Re: Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-13 Thread Klaus Pieper
I can dchroot -c ia32 -d startx -- :1 without problems, where both environments are sarge, with X running in the amd64 environment. Klaus -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-13 Thread Frank
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

Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-12 Thread Frank
(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,

Re: Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-12 Thread Christoph Fassbach
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 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of

Re: Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-12 Thread Frank
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

Re: Starting X (KDE) from chroot possible?

2005-11-12 Thread Hamish Moffatt
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