On Fri, Jan 04, 2008 at 12:11:01PM -0500, Douglas A. Tutty wrote: > Under what conditions would you need to boot the 32-bit chroot natively?
Hopefully none - but until it works perfectly, I need a way to get back there, so I can use my netbank (firefox, java, etc), and other things. Well, perhaps to run some performance tests, to show that my go program really is faster on a real 64-bit system. (well, I have to write that program first...) > I access the chroot with > $ schroot -pc etch-ia32 > which means that I have the schroot package installed on the amd64 > system. Thanks. The basic setup was surprisingly easy. I used the old root partition, so I did not have to install anything at all! I still had to (re?)mount my disks manually, haven't found where to tell schroot which disks I need mounted, or how to get them all right. I run into problems with X display not coming out. xeyes times out after some seconds with "Could not connect to :0". I fixed that by enabling tcp listening (in vi /etc/kde3/kdm/kdmrc), and setting DISPLAY="127.0.0.1" inside the chroot. And a "xhost +" on the amd-64 side. Xeyes works, xine works! Firefox works - except when I try to go to my netbank (www.nordea.dk). I get the login screen, but the process dies in a few seconds, often in the middle of me typing in my password. I am using a 'plain' schroot, since I already have the old root system mounted. Perhaps I should try with a block device type thing? - Heikki -- Heikki Levanto "In Murphy We Turst" heikki (at) lsd (dot) dk -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]