Seems I now have the locale. Too bad I had to delete the "bad" databases earlier.
Thanks Adrian, depesz On Sat, Jun 7, 2014 at 7:16 PM, Adrian Klaver <adrian.kla...@aklaver.com> wrote: > On 06/07/2014 08:17 AM, hubert depesz lubaczewski wrote: > >> localedef --no-archive, requires additional argument, and then it waits >> on something. I'm definitely not an locale expert, so I have no idea >> what it does. There is "locale-gen" option "--no-archive", too, but when >> I run "locale-gen --no-archive", I just get: >> >> # locale-gen --no-archive >> Generating locales... >> cs_CZ.UTF-8... up-to-date >> de_DE.UTF-8... up-to-date >> en_GB.ISO-8859-1... up-to-date >> en_GB.ISO-8859-15... up-to-date >> en_GB.UTF-8... up-to-date >> en_US.UTF-8... up-to-date >> pl_PL.UTF-8... up-to-date >> sk_SK.UTF-8... up-to-date >> Generation complete. >> >> And nothing changes. >> > > Should have been clearer on my previous post, the dpkg command is for use > after locale-gen. > > Missed the part where you ran localedef until I reread the post. localedef > is looking for the following, from example in man page: > > EXAMPLES > > Compile the locale files for Finnish in the UTF-8 character set and > add > it to the default locale archive with the name fi_FI.UTF-8: > > localedef -f UTF-8 -i fi_FI fi_FI.UTF-8 > > Where: > localedef [options] outputpath > > and outpath with --no-archive is by default /usr/lib/locale > otherwise outpath is /usr/lib/locale/locale-archive > > > >> depesz >> >> > > > -- > Adrian Klaver > adrian.kla...@aklaver.com >