

- #LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING INSTALL#
- #LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING UPDATE#
- #LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING ARCHIVE#
86: error while loading shared libraries: libX11.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
#LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING INSTALL#
Clearly I cannot install any of them because my system now has no i386 support./start.sh I didn’t iterate through all of them, but we can guess the 50 or so X related libs it will need, this was just the first. Now it complains about some 32-bit libraries which are required. Game/86: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib/ld-linux.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID=e0a7c50f752aa8ca97613b0be74b44de7afd2437, not stripped Game won’t launch - only 32-bit binary supplied. Successfully installed game using supplied shell script. Wine: Bad EXE format for Z:\home\alan\GOG\setup_quake_the_offering_2.0.0.6.exe.

Wine/wine64 complain that wine32 is not installed wine64. Wine: Bad EXE format for Z:\home\alan\GOG\setup_theme_hospital_v3_(28027).exe.
#LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING UPDATE#
as root, pleaseĮxecute "dpkg -add-architecture i386 & apt-get update & It looks like wine32 is missing, you should install it. I then attempted to install and run each game in turn using either WINE64 (for Windows titles) or the supplied installer shell script. Logged into my GOG account and downloaded the installers for a bunch of games.This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, orĮ: Package 'wine32' has no installation candidate Package wine32 is not available, but is referred to by another package.
#LIBJANSSON DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE IS MISSING ARCHIVE#
Note: The wine64 package from the Ubuntu archive recommends wine32 - which is uninstallable (obviously, as I have removed the capability to install i386 packages, of which wine32 is one. Remove any i386 packages - sudo apt remove "*:i386" (none removed as none found)ĭisable i386 repo - sudo dpkg -remove-architecture i386īoot the VM and install WINE, because I know there’s going to be some Windows applications going on here. Install all updates using sudo apt update & sudo apt dist-upgrade Install eoan from June 6th daily ISO from VirtualBox isn’t great for 3d accelerated gaming, but it’s good enough to see if I can fulfill my two goals: I picked 5 which gave me a representative sample of relatively modern stuff mixed with retro games, and a good mix between native Linux and native Windows titles.

I only had time to select a few at ~random. I have a few (50) games in GOG that I have purchased over the years. Bear in mind I’m trying to approach this from a “normal user” point of view who wants to download and run a game they already had in their collection, or a new title they just bought. I’m also keen to hear if my testing strategy is flawed in any way. These don’t seem to be true for the limited testing I did.
