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
>

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