Here's how I installed my chroot, it works very well (I don't even use any lib32 or bin32 packages anymore, just this): http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Arch64_Install_bundled_32bit_system On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 9:29 PM, Eric BĂ©langer <snowmaniscool@gmail.com>wrote:
On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 7:24 PM, Aaron Schaefer <aaron@elasticdog.com> wrote:
So, my new machine is up and running (and I figured out my previous packaging issues!)...so I'm updating my jGnash package (http://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/i686/jgnash/) to the latest release and there is also currently a bug report on the package (http://bugs.archlinux.org/task/16665). The bug report correctly states that jGnash will not run with openjdk6 (jre works just fine), so what is the current policy for handling that fact?
I know that no other packages depend on jre directly, and the prefered method is now java-runtime, but doesn't that mean that openjdk6 users will just have this software silently fail?
In this case, make it depends on jre. You could put a note in the PKGBUILD to explain this dependency. And, when either openjdk or jgnash release new versions, you could test to see if they work fine together so you could switch back the depends to java-runtime.
Also, if you're building
an i386 package on an x86_64 machine, is there an easy way to test the software to make sure that it's actually working on i386? Thanks in advance...
you could setup a i686 chroot on your x86_64 system. I believe there's info in the wiki.
Eric
-- Aaron "ElasticDog" Schaefer