From: Alfred von Campe
> Thanks for the hint. Upon closer inspection, the issue was with glib from
> rpmforge, so doing a "yum update --disablerepo=rpmforge\*" makes
> it work.
You Should set up repos priorities...
JD
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On Feb 25, 2014, at 6:13, John Doe wrote:
> Maybe try 'protected_multilib' in yum.conf (see man).
Thanks for the hint. Upon closer inspection, the issue was with glib from
rpmforge, so doing a "yum update --disablerepo=rpmforge\*" makes it work.
Alfred
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From: Alfred von Campe
> I have been using 32-bit CentOS since the 4.X days without a real need for
> 64-bit, but in preparation for CentOS 7, I have installed 64-bit CentOS 6 on
> a
> test system to qualify all our builds. However, in order to build some of
> our
> current 32-bit applicati
> What is the best way to proceed with the "yum update" so that all (64-bit
and 32-bit) packages are updated?
I usually check the dependency error and will install the missing 32bit
package alone ( one time task ), then will try yum update . I think,
rpm/repo compose file decides the dependency 32
On Feb 24, 2014, at 18:59, John R Pierce wrote:
> how did you do these installs? I've never had trouble doing it via
> yum, like: yum install glibc.i686
That's exactly what I did, and it worked fine (I can compile our 32-bit apps),
but I get the error when I try to do the "yum update".
On 2/24/2014 3:18 PM, Alfred von Campe wrote:
> However, in order to build some of our current 32-bit applications, I had to
> install some i686 packages, including glib.
how did you do these installs? I've never had trouble doing it via
yum, like: yum install glibc.i686
but then, I've o
I have been using 32-bit CentOS since the 4.X days without a real need for
64-bit, but in preparation for CentOS 7, I have installed 64-bit CentOS 6 on a
test system to qualify all our builds. However, in order to build some of our
current 32-bit applications, I had to install some i686 package
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