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I've been running 32bit Arch on an older laptop for awhile and love it. I recently purchased a new Thinkpad with 4G of RAM, and would like to use Arch64. My question is what is the best way to setup the system to use 32bit programs? Should I just install the 32bit libraries, or create a "Arch64 Install bundled 32bit system" as described in the wiki. If I just install the 32bit libraries is there anything that needs to be configured in the system, or do the necessary programs just work. Then again, should I just install Arch64 and deal with these issues when they pop up?
Michael
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Turn the question around. Which 32-bit applications do you think you will need on a 64-bit system?
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I'm not sure there will be any. It seems that pretty much everything supports 64bit, but I am just wondering what is the best way to handle running 32bit apps? Is there any apps that are only 32bit that are commonly used?
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I'm not sure there will be any. It seems that pretty much everything supports 64bit, but I am just wondering what is the best way to handle running 32bit apps? Is there any apps that are only 32bit that are commonly used?
skype and wine are used a lot. lucky we have bin32-skype and bin32-wine which are working flawless
Give what you have. To someone, it may be better than you dare to think.
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skype is probably the big one. Other than that check the bin32* packages in AUR. I saw google-earth and realplayer.
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I'd recommend a chroot, much less compiling from AUR that way, and easier to handle the dependencies since you're using standard 32-bit packages.
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I run a self compiled and designed chroot. Instead of using arch for the 32bit part I use gentoo. It has a lighter memory footprint. Be warned it's not for the faint of heart.
Hardware is like a parachute.... works best when open.
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Thanks for the suggestions. It seems that going with a chroot system is better than the lib32 way.
@cobra2: I'm always open for a challenge, but I think I'll pass on this one.
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