Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Wed, 3 Jun 2015 13:55:34 -0700 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
On 06/03/2015 04:49 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 4:14 PM, ToddAndMargo <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> Howto build wine 32 on 64 bit only Scientific Linux 7.1:
>> http://scientificlinuxforum.org/index.php?act=ST&f=6&t=3170
>
> I can already save you a few steps. Replace the manual EPEL setup steps with:
>
> yum install epel-release
>
> SL and CentOS both have this as an installable package,
Thank you! I have updated the How To.
>
> That rpmbuild script you refer to is *nasty*. It's replacing your
> $HOME/.rpmmacro file, without warning, which is unreasonable behavior.
> Playing with NCPUS is unnecessary, and overwriting someone's locally
> tuned NCPUS and target build directory is worse.
>
I think that is on purpose. Remember that gcomes is not targeting
experts like yourself.
> The relevant local rpmbuild ooptions can be passed as "--define"
> options to the actual standard rpmbuld command with something like
> this:
>
> linux32 rpmbuild --rebuild [file].src.rpm --define="_topdir
> $PWD/../rpmbuild"
>
> With all that said the "edit .spec files on the fly" is cute, but a
> bit tricky. The "sed" statement to fix all the "-m32" options is
> prize, I'd never have thoght to patch it that way, I'd have just
> written a patch file to apply and add to the SRPM on x86
> arfhitectures.
>
> Hmm. Some of our friends over at CentOS have published a testable i386
> version of CentOS 7, and EPEL is waiting until it's stable enough to
> test to try publishing an i386 set of EPEL packages for it. This might
> eliminate most of the setup work and allow simple package installation
> from that repository for various dependencies, such as chrpath and
> openal-soft, even if EPEL doesn't get around to doing wine.
I can't wait!
>> I also have this in ODT format (easier to follow formatting).
>> If you would like it, drop me a line and I will eMail it to you.
>>
>> -T
>
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Computers are like air conditioners.
They malfunction when you open windows
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|