The emacs installation was also CSW I suppose? So you don't have an emacs binary that doesn't even look for libs in /opt/csw/lib.
You could always remove the package with something like "pkgrm CSWlibthai0" and then try installing it again. You can also get information about its state with "pkginfo -l CSWlibthai0" or "pkgchk -v CSWlibthai0". On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 9:40 PM Wyche, George PW via users <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I am trying to recover from an install of emacs 24.3 that was unsuccessful. > > Any emacs invocation gets ld.so.1: emacs: fatal: libthai.so.0: open failed: > No such file for directory. > #pkgutil -F libthai.so.0 > /opt/csw/lib/libthai.so.0 CSWlibthai0 > And 3 other locations... > #ls -l /opt/csw/lib/thai* > ls No match. > > #pkgutil --install libthai0 > Solving > Solving > 3 CURRENT packages: > CSWcommon-1.5 > CSWlibdatrie1-0.2.5 > CSWlibthai0-0.1.18 > > Nothing to do. > #pkgutil -L libthai0 does list 8 files. > > All of the above was done in root on a Solaris 10 u10 installation. > > My question is: Is there a regular way to have pkgutil (or whichever) > acknowledge that a csw package installation is incorrect? > > I have another Solaris 10u10 workstation that has emacs happily running. It > does have /opt/csw/lib/thai.so.0 (pointing to existing)...thai.so.0.1.7 > > I thought to try uninstall of the package and then attempt another --install, > so > I tried the (experimental it says) pkgutil -r libthai0 > But it listed the3 packages with (in use) after them and returned to the # > prompt. > > Is there a csw pathway to recover? > > George Wyche
