Score:0

From Ubuntu 22.04 to Ubuntu 12.04 because libglade2.-2.0.so is missing?

zm flag

I know that the Itanium (IA64) processor is long gone history as I am too. I wrote a very small priority-based kernel for Itanium some 20+ years ago. I used ski simulator to test it, and everything went well. My "nano kernel" source code with test processes is still in "isosika.net and download link".

Would it be possible to find the a ski binary somewhere? I am 78 years old and want to play with my kernel (nostalgia).

I use Ubuntu 22.04. I know that it is still possible in principle to get ski from source and I have the source, but I have forgotten too much about the handling of missing dependencies to build it, and there's always a new error message coming after every fixed problem.


I rescued the old ia64 ski binary simulator and and also rescued gccia64 and binutils for ia64 (not currently available). I tried the earlier with Ubuntu 12.04 working cross compiled my own ia64 kernel simulation with the old ski (working fine with Ubuntu 12.04) -> error libglade-2.0.so missing. Ubuntu 22.04 can't find libglade2-2.0 with apt-get install or with Synaptic. What should I do? Should I go back to Ubuntu 12.04?

karel avatar
sa flag
https://ski.sourceforge.net/ Ski needs the following tools to build: autocon, autogen, automake -- use at least 1.9, libtool, bison, flex, gawk, gperf, lesstiff development libraries, libltld3 development libraries, libelf development libraries, ncurses development libraries
I sit in a Tesla and translated this thread with Ai:

mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.