On Sat, Jul 8, 2023 at 7:52 PM ToddAndMargo via users
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On 7/8/23 16:44, Chris Adams wrote:
> > Once upon a time, ToddAndMargo <[email protected]> said:
> >> # libvirtd --deamon
> >> libvirtd: /lib64/libvirt.so.0: version `LIBVIRT_PRIVATE_9.0.0' not
> >> found (required by libvirtd)
> >>
> >> I have reinstalled libvirt-daemon. No joy.
> >
> > Seems like somehow you don't have libvirt-libs installed, which is odd
> > since dnf knows it provides the required dependency of
> > libvirt.so.0(LIBVIRT_PRIVATE_9.0.0)(64bit). Don't know what you did to
> > get to that state.
>
> # rpm -qa libvirt-libs
> libvirt-libs-9.0.0-3.fc38.x86_64
>
> Reinstalling libvirt-libs did not help
>
> I upgraded from Fedora 37 to Fedora 38.
>
> I then tried to remove upstream qemu-kvm:
>
> _copr:copr.fedorainfracloud.org:group_virtmaint-sig:virt-preview.repo
>
> and revert back to Fedora's repo. I did this because
> upsteam's repo is corked and thinks I am still on
> Fedora 37.
>
> Now libvirtd refuses to start.
I would remove libvirt the best I could using dnf and rpm. Then I
would look for artifacts still lying around on the filesystem, and
whack them manually:
find /etc -iname '*virt*'
find /lib -iname '*virt*'
find /lib64 -iname '*virt*'
You can usually find some old cruft in /etc/systemd. You might find
some old cruft in /lib or /lib64.
Then I would reinstall using dnf. Dnf should rebuild initramfs or
whatever needs to know about libvirt.
Jeff
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