Rodolfo Medina wrote:
Rodolfo Medina wrote:
How can I know if I'm running 64 bit Debian?
Javier Barroso wrote:
just run "uname -r"
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI <edua...@kalinowski.com.br> writes:
This will return the architecture of the kernel, but it is possible to
run a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit userland.
dpkg-architecture will list the architecture that dpkg expects.
$ uname -r
2.6.18-4-k7
$ dpkg-architecture
DEB_BUILD_ARCH=i386
DEB_BUILD_ARCH_OS=linux
DEB_BUILD_ARCH_CPU=i386
DEB_BUILD_GNU_CPU=i486
DEB_BUILD_GNU_SYSTEM=linux-gnu
DEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE=i486-linux-gnu
DEB_HOST_ARCH=i386
DEB_HOST_ARCH_OS=linux
DEB_HOST_ARCH_CPU=i386
DEB_HOST_GNU_CPU=i486
DEB_HOST_GNU_SYSTEM=linux-gnu
DEB_HOST_GNU_TYPE=i486-linux-gnu
So, am I running 64 bit Debian?
Rodolfo
OpenOffice 3 is available in Debian experimental. I added experimental
to my /etc/apt/sources.list and then add something to
/etc/apt/preferences such as (adjust to suit what you want and you
probably need to create preferences )
Package: *
Pin: release o=Debian,a=testing
Pin-Priority: 900
Package: *
Pin: release o=Debian,a=unstable
Pin-Priority: 300
Package: *
Pin: release o=Debian,a=experimental
Pin-Priority: 50
Finally install with
aptitude install openoffice.org/experimental
Worked for me - openoffice has few dependencies outside of its own files so you don't wreck your installation - but check and be careful, it took me a while to get it working.
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