Hi Casper,

Casper Gielen wrote:
> Upon starting PIDA I get an error:
>
> Fatal error, cannot start PIDA
> Show more details
> The pida package could not be found.
> /usr/lib/libdbus-glib-1.so.2: undefined symbol: db
> Exiting. (this is fatal)
>   
this looks interesting, yeah.
Please send the output of
  /usr/bin/env python --version
  which python
  ls -lah `which python`
  ldd `which python`
  ldd /usr/lib/libdbus-glib-1.so.2

> I do have a manual build version of python3.1 installed, but as far as I can 
> see this should be invisible to pida.
>   
it might not be, depending on your path. the above should bring clarity.

> --- System information. ---
> Architecture: i386
> Kernel:       Linux 2.6.29-2-686
>
> Debian Release: squeeze/sid
>   500 unstable        www.debian-multimedia.org 
>   500 unstable        rum 
>   500 stable          dl.google.com 
>   500 experimental    www.debian-multimedia.org 
>   101 experimental    rum
You seem to be using no official debian mirrors at all. As long as one
is a full and up-to-date mirror, that should not be a problem though.

> --- Package information. ---
> Package's Depends field is empty.
>   
this however is certainly not true. did you write this bugreport with
reportbug ? it seems to be very confused about the package.
Please try again to run "reportbug pida" (after adding an official
mirror and calling apt-get update) and attach an answer to this bug.

Bye,
  Philipp



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