![]() You will find that evince opens up and allows you to open a valid djvu file. You will fire up evince via flatpak using (in my case) flatpak run (again in root) You will also search and install evince on flatpak - using root. You will probably install flatpak - using root. Typically, I stay one version behind the latest stable, just to keep away from anything that may hold up my work/usage.įor anyone who tries using evince via flatpak, This was not my intention - although I am not sure what to make of the updated Rocky 8.5. My djvu file can now be accessed via the flatpak evince.Īpparently, there was some other evince also - which did not run the djvu file - as you have pointed out from your last message.Īs per the howtoshout link above, I was to update dnf first using the below command… I tried, and installed flatpak and evince via flatpak. Can you please point me to a solution to help me read my djvu you for clarification. I don’t understand, if the website shows the djvu logo, why does it now need plugins? “Could not open file:///home/user01/Documents/ERT.djvu.Ĭan not find a plugin which is able to handle the document being passed.” It installed Okular, and I tried opening a djvu file, only to get a message. Last metadata expiration check: 12:22:53 ago on Friday 24 December 2021 01:31:57 AM IST. Says out there loud and clear… it supports djvu format… so I went ahead and installed sources]# dnf install okular-21.08.86_64 (try to add ‘–skip-broken’ to skip uninstallable packages or ‘–nobest’ to use not only best candidate packages)Ĭan you explain what is happening? At this point, I skipped djview4-4 and looked online again for a djvu reader Nothing provides libm.so.6(GLIBC_2.29)(64bit) needed by 86_64 Nothing provides libdjvulibre.so.21()(64bit) needed by 86_64 Nothing provides libc.so.6(GLIBC_2.34)(64bit) needed by 86_64 Problem: conflicting requests nothing provides glibc >= -43.fc35 needed by 86_64 Last metadata expiration check: 12:08:12 ago on Friday 24 December 2021 01:31:57 AM IST. I gave same command again… and this sources]# dnf install 86_64.rpm I gave no (n) as the response here, the system immediately came out waiting for me to enter at the prompt This is the sources]# dnf install 86_64.rpmĭisplay all 16732 possibilities? (y or n) I tried the command you suggested - namely installing using dnf install … ![]() Yes, it isn’t like upstream 5.15, but it for sure has a feature that upstream introduced in 3.13. It is still in use, still called “3.10”, but different from what upstream 3.10 was. For example, in around 2013 Red Hat took Linux kernel 3.10 and based kernel it RHEL 7 on that. The formal version string does not change, but after a while the branch in RHEL differs from its origin. That is, at some point Red Hat creates a branch of some application for RHEL. Put the result in distinct directory (for example, under your homedir).ĭo note that Rocky is based on RHEL and RHEL contains backported features. If the only option is “build from sources”, then don’t put files among system files (no default make install). If a package can be built for the platform, then that is an option, because you can dnf install/upgrade/remove. ![]() If package is from unknown source and would replace/remove already installed system packages, then be sceptic. If package has been built for the platform (here Rocky), then that (dnf install) should be the first option. My question is: Can I update glibc and install above dependencies and continue to run Rocky without any clashes in dependencies etc.? I have seen some webpages indicating updating glibc should be OK since versions are supposed to be backward compatible, but I thought I will ask here anyway. I have checked my glibc Software]# rpm -q glibc ![]() The following are missing in my Software]# rpm -Uhv 86_64.rpm When installing this, I ran into dependencies issue. Lists djview4 ( DjVuLibre: Open Source DjVu library and viewer ) as an improved viewerįurther, for Fedora/RHEL we have a binary package - 35 | Build Info | koji I have Rocky 8.4, and have an interest in reading djvu files. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |