hJust installed brand new Centos 5.6 and skype, according to centos wiki (http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/Skype) Getting these errors: skype: /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.9' not found (required by skype)
i wanna install packages for my RHLE how can i do that ,i tried in the add/remove software menu ,but i didn't work i tried rpm tools but the problem is how can i specify what i want from the cd like cmake library for example.
Recently I installed gcc-4.3.4 on my suse 11.3( I had to install it because matlab mex compiler was supported uptill gcc-4.3.4. ). It took me several mins to compile the source and installing took another hour.Now, the problem which I'm facing is as follows:1. can't open install/remove software, zypper, openoffice, firefox .. and many other applications.
zypper: /usr/local/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.11' not found (required by zypper) zypper: /usr/local/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.14' not found (required by zypper) zypper: /usr/local/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.11' not found (required by
I'm a bit of a linux noob, running gOS (which I believe is based on 8.04) on a little Dell Mini (8GB SDD, hence gOS).I tried installing an app called Sublime Text, and it yields the following error in terminal:
Code: me@dellmini:~/apps/Sublime$ ./sublime_text ./sublime_text: /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.11' not found (required by
Anyone have any luck getting Firefox's binary to run under CentOS 5.5 from Mozilla's web site?
# ls firefox-4.0.tar.bz2 # /usr/lib/firefox /usr/lib/firefox-4.0.0/firefox-bin: /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.9' not found (required by /usr/lib/firefox-4.0.0/libxul.so)
Trying to launch Second Life gives the following error message:
You are running the Second Life Viewer on a x86_64 platform. The most common problems when launching the Viewer (particularly 'bin/do-not-directly-run-secondlife-bin: not found' and 'error while loading shared libraries') may be solved by installing your Linux
This problem was easily found using search with solutions for Fedora 11.
The following information has been found for adding the 32 bit support to Fedora 11 but it does not work in Fedora 12.
The file created in the instructions below is a list of the 32 bit libraries. It is then called as input to yum to simply install them.
"Add the Libraries Next, add the 32-bit libraries by copying the following list, and pasting it into a text file. Save it as �Fedora-ia32.txt�."
Another post says that was all unnecessary as the following commands would do the same thing.
Could have simply been achieved by calling:$ yum install SDL.i586...(Or by selecting SDL.i586 in add/remove programs.)
The problem I have with Fedora 12 are neither of these will install anything in Fedora 12. Looking at add/remove programs does not yield anthing that looks like it is 32 bit support when searching with the argument "SDL".
Does anyone know how to install 32 bit support into Fedora 12 64 bit version ? I like the simple yum expression rather than long lists like the first example uses, but I'll try anything if it works.
A side question to this entire experiment is what chance would you give to Second Life being able to be run remotely using VNC? I would think if it runes on the Linux machine, using a remote terminal would have little impact. Using VNC isn't the usual way this will be run, I just wonder if it would work at all.
I installed the minimal-command line system from the kubuntu CD on my laptop, which is guess is roughly around 200mb after installation. I wish to install a Desktop Environment preferably KDE and I wanted to know how and where do I begin from? Do I need to have a working XORG prior to installation of KDE and do I also need to install Window mangers and e.t.c? What all packages/libraries and components do I need to install first? I'm really not sure where should I begin from.
Initially what I am trying to do is to have working GUI system,then later on I can install rest of the packages and software that I need, like office, GPU drivers, browser etc. Secondly,for a minimal KDE system,what metapackages are to be installed from this site? I believe kdebase, kdebase-runtime, kdebase-workspace are required. [URL]
I'm running openSUSE 11.0 (X86-64) and just installed skype 2.1.0.47. When starting it, I get skype: error while loading shared libraries: libQtDBus.so.4: wrong ELF class: ELFCLASS64 Where do I get the correct library from? Or which one should I point it to?
I'm reading the 3rd official handbook in beta version and I learn that the automated tool "slackpkg" exists only since Slackware 12.1.Before that, how did users install new packages and their libraries ? Did they search each package with their web browsers and then install manually? For me, it seems tedious because I usually work with distributions like Fedora, Debian which use an online package management.Is there another way to download it from console and without web browser?
Why many Linux distros are trying to use always the latest versions of the libraries and don't save the old libraries for compatibility? I mean, I can see libtiff for example, i can found a libtiff.so.5 on my /usr/lib, but doesn't store a libtiff.so.4 or 3 just for binary applications or games. For this example, I need libtiff.so.4 for uplink.
That should happen too on the old version of sims for linux, some ID games or others.What's wrong with storing old libraries? PD: Yay, my first post on 3 years!
I installed Boost 1.43.0 on Fedora 12 32 bits, using standard build from the source code procedure:
./bootstrap.sh ./bjam ./bjam install
I see all Boost libraries in /usr/local/lib. Now I build my own program depending on the Boost libraries, and it is built successfully. However, when I try to execute my program, it shows "Library not found" message:
Code: [alex@localhost ~]$ sixfpdconsole
sixfpdconsole: error while loading shared libraries: libboost_system.so.1.43.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
[alex@localhost ~]$ ldd /usr/local/bin/sixfpdconsole linux-gate.so.1 => (0x009d1000) libboost_system.so.1.43.0 => not found libboost_thread.so.1.43.0 => not found
I'm trying to compile gwenhywfar-2.6.2 on Slackware64 13.1. That's the error I get:
Code: checking if profiling is to be supported... no checking if OpenSSL should be used... yes checking for openssl includes... -I/usr/include checking for openssl libs... checking whether openssl is usable... configure: error: ssl libraries not found.
I've downloaded the static .tar.bz2 file for Skype .
[code]...
Same with Flash, my default browser is Konqueror. explain everything for dummies. I've also created a non-root user (kasu) and when I try logging in, I get the error message; There's no home directory and it can't be created.
i am trying to install: kiso-0.8.3 but when I try ./configure I recive this error >>>>>>>>>>
configure: error: Qt (>= Qt 3.2) (headers and libraries) not found. Please check your installation! For more details about this problem, look at the end of config.log
I'm on F13 and I'm trying to compile a package from the source. The package is delasa (www.dalesa.lk) and when I ./configure. I get 'configure: error: openssl development libraries not found'. This is the output of 'yum search openssl | grep dev'
openssl-devel.i686 : Files for development of applications which will use globus-gsi-openssl-error-devel.i686 : Globus Toolkit - Globus OpenSSL Error globus-openssl-devel.i686 : Globus Toolkit - Openssl Library Development Files globus-openssl-module-devel.i686 : Globus Toolkit - Globus OpenSSL Module
Is there any way to use a dynamic libraries as a static libraries instead when compiling, so that my resulting executable won't have them as dependencies?
I am working on a project which targets both 32 and 64 bit architectures at the moment. My system is amd64. I added i386 architecture using this guide. However, my problem is
Code: Select allapt-get install package-name:i386
prompts the removal of currently installed packages (amd64 arch.) which is the problem.
Code: Select allReading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done The following extra packages will be installed: libportaudio0:i386
[Code] ...
Some of the packages I am talking about are
-libegl1-mesa-dev:i386 -libportaudio-dev:i386
Now, as of now, I want to carry out the compilation using 32 bit libraries, however, I really don't want to install 64bit version of all prerequisites each time I switch the compilation from 32 bit to 64. Is there any way to have both architectures at the same time?
I am trying to install kcachegrind and during the ./configure phase I got the following error: Checking for Qt... configure: error: Qt (>= Qt 3.0) (headers and libraries) not found. Please check your installation!
Now I guess I have QT installed and I tried to do the following: ./configure --with-qt-includes=/usr/lib64/qt4/include but that did not work either.. actually checking further I found that the folder include is missing in usr/lib64/qt4/ !!!!
Just trying to install Skype on Fedora 12 .. but got an error: skype: error while loading shared libraries: libasound.so.2: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory So, anyone got it working there ?
way to install packages from a live CD/DVD. I have a live dvd that their are alot of apps I want off it, I would download them my self but I have very limited bandwidth. I have read about how to repackage the packages.
I want to install packages such as samba, openssh etc. from a CD rather than download it from the net each time I build a new machine. I am able to install them from the installation CD after using the �apt-cdrom add� command but what I want to do is burn my own CD with only the packages I require and install from that. I have put them on a CD, entered �apt-cdrom add� but get errors about the name of the disk, and a read error when copying package lists.