Subj : the berry fairies To : Maurice Kinal From : Benny Pedersen Date : Sun Sep 03 2017 22:27:48 Hello Maurice! 03 Sep 2017 07:35, Maurice Kinal wrote to Benny Pedersen: MK> Hey Benny! BP>> drop multilib, it saves ram, and raise speeds MK> I haven't used multilib since the first custom build I did way back MK> when, around 15 years ago. See below for the latest glibc deployed MK> here; after i dropped f-prot, bitdefender, it was not needed for me to use 32bit glibc anymore, after that all was 64bit elf, and i got more memory to do other more usefull things with it MK> ----- ':read !/lib/libc.so.6' starts MK> GNU C Library (GNU libc) stable release version 2.26, by Roland MK> McGrath et al. MK> Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. MK> This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. MK> There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A MK> PARTICULAR PURPOSE. MK> Compiled by GNU CC version 7.2.0. MK> Available extensions: MK> crypt add-on version 2.1 by Michael Glad and others MK> GNU Libidn by Simon Josefsson MK> Native POSIX Threads Library by Ulrich Drepper et al MK> BIND-8.2.3-T5B MK> libc ABIs: UNIQUE IFUNC MK> For bug reporting instructions, please see: MK> . MK> ----- ':read !/lib/libc.so.6' ends how do you make that output ?, imho its not ldd :=) MK> Furthermore there is no lib64 even as symlinks anywhere on the latest MK> x86_64-silvermont-linux-gnu, or my other box which is a comparable MK> x86_64-bonnell-linux-gnu. this is generic how its done, just in case you have 64bit, and builded some errors, you can do a bootstrap on 32bit to fix it, well its hard, but not for a talented fool :=) systemresquecd would just be better choice and chroot it there MK> The only reason I mentioned multilib was because someone here stated MK> that he required 32 bit libs to run some games on what looks to me to MK> be a 64 bit system. Also it was a reply to one of my aarch64 running MK> on a raspberry pi 3 so I suspect he thought that the aarch64 ought to MK> be multilib which it isn't, or at least the one I first built wasn't. i readed it as it was some game that is not localy compiled ?, or was localy compiled but failed to work ?, hmm if it was gentoo it was just a matter of revdep-rebuild :=) BP>> this is still not gentoo :=) MK> Correct. I don't have any of their tools and instead built my own and MK> so far continue to use those. Simple, lean and mean for whatever task MK> they are allocated to take care of. i like to get lowpowered atom cpu bassed servers in comming years, here, the old p4 is soon time to be retired as my best friend, done from my time learning gentoo, and why use gentoo, if you google xpoint fidonet you can find redhat 8, lol, maybe i could give Mr Maddog a fidonet number :=) (Mark Hall....) he is well known in redhat and now small computers, and i have meet him in my local town here in danmark, he sleeped around a mile from me, oh this memories BP>> but atom is atleast not supporting intel ME (nsa / fbi / silly BP>> govments interfaces> MK> I honestly don't care. None of them are paying the bills here so MK> their input ... or lack of it ... is of no importance, especially MK> considering that they are US government and not Canadian. its not that simple for all outside of canadien borders, nsa and danish counterpart of it pet, do some silly privacy exchanges, and there is not even a bill to pay BP>> if i know right systemd parts on linux help it MK> Not that I ever noticed. I am still using sysvinit. Also still using MK> lilo instead of (U)EFI boots ... just like Mom used to do. :-) yep, i just dont know how and why linux have systemd at all MK> I see no reason to change ... yet. Do you? still using gentoo here with systemd disabled MK> Life is good, MK> Maurice yep MK> ... Don't cry for me I have vi. MK> -+- GNU bash, version 4.4.12(1)-release (x86_64-silvermont-linux-gnu) MK> + Origin: Little Mikey's Brain - Ladysmith BC, Canada (1:153/7001) Regards Benny .... there can only be one way of life, and it works :) --- Msged/LNX 6.2.0 (Linux/4.12.10-gentoo (i686)) * Origin: openvpn on its way here (2:230/0) .