OpenSUSE :: Installing Mathlab For (32bit) Into 11.1 (64bit) - Error With Xsetup
May 11, 2010
I am trying to install the Linux version of Mathlab (32bit) into my openSUSE 11.1 (64bit). With STATA this was at the time possible, having installed the 32bit GTK. This is a program running Java. So since I have both 32bit and 64bit Java installed it should work, no? Copying files to /usr/local/temp as indicated OK
Decompressing O.K.
Code:
su -
cd /usr/local/temp
./install
Executing ./install gives following error: An error status was returned by the program 'xsetup', the X Window System version of 'install'. The following messages were written to standard error: /usr/local/temp/update/install/main.sh: line 86: /usr/local/temp/update/bin/glnxa64/xsetup: No such file or directory
Attempt to fix the problem and try again. If X is not available or 'xsetup' cannot be made to work then try the terminal version of 'install' using the command: install* -t or INSTALL* -t
If I well understand in line 86 the script is calling the 64 bit version of the file gnlxa64 to call the 64 bit version of the program that is not available (as academic version). I tried then the command line version.
I'm having trouble understanding the principles behind OpenSuse package and repository management. Here is a concrete example: I want to install the 32bit version of glibc. (using zypper) Naturally I write 'wp glibc' to see what's available. Output:
[Code]....
I'm looking for the (32bit) tokyocabinet library. I go through all the hoops like I did in the first example. Nothing shows up! How is that possible? Does opensuse really not have this library in any repository? Does that mean I have to install from source? How can I be sure that zypper searches through all repositories?
I have 4 partitions in my system, out of which two(sda1, sda2) have windows on them. I have installed RHEL 4 32 - bit on sda3 and after that , installed installed RHEL 64-bit on to a partition sda 5. Now i am unable to boot into RHEL 32-bit. The error i am getting is Error 13: Invalid or unsupported executable format.
$ wine /home/gnu/Downloads/win7/adobe/pagemaker7/Pagemaker/setup.exe Trying to load PE image for unsupported architecture (I386) Trying to load PE image for unsupported architecture (I386) wine: Bad EXE format for Z:homegnuDownloadswin7adobepagemaker7Pagema kerSetup.exe
my lappy is 64bit...But I dont remember, So far I am using 32bit ubuntu. So How can I know if my computer is 64bit machine? if it is, Installing ubuntu 9.10 64bit will give any performance fetch??I guess 64bit ubuntu and 32bit are same interms of functionality and look Right? may be performance difference? give me some info...
environment: 2.6.9-89.ELlargesmp #1 SMP Mon Apr 20 10:43:12 EDT 2009 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux cat /etc/redhat-release Red Hat Enterprise Linux ES release 4 (Nahant Update 8) I am trying to install a 32 bit package on a 64 bit install. I don't get an error, it just does not install. This is the command I am using:
I really need the 32bit Libraries of wxWidgets. 32bit Packages for 64bit Linux normally called name_of_package-32bit i only know that it is in openSUSE. i cannot find libwx-32bit packages anywhere, the program i want to run is a 32bit only program, 64bit is impossible for this program and here you can find it PCSX2 Playstation 2 emulator - News
EDIT: only pre-compiled thinks please, compiling takes too long and 100% CPU usage
today I've got an application which is need glibc-2.1 32bit but my opensuse 11.2 is 64bit.I've checked the yast but nothing interesting catch my eyes. is there any solution to install glibc 2.1 32bit on a 64bit box?
My new HP625 Laptop came with SLED11 preconfigured - including such special keys as the wireless/bluetooth key etc under gnome. I need a 64bit OS and 8Gb for my applications and the HP site does not offer any explicit support for 64bit Linux. So I installed SLED64bit on separate system partition and can select now 32 or 64 bit from GRUB. There remains the problem of configuring gnome (or KDE) on the 64bit system to take advantage of the keyboard, sound, cam etc. I did find a 64bit wireless driver in the i586-Repo on the HP-site that requires the kernel from opensuse 11.3 and I got bluetooth working with gnome but just for the keyboard alone, I am stuck with finding a decent configuration under 64bit. Is it possible to migrate the system wide gnome configuration from the SLED32 bit installation (as configured by HP) to any SuSEx86_64 system?
OpenSUSE 11.4 install from DVD with default options. (KDE Desktop, selected language and keyboard is German)
When installing from the 32bit media KDE is always English afterwards but when installing from the 64bit media I will have a german KDE as expected. Changing country & language & preferred language on the 32bit does not help - still in English.
I met some problems with installation of Matlab2010a for Unix.My edition of ubuntu is 10.04 and I downloaded an iso file of ubuntu and extract that in this document: /home/edwardli/temp/Mathworks.Matlab.R2010a.UNIX/
when I start to install, it showed :
------------------------------------------------------------------ An error status was returned by the program 'xsetup',the X Window System version of 'install'. The following messages were written to standard error:
You may know the Humble Indie Pack 2, which is a set of crossplatform indie video games. There's one game in the bundle that doesn't offer a 64bit build and therefore it fails to load. It's called Braid and that's what you get when you try to run it: $ ./braid ./braid: error while loading shared libraries: libGL.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
Of course the 64bit libs for OpenGL and the propitiatory nvidia drivers are installed, but the game asks for the 32bit ones, at least to my understanding. I do know that why can install 32bit libraries on a 64 bit linux system (we do that for the sake of crappy Adobe Flash), but I don't know where to find these libs (searching the repo with keywords like .i586 or ia32 led me nowhere).
I just ordered my new laptop (DLL XPS15) and I'm wondering on whether install a 32 or 64 bit version, I don't know if there's really a big difference between each one of them, I've always used a 32 bit version.
I am pretty new to linux, I was trying to install vnc enterprise edition (x64) but was getting the following error message:
"error: Failed dependencies: libX11.so.6()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libXext.so.6()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libXtst.so.6()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libc.so.6()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.2.5)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.3)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libcrypt.so.1()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libcrypt.so.1(GLIBC_2.2.5)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libdl.so.2()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libdl.so.2(GLIBC_2.2.5)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libgcc_s.so.1()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libgcc_s.so.1(GCC_3.0)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libgcc_s.so.1(GCC_3.3)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libm.so.6()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libm.so.6(GLIBC_2.2.5)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libstdc++.so.5()(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libstdc++.so.5(CXXABI_1.2)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libstdc++.so.5(GLIBCPP_3.2)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64 libstdc++.so.5(GLIBCPP_3.2.2)(64bit) is needed by vnc-E-4.5.21561-1.x86_64"
I'm new to Fedora and the Red Hat way of doing things, having been a Ubuntu/Mint user for the last 5-6 years. I've been using Fedora for my daily computer now for the last 3-4 months - a change that has definitely been for the better! However, earlier this morning I went to install a .rpm, and yum output via terminal the following error:
Code: [leeky@darkstar ~]$ sudo yum install opera [sudo] password for leeky: Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit Adding en_US to language list Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile * fedora: mirror.netrino.co.uk * rpmfusion-free: mirror01.th.ifl.net * rpmfusion-free-updates: mirror01.th.ifl.net * rpmfusion-nonfree: mirror01.th.ifl.net * rpmfusion-nonfree-updates: mirror01.th.ifl.net * updates: mirror.netrino.co.uk Error: database disk image is malformed [leeky@darkstar ~]$
This is the first time I have received this error. I've now tried the following methods of resolving this problem with no luck:
1. Code: yum clean all 2. Code: yum clean metadata yum clean dbcache yum makecache 3. Physically removing the /var/libs/yum folder, and creating a new "yum" folder, and then step two above to rebuild it. Either way the problem then still returns in terminal.
This is probably a dumb question but I can't find out whether I have a 32 or 64 bit machine. Here's uname -a [Linux Flow 2.6.34.7-56.fc13.i686 #1 SMP Wed Sep 15 03:33:58 UTC 2010 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux]
I have a 5 year desktop with 1.5GB RAM and the following specifications. AMD Athlon D400 Single Channel 64bit. Would it be advisable to install the latest version of Ubuntu "Lucid Lynx" 64bit on this pc?
I have downloaded the 64bit version of Ubuntu 10.04. I am currently using 8.10 32bit and I want to clean install 10.04 64bit version. However the one thing that is putting me off is that I have heard if your PC has 1GB of RAM or less then 64bit won't run very good because it uses more RAM than 32bit. (my PC has 1GB) So the question is: Does 64bit use more RAM than 32bit?
I currently have Ubuntu running in 32 bit with pae but I now want to switch to 64 bit. all of my hardware supports it. Is there an easer way to switch without needing to install Ubuntu all over again? It's such a haste to copy all of my files and reinstall programs and there settings manually.
Im installing a fresh copy of F12 on a laptop.What I would like to know is if I install the 64bit version will all none 64bit apps install and run.I have normal apps but do needs the lotus notes clientadobe apps, crossover linux, vmware etc.
I've been using the 64bit version of fedora since release 10. I want to know what exactly makes the diffrence between the 32bit and the 64bit releases. I am having some troubles recently regarding some drivers and other issues in my fedora 12 and I was thinking of moving to the 32bit one,