Thanks for you replies, it works fine by now. As posted above, one of the
problems was that I didn't have the font server in the chroot installed, and
another part of the problem might have been, that I did not have a bind
from /tmp to the chroot's /tmp.
Klaus Pieper:
| I can
|
| dchroot -c ia3
I can
dchroot -c ia32 -d
startx -- :1
without problems, where both environments are sarge, with X running in
the amd64 environment.
Klaus
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On Sat, Nov 12, 2005 at 08:48:26PM +0100, Frank wrote:
> you are correct, I forgot to install the xbase-fonts package.
> Should have been a dependency though, if the xserver doesn't start without
> it.
> But that is certainly not Debian's bug, but Ubuntu's.
No, Debian's X server package (xserver
Hi Christoph,
you are correct, I forgot to install the xbase-fonts package.
Should have been a dependency though, if the xserver doesn't start without it.
But that is certainly not Debian's bug, but Ubuntu's.
Thank you,
Frank
Christoph Fassbach, 12. November 2005 20:21:
| Hi Frank,
|
| are you
Hi Frank,
are you sure about having installed all neccessary packages?
The log file looks like you forgot to install any fonts.
Perhaps you should try to bind-mount /tmp, /proc, tmpfs and /dev, too.
Greetings,
Christoph
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(I hope nobody is going to complain, that this question involves the word
"Ubuntu". The question is not directly related to that.)
I decided to install an (K)ubuntu chroot on my Debian AMD64 system, because
that solves two issues for me:
- the few 32bit-only applications can be run (flash, OOo,
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