On 01/29/2015 07:59 PM, Stephen wrote: > > On 01/29/2015 10:46 AM, Florent Peterschmitt wrote: >> Or a custom glibc installed in an isolated prefix, then playing with >> LD_LIBRARY_PATH to load the new glibc. > >> Or if you don't want to build it by hand, you may do something tricky: >> extracting the Jessie package by hand in, again, an isolated prefix. >> But i'm not that sure it would work. > > I wouldn't mind building it by hand, I'm trying to get more 'hands on' > (pun completely intended) with Debian. I am just a novice user though so > I have a very faint clue what your talking about...
I understand. Well, you don't have much choices. Force-install a newer glibc in the base system will break your entire system, so here are the options: * install another version of Debian containing the required glibc version * install another distro if you don't want to use "unstable" softwares. if you want to stay on a debian-like and are a novice, can I suggest you Ubuntu or LinuxMint? * build your glibc by hand (see LFS pages[0], they can be helpful) but install files (not configuration) in, say, /opt/glibc-<version>. Then to use you'll need to play with some environment variables. At least you know how to run a program from command line, so env variables are just the next step :-) * download the newer, packaged, version of glibc from unstable or testing Debian, extract it by hand and put files in a prefix, like before. Then use env vars an pray for it to work. [0] http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/development/chapter06/glibc.html
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