Server :: Virtual Boxes Supports 32bit And 64bit Os?
Jun 23, 2010Iam using Centos 5.4 and now i want to install virtual box in my os. how many virtual boxes can be run
on 32bit and 64bit linux os?
Iam using Centos 5.4 and now i want to install virtual box in my os. how many virtual boxes can be run
on 32bit and 64bit linux os?
I have running 32bit Tomcat on 64bit Redhat machine. What is the maximum Xms Heapsize for 32bit applikation working in 64bit environment. Code: -Xms2048M -Xmx3300M Today I saw that my Tomcat swapping. Seems to bee problem with memory.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI am trying to install skype on a 64bit Fc14 and the 32bit doesn't work.
View 8 Replies View RelatedI 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.
View 5 Replies View RelatedI would like to know the exact difference between 32 bit Linux OS and 64 bit Linux OS. Can some one post me the material or overview on this.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI tried to use tsMuxeR a 32bit app on F12 64bit, but this fails with the following error message:
Code:
# ll tsMux*
-rwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 437072 11. Mai 2009 tsMuxeR
-rwxr-xr-x 1 1000 1000 210412 11. Mai 2009 tsMuxerGUI
[Code]....
Teh 32bit progs of ld-linux.so.2 and libfreetype.so.6 is already installed.
Code:
yum install ld-linux.so.2 libfreetype.so.6
Is it possible to upgrade from F12 32bit to F13 64bit? The hardware would support 64bit.
View 1 Replies View RelatedThis 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]
Is it possible to get a 32bit Wine install on a 64bit Suse OS and block all 64bit updates to Wine?
View 6 Replies View RelatedI 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?
View 9 Replies View RelatedI 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?
View 9 Replies View RelatedI 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.
View 9 Replies View RelatedI tried to find this information under "about Ubuntu", but could not any information on it.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have Ubuntu 10.04 LTS installed...how can I find out if I have 32bit or 64bit version?
Also, can someone briefly explain why there is this importance about "do you have 32bit or 64bit"?! ie. what does it mean?!
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.
View 3 Replies View RelatedI'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,
here are my PC's specs:
CPU C2D Intel 2.6
4 GB RAM
NVidia 8500GT
Nvidia 9500GT
I've managed to use the 32bit apps by installing the 32bit compatibility packages.
I'm trying to run a library compiled in a 32bit Linux (CentOS) environment on my Fedora11 64bit image. I ran into a few issues with dependencies such as gcc, xml2, ssl plus a whole stack more that existed in /lib64 and no/lib where the binary was expecting them. After a bit of reading around, I found I needed to install the .i586 version of each of the dependencies. After adding most of them, I was left with libssl, libcrypto and libxml2. When I tried to do the following
Code:
yum install openssl.i586
I got an error stating it could not be copied due to a conflict with the i686 version. I was going to erase the i686 but it was going to remove a ton of other stuff so I created a symbolic link in /lib to point to 64bit version. Eventually, ldd had no missing dependencies so I figured I was good to go. I now get the following errors when I call my library
./SupervisionServer: /usr/lib/liblber-2.4.so.2: no version information available (required by /lib/libphp5.so)
./SupervisionServer: /usr/lib/libldap_r-2.4.so.2: no version information available (required by /lib/libphp5.so)
./SupervisionServer: error while loading shared libraries: /lib/libpalo_ng.so.0: cannot restore segment prot after reloc: Permission denied
PHP is installed and working and the libpalo_ng.so.0 is in the /lib folder
Google answers attempted:
# grep lm /proc/cpuinfo
# uname -m
# file /sbin/init
# file /usr/bin/file
I don't think none of the above gives deterministic answer. Since I have 32-bit & 64-bit different system all of above spit out the same info.
I have upgraded to 6gb of ram on my lenovo x201. Unfortunately Fedora 14, 32bit version, allow to use only 3gb of ram.
I need now to migrate to 64bit.
What is the best way to backup my actually configuration and restore later?
For example I have my gnome inteface customized, notes in gnote...etc.
I dont want to set up again from scratch.
I try install F14 32 bit, f14 64 bit, f15 32 bit and Centos 5.5 and when it arrives at the end of the installation and reboot, my system no boot. I try install it on a Hardware RAID 1 --> 2 x 2TB. Motherboard Intel DH57DD, Core I5, 4 Gb DD3. (Windows 7 afeter install boot OK).
View 13 Replies View RelatedI have been running F14 as a 32-bit system (original m/b was 32-bit). Now the system is on a 64-bit dual-core processor board and I'd like to change from the 32-bit kernel to 64-bit. I downloaded a 64-bit kernel (kernel-2.6.35.6-45.fc14.86_64.rpm) and attempted to install it. It won't install and Package Installer returns a message of the sort that says this file "has incompatible architecture.
Valid architectures are ['athlon', 'i686', 'i586', 'i486'....]". My processor is an Athlon 64 x2. Is it possible to do what I want to do (I only want the kernel at the moment)? Is there some Fedora file I need to modify to allow the system to install the 64-bit kernel for this m/b? Do I need another file (or files) installed before I install the kernel?
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
I am a little confused about the Debian installer. I chose the i386 release of Debian 6, downloaded the ISO and installed in a Core2-Quad with 4Gb of RAM. That lead me to a System with a 64Bit Kernel and a 32Bit environment (is that the correct word for it?). Why would the installer chose to install a 64Bit Kernel, even if i386 installation media was explicitly selected? Though it is easy to change the kernel manually after the installation is complete, I really would like to know if there is a good technical reason for selecting a 64Bit Kernel in this case.
View 2 Replies View RelatedIve been using Ubuntu 32bit on my work Dell E6400 for nearly a year now with no problems. It is capable of running Ubuntu 64bit and Ive tried out the live CD which seems ok. I have a spare 40GB HDD and a USB caddy so Id like to install Ubuntu 64bit onto that and start working with that as a trial. Once im happy I can get all the usual things I need for my work (like vpnc) working then I'll wipe the main internal HDD and install Ubuntu 64bit.
Apart from backing up my home directory, id like to backup a list of my installed packages as a list of reference so I know what to add into my new install. Is there a "apt" command to do this and list the packages in a way where if I install those packages, I'll not hit any dependancy problems by installing one before another?
I don't come across as dumb but here it goes *L* I have 2, 2gig usb pendrives. I have Ubuntu on both of these drives 1 is Ubuntu 10.10 32bit the other is Ubuntu 10.10 64bit. When in the live environment can I tell which bit I am currently running. (Yeah I forgot to mark them) I don't want to install the 32bit on my 64bit computer (I know it would work but still) I really dont want to redo the usb's if it is at all possible.
View 3 Replies View RelatedCan I 'upgrade' from 10.4 32bit to 64bit without reinstall?
View 4 Replies View RelatedI'd like to upgrade from 32 bit to 64 bit ubuntu. Is it possible without reinstalling the whole system?
View 4 Replies View Relatedhow to determine if installed ubuntu is 32bit or 64bit?
View 4 Replies View RelatedOr do I need to d/l a new ISO that's 32bit?
View 1 Replies View RelatedNow, I'm ready to run my program, and my code is based on 32bit version. So I run the program on Ubuntu 9.10 32bit. And I got running time for 48s. But that's a bit slower than I expected; the program has bunch of File I/O processing but the result(48s) just doesn't make sense compared to given initial data set. So I just run the same program and same initial data set on Ubuntu 9.10 64bit ver. Then, bang!! it took 1.4s to finish the job.
Do you have any thoughts what kind of fact might make this significant difference? The differences b/w those two OS are "32 vs 64" and 32bit version has Java SDK, Eclipse, Apache2, Mysql, PHP, CGI, and python. We-server service is running but because I'm not really running web server. Did the result come from these background programs?
-- I tested it on the both OS in the same situation as possible as I can.
(reboot->test)
-- BTW 64bit one doesn't have those programs. I just installed on my external hard drive, so it's literary PURE one. (32bit one also in the same HDD)
-- I run these Ubuntus on VMware