I'm going to mark this as invalid unless someone can provide steps to
reproduce with wine1.6 on Trusty.
** Changed in: wine1.4 (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Invalid
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I encountered this issue on Saucy. I had installed the system with
debootstrap. My system did not contain /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch. I
ran 'sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386' as suggested by @micahg. My
system still does not contain /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch (nor any
reference to i386 in
I am able to install wine correctly on x86_64 in trusty as of today (November
24th).
What should be the action for this bug status?
Thanks,
Tobiasz
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On my system /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch does not exist. I did 'sudo
dpkg --add-architecture i386' and ran an 'apt-get update' but that
didn't change the situation - /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch still does
not exist and I still cannot install wine.
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I did a fresh install of 13.10 (nothing unusual about my install that I
can think of) and I can't install wine either:
talbert@crashback:~$ sudo apt-get install wine
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Some packages could not be
I can confirm that installing via debootstrap is one of the way to get
this issue. (And some others by the way).
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1221301
Title:
cannot install wine1.4
Chroots are meant to be a single arch. Using debootstrap already implies
more advanced knowledge. If you create an amd64 chroot and you want it
to be multiarch, use the command I gave above.
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This sounds like something not working correctly with multiarch. Check
/etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/multiarch to make sure i386 is listed. if it's
not, run 'sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386'.
Removing sponsors since this doesn't need an upload to fix.
** Changed in: wine1.4 (Ubuntu)
Status:
Wine does require the i386 packages on amd64, Wine needs both its 32 and
64 bit subsystems. There's something wrong with your system not having
32-bit multiarch enabled (this has happened before, most likely it's due
to a particular install method on an old version of Ubuntu we haven't
nailed down