Re: [gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-04 Thread Mick
On Wednesday, 4 July 2018 10:21:16 BST Zoltán Kócsi wrote: > On Wed, 4 Jul 2018 09:25:41 +0200 > > Arve Barsnes wrote: > > [...] > > An example: I have a file /etc/portage/package.use/abix86 where I put > > lines like these for packages I need installed in a 32-bit flavour (in > > addition to

Re: [gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-04 Thread Zoltán Kócsi
On Wed, 4 Jul 2018 09:25:41 +0200 Arve Barsnes wrote: > [...] > An example: I have a file /etc/portage/package.use/abix86 where I put > lines like these for packages I need installed in a 32-bit flavour (in > addition to the 64-bit my normal system uses): > > dev-db/sqlite abi_x86_32 >

Re: [gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-04 Thread Arve Barsnes
On 4 July 2018 at 08:31, James Stevenson wrote: > The easiest way to fix this issue is to figure out which libraries you need > and then stipulate that you want the x86_32 version of that package in your > accept_keywords file. Check the Gentoo wiki for the software you are trying > to run for

Re: [gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-04 Thread James Stevenson
The easiest way to fix this issue is to figure out which libraries you need and then stipulate that you want the x86_32 version of that package in your accept_keywords file. Check the Gentoo wiki for the software you are trying to run for hints on what libraries you need. James On Wed, Jul 4,

Re: [gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-04 Thread Andrew Udvare
> On 2018-07-04, at 01:51, Zoltán Kócsi wrote: > > My problem is that I've installed a multilib-enabled 64-bit system and > realised that /usr/lib32 and /usr/lib64 are vastly of different. There > are around 2200 dynamic and some 130 static libs in lib64 while there > are around 300 dynamic

[gentoo-user] Multilib help

2018-07-03 Thread Zoltán Kócsi
I have to admit that I'm a recent convert to Gentoo and don't really understand (read: haven't the slightest clue about) the inner workings of portage, emerge, ebuild et al. My problem is that I've installed a multilib-enabled 64-bit system and realised that /usr/lib32 and /usr/lib64 are vastly