Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 02:06:52 -0500 From: "Michael R. Wayne" <amd64@wayne47.com> To: freebsd-amd64@freebsd.org Subject: Re: How to use older libs in 32bit mode? Message-ID: <20041124070652.GT49800@manor.msen.com> In-Reply-To: <20041120014424.GI20068@dragon.nuxi.com> References: <20041116052630.GD49800@manor.msen.com> <20041120014424.GI20068@dragon.nuxi.com>
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On Fri, Nov 19, 2004 at 05:44:24PM -0800, David O'Brien wrote: > On Tue, Nov 16, 2004 at 12:26:30AM -0500, Michael R. Wayne wrote: > > I'm trying to use a 32 bit executable which uses older libraries > > (e.g. libm.so.2) and can not easily be regenerated. > > This should be fine. You just want *.so.*. > > > I've tried copying the libs from a i386 5.3 RELEASE system into > > /usr/lib32 with no success. > > Please give details about "no success" -- that doesn't give us much to go > on. Sorry. No success as in it cores. I reduced the problem down to a very simple case: > cat hello.c #include <stdio.h> main () { printf("Hello world\n"); } Put this onto a 5.3 RELEASE i386 platform and compiled it: > file hello hello: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (FreeBSD), for FreeBSD 5.3.0, dynamically linked (uses shared libs), not stripped It won't run though: > ./hello Segmentation fault (core dumped) I did run the script to build the libs: > ls /usr/lib32 | wc 393 393 5069 /\/\ \/\/
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