On 12/16/05, Vitaliy Margolen wine-devel@kievinfo.com wrote:
$ rm -rf .wine $ wine/wine notepad.exe /home/dank/.wine updated successfully. $ find .wine -name regsvr32.exe -ls 4669487 0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 dank dank 40 Dec 17 03:35 .wine/drive_c/windows/system32/regsvr32.exe -> /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32.exe.so
Yup, exactly what I said.
? You were talking about something being overwritten with a native copy by an installer, but you can see from the log that no installer was run.
Run 'file /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32.exe.so' to see what I'm talking about.
OK:
$ file /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32.exe.so /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32.exe.so: symbolic link to `regsvr32/regsvr32.exe.so' $ file /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32/regsvr32.exe.so /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32/regsvr32.exe.so: ELF 32-bit LSB shared object, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV), not stripped
What does that tell you? The file looks like a perfectly good ELF file, as one would expect. How do you explain the next line from the log,
$ wine/wine .wine/drive_c/windows/system32/regsvr32.exe wine: cannot open builtin library for L"Z:\home\dank\.wine\drive_c\windows\system32\regsvr32.exe": /home/dank/wine/programs/regsvr32.exe.so: invalid ELF header
? - Dan
-- Wine for Windows ISVs: http://kegel.com/wine/isv