I used rpm rather than yum, downloaded the rpm directly to the machine and 
installed it. 

----- Original Message -----
Reindl Harald wrote: 

> 
> 
> Am 16.01.2013 18:03, schrieb Neal Becker: 
>> Mike Wohlgemuth wrote: 
>> 
>>> On Wed, 2013-01-16 at 10:11 -0500, Neal Becker wrote: 
>>>> Well, workaround really. 
>>>> 
>>>> /usr/lib64/libudev.so.0 -> /usr/lib64/libudev.so.1 
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> A better solution is probably: 
>>> 
>>> yum remove google-chrome-stable 
>>> yum install google-chrome-stable 
>>> 
>>> Woogie 
>>> 
>> 
>> Really? I just tried it, but looks like google-chrome-stable is still linked 
>> to libudev.so.0: 
>> 
>> ldd /opt/google/chrome/chrome | grep udev 
>> libudev.so.0 => /lib64/libudev.so.0 (0x00007ff603cb0000) 
>> 
> 
> for me it works, there must be some magic in the rpm-scripts 
> 
> [root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ ldd /opt/google/chrome/chrome | grep udev 
> libudev.so.0 => not found 
> libudev.so.1 => /lib64/libudev.so.1 (0x00007fbd92d17000) 

Yes, if I remove /lib64/libudev.so.0 link, and then reinstall: 

ldd /opt/google/chrome/chrome | grep udev 
libudev.so.0 => not found 
libudev.so.1 => /lib64/libudev.so.1 (0x00007f3c62696000) 

which is weird, but somehow seems to work 

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