Scott Weisman wrote:
Hello everyone,

I've got a big problem I hope someone can help with.

I've been a huge fan and user of Arch since early 2004. I really like
it and it works great for me. I have several production servers also
running it, with no problem whatsoever.

However, I have one ancient server running a creaky version of Red Hat
Linux that I would love to replace, but can't.

This is running Sybase 11.0.3.3, and I simply can't get it working on
my replacement server. First of all, for those who are shaking their
heads, this is a legacy server dating to 1998. Second, I had nothing
to do with the original design. Third, I hate Sybase. Even though a
free version has been available for years, it is absolutely hostile to
Linux in general. It needs a very specific configuration or it simply
won't run. And good luck figuring that out, unless you use one of
their supported configurations.

My new server is running Arch x86_64. I have no choice about this. I
have the old 11.0.3.3 RPMs and extracted them to /opt/sybase. I
installed the following packages:

local/libstdc++5 3.3.6-2
local/emul32-compat 1.0-3
local/lib-compat 1.4.1-1

No matter what I try though, I get segfaults when trying to run Sybase.

Has anyone had any success getting ANY version of Sybase running on
Arch? Please let me know if you have, or if you have any suggestions
at all!

VERY much appreciated.

Thanks,

Scott



You could try copying that whole red hat installation to somewhere else, chroot 
to it and run programs from there. But pretty good chance that won't work 
because arch's GCC, kernel, etc... is too new to support that old stuff.

An other option would be to do a fresh redhat 9 install or copy the existing redhat 
installation to somewhere on the new server, and run the install in a virtual machine 
using qemu, vmware or <insert your favorite virtualization software>. Make sure 
you use hardware VT (qemu can make use of the kernel's KVM layer - ideal!).

My choice would be copy the entire redhat install and run it in a virtual 
machine with qemu-kvm.

Glenn

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