On Jan 9, 2017, at 4:08 AM, Walter Dnes waltdnes@waltdnes.org wrote:
Hi all. I'm using a CentOS 6.8 VM to do volunteer builds for an open source project. I want to build Pale Moon with a gtk2 library older than 2.24, to allow people with older linuxes to run it. Short summary, if built against version gtk2-2.24 and/or higher, the binary will use a function that does not exist in gtk2-2.23 and lower. Net result is that the program dies with an "undefined symbol:" error for people with machines lower than gtk2-2.24. Yes, before you ask, they do get security fixes backported.
The hits from my Google search suggested...
yum downgrade gtk2
The response from yum was...
Only Upgrade available on package: gtk-2.24.23-8.e16.i686 Nothing to do
Are there ways around this?
I suggest building the software using mock chroots, built against older versions of CentOS. You can set up custom chroots in /etc/mock/.
For example, I have staged versions of CentOS7 (with staged yum repos) that I use to build kernel modules, so I can build the latest version of OpenAFS against kernels other than the latest, since our environment’s kernels don’t get updated immediately but I will still need to have OpenAFS kmods. You could do something similar, only pointing the yum repos at vault.centos.org http://vault.centos.org/ repos.
-- Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org