TL;DR /opt/csw/lib/ffi 2014-02-20 0:21 GMT+00:00 Riccardo Mottola <[email protected]>: > Did some package not install properly?
We had trouble with libffi, because there were two different pieces of software trying to claim libffi.so. We've moved that file into a subdirectory: > pkgchk -L CSWlibffi-dev | grep '\.so' /opt/csw/lib/ffi/libffi.so=../libffi.so.5.0.10 s none CSWlibffi-dev /opt/csw/lib/sparcv9/ffi/libffi.so=../libffi.so.5.0.10 s none CSWlibffi-dev You need to add -L/opt/csw/lib/ffi to the linker invocation, or set an environment variable that will do that. Or set a variable in GAR which will cause an environment variable to be exported that will cause that flag to be added to the linker invocation (yay layers of indirection! ;-) ). I think that the other piece of software was... > bin/pkgdb -r SunOS5.9 show basename libffi.so /opt/csw/lib/sparcv9/ffi/libffi.so CSWlibffi-dev /opt/csw/gcc3/lib/sparcv9/libffi.so CSWgcc3java /opt/csw/lib/libffi.so CSWgcc3javart, CSWgcc4core /opt/csw/gcc3/lib/libffi.so CSWgcc3java /opt/csw/lib/sparcv9/libffi.so CSWgcc3javart, CSWgcc4core /opt/csw/lib/ffi/libffi.so CSWlibffi-dev Yes, GCC. But this seems to be no longer the case in our Solaris 10 catalog. Maciej
