Use Sun's Java Kit (preferably jdk 1.4). Some application servers had problems to start with blackdown jdk. If you want use java-alsa, you must have installed alsa.
On 10/12/05, Dave Nebinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > What to do? Can I safely ignore the revdep-rebuild messages? > >> I think you can safely ignore that (unless you're running java > >> applications that use sound/alsa). the java packages are binary, that > >> means that you don't compile it according to your use flags, you install > >> the "whole package", so some libraries (like libalsasound.so) will > >> complain if you don't have alsa support. I'm having this problem with > >> opera and libXm but I just ignore it. > >> > > Thanks. > > You might consider the alternate route of removing the offending > libjsoundalsa.so file. > > Of course, rather than simply /bin/rm'ing the thing away you might want to > just relocate it temporarily. Then do a revdep-rebuild -p to see if > blackdown starts complaining about the missing file... > > Another alternative is to install alsa. Granted you won't be using it > because you don't have the hardware, but it might be enough to have a clean > revdep-rebuild. Based on equery results, it looks like all you'd need to > emerge is alsa-lib and alsa-headers, so you wouldn't be talking about a > great deal of extra space... > > Just a thought. > > Dave > > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list