Libffi6 libk5crypto3 libtasn1-3 libxrandr2 Libdbus-1-3 libhunspell-1.3-0 libselinux1 libxinerama1 Libcomerr2 libgssapi-krb5-2 libpng12-0 libxft2 Libcanberra0 libgpg-error0 libpixman-1-0 libxfixes3 Libc6 libgnomevfs2-0 libpango1.0-0 libxdmcp6 Libbonoboui2-0 libgnomeui-0 libpam0g libxdamage1 Libbonobo2-0 libgnome-keyring0 libp11-kit0 libxcursor1 Libavahi-glib1 libgnomecanvas2-0 liborbit2 libxcomposite1 Libavahi-common3 libgnome2-0 libogg0 libxcb-shm0
Libavahi-client3 libglib2.0-0 libnss3-1d libxcb-render0
Libatk1.0-0 libgdk-pixbuf2.0-0 libnss3 libxcb1 Libasound2 libgcrypt11 libnspr4-0d libxau6 This was the output: libart-2.0-2 libgconf-2-4 libnspr4 libx11-6 zlib1g This is similar to miquel's approach above, only that he removes all dependencies, while I'll modify them to be compatible with both 32-bit and 64-bit Ubuntu versions.ĭependencies are mostly libraries the program is dynamically liked to, so I ran this command on an 32-bit Ubuntu 12.04 with IBM Notes installed: $ for f in $(find /opt/ibm/ -type f -exec ldd ' | sort | uniq | sed 's/:$//'
Lotus symphony 64bit install#
However, you can fix the package dependencies to make it install properly and work flawlessly on your 64-bit Ubuntu. The reason is that the deb package as distributed by IBM is designed to be installed on 32-bit systems only. My experience with IBM Notes 9 and 9.0.1 is that installing all required dependencies will break X and render your 64-bit Ubuntu installation unusable for the most part.