Wine depends winbind but it is not installable


















I tried to make the multiarch file as dchampagne suggested but it didn't work. To get it to work properly I had to do this:. That cleared everything up for me. Looking elsewhere on the interweb this is apparently a really common problem with This will let you install the i package wine depends on.

Example Depends: wine1. I had the same problem under Pear OS 8. Got the it fix its the packages that are in the system that need updating. But you cant just run the commands you need to use Synaptic Package Manager and redownload the catalogue for wine. Then run sudo apt-get install wine. After you have got all the catalogue rebuilt mine said that it updated catalogues dir. It has to do with x64 bit not installing the proper i files. I tried everything wanted to give up but tried that even using the fix commands don't work nor does deleting the information for the packages.

Just tell it to download catalogue for wine and the rest of your system then use terminal should work. Good luck. Ubuntu Community Ask!

Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Asked 9 years, 2 months ago. Active 6 years, 4 months ago. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Can't install Wine Ubuntu Asked 3 years ago. Active 2 years, 11 months ago. Viewed 11k times. Done Building dependency tree Reading state information Done Some packages could not be installed.

This may mean that you have requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable distribution that some required packages have not yet been created or been moved out of Incoming.

Tried to install wine-staging-amd64 but then, get other dependencies issues : sudo apt-get install wine-staging-amd64 [sudo] password for gerard: Reading package lists Improve this question.

Auth C. Auth 33 1 1 gold badge 1 1 silver badge 4 4 bronze badges. The wine-staging package is not in Ubuntu. You are getting it from somewhere else. You have unwisely added a non-Ubuntu source that provides packages that are incompatible with your release of Ubuntu. Determine the source using the apt-cache policy command see the manpage for apt-cache , uninstall ALL packages from that source, and delete that source.

Look up the ppa-purge command for how. Post by dimesio » Fri Feb 14, pm. Post by jkfloris » Sat Feb 15, am. Done Building dependency tree Reading state information Done Calculating upgrade Done The following packages have been kept back: wine-stable wine-stable-amd64 wine-stable-ii winehq-stable 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 4 not upgraded. Done Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable distribution that some required packages have not yet been created or been moved out of Incoming.

The following packages have unmet dependencies: wine-stable-amd64 : Depends: libfaudio0 but it is not installable wine-stable-ii : Depends: libfaudio0:i but it is not installable E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.

Coming back to this problem a couple weeks later, holy moly, I found the answer to the problem thanks to dimesio's advice of just flowing down the tree of dependencies until I untangled things. That's the short version of the story. I have a follow-up question. Unfortunately, but the only way I can properly frame it is to give you the tl;dr version.

Is there a spoiler tag for this forum? Oh well, here goes After I posted my original forum question, I thought I fixed things using some suggestions from an AskUbuntu thread, but it turned out I only buried the problem by hiding the upgrade notifications without actually installing Wine 5. I realized my error tonight when I attempted to run WineHQ. I discovered it wasn't installed.

I discovered that the unmet dependencies were still unmet. Only now, there was only one unmet dependency listed. How this happened, I cannot begin to fathom. All of the output that my CLI returned when I ran the suggested commands from AskUbuntu are long gone, but luckily I do have the bash history which may provide a few clues: Code: Select all sudo apt update apt list --upgradable sudo apt upgrade sudo apt-get --with-new-pkgs upgrade sudo apt --with-new-pkgs upgrade sudo apt-get install wine-stable wine-stable-amd64 wine-stable-ii winehq-stable sudo apt clean sudo apt autoclean sudo apt-get -f install sudo apt-get -u dist-upgrade apt list --upgradable apt list --upgradable -a sudo apt update apt list --upgradable sudo apt upgrade sudo apt autoremove.

Need to get 2, kB of archives. After this operation, Do you want to continue? Removing audacity 2. Removing ffmpeg Removing gstreamer1.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000