Hi! I want to install Lahey's fortran 95 compiler in my debian box. This is a vanilla (ish!) potato box which works fine. However, there is a little catch: the installer (which takes a key and licences the software, copies the files and so on) is a shell script that calls some programs. These programs seem to be linked against libc.so.5 and will not run. The installer detects the version of libc/glibc I'm running (glibc 2.1) without a glitch, but since these other executables are needed and are not being run, the installation isn't succesful.
If I create a quick hack (ln -s :D) libc.so.5 to the real libc, the think segfaults (which is to be expected, I suppose). I have thought about compiling an older libc for installation purposes (I can always select which version of the compiler I want to install anyway), but I don't know how hard this is, and whether it might break my system. Does anyone have any views on this? They'd be appreciated (and especially if mailed directly!). Cheers, José -- José L Gómez Dans PhD student Radar & Communications Group Department of Electronic Engineering University of Sheffield UK