> >Package: libc5-dev > >Version: 5.2.9-2 > > >The headder file /usr/include/errno.h has this line: > >#include<linux/errno.h> > >but there is no 'linux' directory. > > Egads! There should be a symlink, if memory serves, from > /usr/include/linux to /usr/src/linux/include/linux. Go ahead and > create that symlink with the command > ln -s /usr/src/linux/include/linux /usr/include/linux > if you've got 'source' installed; I don't know what the procedure is if > you've got 'includes' installed. > > Meanwhile, I'll check up on libc5, et al and see what the problem is. > (I'm missing the same link, and I'm *sure* that's recent!)
Well, I just used dpkg to re-install libc5-dev and libc5 and the symlink is now there. I had just updated to elf from a.out (last night) in one dselect session. I don't know why the sym-link didn't stay around.... I don't suppose any packages would have the authority to remove symlinks? I did just remove the old a.out package; is there some way that dpkg would have removed the symlink after libc5-dev had created it? Strange. -- - John Larkin - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://aij.st.hmc.edu/~jlarkin