Post by suolainen on Apr 24, 2023 17:45:51 GMT
So …
I have experimented a lot during the last days.
I got to know that some programmes can be your friend (Timeshift, Redo Backup, Qemu, good old Virtualbox and even Cubic, which by the way appears to work properly and can thus be sort of a replacement for Remastersys).
My initial problem (which was not being able to change the wallpaper immediately, but only after changing the theme) has vanished. I actually had a Timeshift snapshot of that system, which I applied then to find out that changing the background worked like a charm after shifting back.
Since I had my list with all the commands to install, I then decided to follow this list again and see if there would be a point when changing the background would work no more.
Alas, this didn’t happen. But still I don’t know why … And I’m not really into changing settings that I don’t understand and cannot remember having tinkered around with that system at all.
On the other hand …
I had been able to reproduce the strange behaviour on TWO systems.
On the one I was experimenting with (the timeshifted one) it is now gone.
The other one is still in the ‘wrong’ state, even after the update with the new version of Moksha.
I assume I will simply do a fresh install there and hope everything will be alright then.
Best regards to everybody at Bodhi Linux – and good luck to all people that would like to try to install wine32.
I was finally able to get that done. The problem seems to be comparable to the one with Steam described by xpistian. Likely a question of jammy-backports priority ...
But the procedure was … well, something in between weird and fantastic.
1) Install Wine 6.03:
sudo apt install wine wine32 wine64 libdw1:i386=0.188-1~bpo22.04.1 libelf1:i386=0.188-1~bpo22.04.1
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt autoremove
2) Then install Wine 8.01 from Wine HQ
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo mkdir -pm755 /etc/apt/keyrings
sudo wget -O /etc/apt/keyrings/winehq-archive.key dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/winehq.key
sudo wget -NP /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/ubuntu/dists/jammy/winehq-jammy.sources
sudo apt update
sudo apt install --install-recommends winehq-stable -yy
wine cfg
And then I … well, I felt quite relieved.
Thanks again for your support.
I have experimented a lot during the last days.
I got to know that some programmes can be your friend (Timeshift, Redo Backup, Qemu, good old Virtualbox and even Cubic, which by the way appears to work properly and can thus be sort of a replacement for Remastersys).
My initial problem (which was not being able to change the wallpaper immediately, but only after changing the theme) has vanished. I actually had a Timeshift snapshot of that system, which I applied then to find out that changing the background worked like a charm after shifting back.
Since I had my list with all the commands to install, I then decided to follow this list again and see if there would be a point when changing the background would work no more.
Alas, this didn’t happen. But still I don’t know why … And I’m not really into changing settings that I don’t understand and cannot remember having tinkered around with that system at all.
On the other hand …
I had been able to reproduce the strange behaviour on TWO systems.
On the one I was experimenting with (the timeshifted one) it is now gone.
The other one is still in the ‘wrong’ state, even after the update with the new version of Moksha.
I assume I will simply do a fresh install there and hope everything will be alright then.
Best regards to everybody at Bodhi Linux – and good luck to all people that would like to try to install wine32.
I was finally able to get that done. The problem seems to be comparable to the one with Steam described by xpistian. Likely a question of jammy-backports priority ...
But the procedure was … well, something in between weird and fantastic.
1) Install Wine 6.03:
sudo apt install wine wine32 wine64 libdw1:i386=0.188-1~bpo22.04.1 libelf1:i386=0.188-1~bpo22.04.1
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt autoremove
2) Then install Wine 8.01 from Wine HQ
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo mkdir -pm755 /etc/apt/keyrings
sudo wget -O /etc/apt/keyrings/winehq-archive.key dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/winehq.key
sudo wget -NP /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/ubuntu/dists/jammy/winehq-jammy.sources
sudo apt update
sudo apt install --install-recommends winehq-stable -yy
wine cfg
And then I … well, I felt quite relieved.
Thanks again for your support.