On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Karl Kleinpaste <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> "Greg Hellings" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Package Manager does not list xrender.pc as part of the xorg-headers > > package, nevertheless, after installing that package, I had the > xrender.pc > > file. What version were you trying? I have 0.5.11-0.98. I presume the > > 0.5.11 means that this is SunOS 5.11, but I have no idea what 0.98 is > > supposed to indicate. I second your feelings about this package manager > > system. > > I want to know where you got -0.98 because what the package manager > offered to me was -0.86. I have done nothing to alter what package > repository is in use; the upper-right combobox claims only that it is > "opensolaris.org" and it offers no mechanism I can find to change that. My guess is that the update to -0.98 came with the image-upgrade that I ran from the command-line, or from syncing against the repository. I'm not completely certain about that, but I also have everything else just the way you describe yours. They're the only things I can think of. The Package Manager spent around 16 hours thinking about upgrading the system, so I closed it, went to the command line, and used the pkg command to do the system upgrade. After that, the Package Manager has been fine. > > > It is a certainty that [a] I have SUNWxorg-headers installed and [b] I > do not have xrender.pc, therefore I still cannot configure GS. > > How do you know for certain that xrender.pc comes from that package? In > an RPM world, I would "rpm -qf /usr/lib/pkgconfig/xrender.pc" to query > the filename for the package in which it arrived. How does one do that > in Solaris? I'm not completely certain - when you look in Package Manager, you can see a list of files that come with a package. Alternatively, the various pkg command-line tools might give you similar information that you're looking for. xrender.pc was not listed in xorg-headers, but xrandr was, so I thought maybe it was a misspelling, installed xorg-headers, and now I have both xrandr.pc and xrender.pc installed. It was the only difference. I even installed GNU findutils so that I could be sure there was no xrender.pc installed before installing xorg-headers. So my only guess is that either the information in Package Manager is wrong, or some hidden dependency pulled it in. --Greg
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