Bob Proulx wrote: > sudo dchroot -c ia32 > > At that point you should be root in your chroot. Use su to load the > user environment. Where 'youruser' is your normal user account. > > su - youruser > > What does that say? I am guessing it will say no shell. Look to see > why. These commands should help.
Hm no, now it does not say "no shell" anymore but: $ dchroot -c ia32 -d glxgears (ia32) glxgears dchroot: chroot: Operation not permitted dchroot: Child exited non-zero. dchroot: Operation failed. I don't know what I've done but now the problem is that I have no permissions. The same user, passwd and group exists. What have I done wrong? Thanks & regards, Alexander -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]