0.7.33-1.i386.Fedora_12.rpm: Header V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID dfb2ef23
error: Failed dependencies:
libmediainfo.so.0 is needed by mediainfo-gui-0.7.33-4.1.i386
libmediainfo0 >= 0.7.33 is needed by mediainfo-gui-0.7.33-4.1.i386
libzen.so.0 is needed by mediainfo-gui-0.7.33-4.1.i386
libzen0 >= 0.4.14 is needed by mediainfo-gui-0.7.33-4.1.i386
and I have no idea of how to go on..it asks for elevated prompt but is not able to retrieve dependencies by itself..
Administering offline Linux boxes can be a serious pain. The Debian flavours now have keryx to make life easier. Keryx is a cross-platform application, which means one can get the dependencies from Windoze too. Is there any similar package for rpm/fedora based flavours? In the absense of a proper Offline manager, I was also wondering if there is a way to collect the output of:
Code:
yum deplist <package>
... condense or sieve out the double listings, and pipe that to a text file? One can copy the output and run
Code:
yum reinstall <paste them here> --downloadonly
and get all the required dependencies from the yum cache. If all that can be accommodated in one script... then that's pretty cool. I don't have the scripting know-how to dive into this.
I received the updated packages available notice and tried to run the updates.
When I run it, it checks for dependencies and I get this:
I'm seriously new to Linux and I admit, not much makes sense right now.
How do most experienced Fedora users remove packages with large number of dependencies?
I know that the question is as old as yum, but still I can't find solution. There is package-cleanup tool, which supposed to do the job with "--leaves" key, but it doesn't seem to work. Right now I have F12 installed. I installed rosegarden with `yum install rosegarden`. Then I removed it with `yum remove rosegarden`. If I understand right, `package-cleanup --leaves` must show all of 12 dependencies that was installed with rosegarden, but it shows none of them (although it shows few packages). Is this a bug? For years I used Ubuntu and Debian and I was completely satisfied with apt.
I have been running f13 ever since it was released. Evidently the kmod-rt2870 rpms are never deleted when older kernels are removed. When I tried to do today's update the Package Manager and yum complained that some of the older kmod-rt2870 packages left over from fedora 12 were missing kernel dependencies. The kernels have been missing for a long time. I don't know why the package manager started complaining today.
I tried
1) yum clean all
2 rpm --rebuilddb
3) removed the /lib/modules directory corresponding to the old kernels
and the problem persisted.
I finally removed all of the kmod-rt2870 rpms what where originally installed in fedora 12 and I was finally able to complete the update. Why did the package manager suddenly start complaining about the missing kernels?
I attempted to install the power management package apcupsd-3.14.8-1.el4.i386.rpm on a vortexbox (Fedora 14) appliance and got the following:
error: Failed dependencies:
libcrypto.so.4 is needed by apcupsd-3.14.8-1.i386
libnetsnmp.so.5 is needed by apcupsd-3.14.8-1.i386
net-snmp is needed by apcupsd-3.14.8-1.i386
How can I obtain and install these items?
While trying to install a package using gpk-application ("Add/Remove Software" under System Tools), I accidentally checked the "Do not show this message again" checkbox, and now gpk-application does not list the package dependencies anymore.
I tried to go back to listing the dependencies, however, I could not find a way to do it. How do I revert to the default behavior, i.e., having gpk-application listing the dependencies again?
I've recently got this error coming up when I try to install things via yum through the terminal. It happens when I try to install *anything* at all. I'm running 32bit Fedora 14, although my laptop is 64 bit.
I think the error may have occurred a while back when trying to upgrade to fedora 15 running 64 bit, although I'm not sure exactly what I did then
Quote:
I have tried running "rpm -Va --nofiles --nodigest" and I just get this error again.