--disable-OpenXML \i get following message:
configure: WARNING: unrecognized options: --disable-OpenXML
tux@slitaz:~$ abiword
abiword: error while loading shared libraries: librsvg-2.so.2: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
checking for DEPS... configure: error: Package requirements (
fribidi >= 0.10.4
glib-2.0 >= 2.6.0 gthread-2.0 >= 2.6.0 gobject-2.0 >= 2.6.0
libgsf-1 >= 1.12
wv-1.0 >= 1.2.0
enchant >= 1.2.0 gio-2.0
cairo-pdf cairo-ps pangocairo
gtk+-2.0 >= 2.12.0 gtk+-unix-print-2.0 librsvg-2.0 >= 2.16.0
) were not met:
No package 'librsvg-2.0' found
cat prova.doc
...
\pard\plain\ltrpar\ql\s29\sl240\slmult1\itap0{\s29\f0\fs24\lang1033{\*\listtag0}\abinodiroverride\ltrch testoscritto}{\s29\f0\fs24\lang1033{\*\listtag0}\par}}
locale -a?
locale
* LuX
* February 26
* Permalink
Hello Dave!
I have found something for your Abiword problem: among ntop dependencies there is glibc, which all the devs as well as everybody who build a package, has installed. And among the numerous dependencies of glibc there is glibc-locale, which is one of the first thing I install in Slitaz, probably like anybody else using UTF-8 encoding (at least they should).
Since I never experience in Slitaz any of the problem you and Slicel reported about Abiword, I decided to test this intuition. I started from a fresh install of the last available Cooking, release 20100221, and followed this steps:
- I installed only abiword. It doesn't work, that is to say it crashes just after starting.
- I installed glibc-locale. Run abiword and it works. Well I haven't tested it much like you did, but at least it doesn't crash just after starting and seems to work nicely.
So one can understand now not only a solution (add glibc-locale or some of its dependance among the dependencies of abiword) but also the reason why the devs, as well as a lot of normal users like me, never encountered your problem, hence could not solve it.
But this proves also that people who write new receipts should always test the resulting package not only in their usual Slitaz environment but in a fresh installed one, and even in the smallest possible flavor, namely Slitaz-base.
Hope this helps (no, I know this helps ;-))
LuX.
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