Hi,
On Fri, 16 Sep 2005 23:24:39 +0000
Rodrigo Lazo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> Well, thanks all of you for your replies. I did rebuild the package
> using quickpkg but it didn't fix the problem, the only way I found to
> do it was compiling it on the second computer. That fix it but it
> wouldn't be an alternative if somebody find this problem and have
> twenty machines to install. What else could be done? Copying
> the /etc/gtk-2.0 dir would be an alternative?
> 
> Regards
> 
Using binary packages depends on your machine arch, USE-flags eventually many 
other things.
As a safe bet could use -i686 (see also -mtune vs -march in CFLAGS) as a common 
arch and syncronize USE-flags across machines.
There is a *little* price for so much flexibility (as in Gentoo).
There were a lot more and detailed info about this, search for it.
> On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 03:53:12 +0100
> Mike Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > On Saturday 17 September 2005 03:23, Willie Wong wrote:
> > > It is a curious thing: apparently portage doesn't think /etc/gtk-2.0
> > > belongs to any package:
> > 
> > Ahh, but it does...
> > 
> > gimli ~ # equery belongs '/etc/gtk-2.0/*'
> > [ Searching for file(s) /etc/gtk-2.0/* in *... ]
> > x11-libs/gtk+-2.6.8 (/etc/gtk-2.0)
> > gimli ~ # equery belongs '/etc/gtk/*'
> > [ Searching for file(s) /etc/gtk/* in *... ]
> > x11-libs/gtk+-1.2.10-r11 (/etc/gtk)
> > 
> > Note the slightly odd usage. equery appears to only be able to link files 
> > to 
> > packages, not directories.
> > 
> > As for the parent problem, re-quickpkg, then check that the exact version 
> > being packaged up does in fact contain those files, is the best I can 
> > suggest 
> > off the top of my head.
> > 
> > -- 
> > Mike Williams
> > -- 
> > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
> > 
> 
> 
HTH. Rumen
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