No package lib32z1,lib32ncurses5,lib32stdc++6 available in centos - android

During installing android studio in centos the Unable to run mksdcard SDK tool. error occure. I try to find out the solution on net but unable to install
yum install lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0 lib32stdc++6
and the error is no package available.Also i have updated the yum. So please if there is any solution for it.

The below commands helps for me on centos-7
For lib32stdc++6
sudo yum install libstdc++*
For lib32z1
sudo yum install zlib*
For 32 bit system compiling
sudo yum install zlib.i686
For lib32ncurses5
sudo yum install libncurses*

yum list available
The command above will list all the available packages including the 32 bit ones with extension .i686, install the ones that are required.
thereby the similar packages in RedHat based system for apt-get lib32stdc++6 lib32z1 is as below
yum -y install libstdc++.i686 zlib.i686

Centos does not have these rpms
lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0 lib32stdc++6
you can try :
yum install libstdc++.i686

Related

how to install android studio in linux mint 19 64-bit

should i also install 32 bit libraries ?
sudo apt install -y libc6:i386 libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386 lib32z1 libbz2-1.0:i386 wget
I am using a 64 bit os.
According to the official website you need to install the 32-bit lib:
Required libraries for 64-bit machines:
If you are running a 64-bit version of Ubuntu, you need to install some 32-bit libraries with the following command:
sudo apt-get install libc6:i386 libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386 lib32z1 libbz2-1.0:i386
To enable multi-arch :
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo apt-get update

Ubuntu android studio installation error

I am using 64 bit operating system(ubuntu 15.04) and I am also new in linux platform.
When I try to install android studio I got an error "Unable to run mksdcard SDK tool".
I try this one and it does not work:
sudo apt-get install lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0 lib32stdc++6
Can u help me?
You only need to install lib32stdc++6. Try the following command:
sudo apt-get install lib32stdc++6
Use this
sudo apt-get install lib32stdc++6
For Ubuntu 15.04,15.10,16.04 LTS & Debian 8

Run Android aapt on Ubuntu 12.04 64 bit

I'm trying to build an Android project on an Ubuntu 12.04 machine, 64 bit.
For some reason, after I've done everything required, I still can't run "aapt".
As instructed, I downloaded the SDK and installed all the packages.
I changed permissions on the file, and also installed 32->64 bit multiarch libraries:
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs-multiarch
Because this didn't work, and after a whole lot of more searches, I also installed:
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5
Still, I get
aapt: command not found
Please let me know if there's anything else to attach to the question.
Any ideas?
As commented by Sinhyeok: JafarKhQ's solution works for us, which is:
sudo apt install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5 lib32z1
You might be missing the android sdk from your PATH environment variable.

adb error on Android SDK. Using Linux Ubuntu 64 bit 12.10

I looked on this site for this error I'm encountering:
Stopping ADB server failed (code -1).
Unable to run 'adb': Cannot run program "/home/ariel/Downloads/adt-bundle-linux-x86_64/sdk/platform-tools/adb": error=2, No such file or directory.
Starting ADB server failed (code -1).
I've used this command on the terminal provided from this topic.
Android SDK on a 64-bit linux machine
EDIT:
I've tried using this command on terminal:
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs
Sadly, it did nothing and it showed this:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Package libc6-i386 is not available, but is referred to by another package.
This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or
is only available from another source
E: Package 'libc6-i386' has no installation candidate
I had the same problem, but it's fine now with these commands :
*sudo apt-get install libstdc++6:i386 libgcc1:i386 zlib1g:i386 libncurses5:i386
for running the emulator you need that additional package:
*sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2debian:i386
then install ia32-libs:
*apt-get install ia32-libs
You need to add i386 packages to apt
dpkg --add-architecture i386
I just used
sudo apt-get install lib32bz2-1.0
For this problem, one may try :
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5

Android adb not found

When I run my android app from eclipse, I get this error.
Unexpected exception 'Cannot run program "/home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/adb": error=2 No such file or directory' while attempting to get adb version from /home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/adb
COPY PASTE FROM Eclipse Error
[2012-11-26 13:43:08 - adb] Unexpected exception 'Cannot run program "/home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/adb": error=2, No such file or directory' while attempting to get adb version from '/home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/adb'
However my adb is exactly in the location where it says it's not.
What is wrong and how do I fix this?
I cd into the directory where adb is (/home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/) and I typed in adb and it says
antz#antz-90X3A:~/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools$ ls
aapt aidl dexdump fastboot llvm-rs-cc renderscript
adb api dx lib NOTICE.txt source.properties
antz#antz-90X3A:~/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools$ adb
bash: /home/antz/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools/adb: No such file or directory
adb is green which means its an executable, correct?
for example, dx is also green and when I typed in dx into the command prompt, it works... whats wrong with adb?
On Linux, Android SDK platform-tools package containing adb used to be 32bit. It worked fine on 32bit systems. But on 64bit systems you need to manually install the IA32 library.
For Debian based distributions try this:
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5
But since v24.0 platform-tools contains only 64bit binaries - so 32bit libraries no longer required.
You can no longer install ia32-libs, so you must the individual 32 bit libraries needed by adb
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5
And for Ubuntu 13.10:
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5 lib32z1
You have to install the 32 bit glibc:
in Fedore 64 bit machine
# yum install glibc.i686
This removes the misleading 'no such file or directory' message when trying to execute a 32 bit binary. With that the 64 bit Fedora system is capable of executing 64 bit binaries.
This also removes the misleading 'not a dynamic executable' message of ldd when calling ldd on a 32 bit dynamic executable.
Now you have to install missing 32 bit libraries the binaries under adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools are linked against:
# yum install zlib.i686 libstdc++.i686 ncurses-libs.i686 libgcc.i686
Thats it.
I'm using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS 64-bit and the following code works for me;
sudo apt-get install lib32z1 lib32z1-dev
sudo apt-get install lib32stdc++6
Summary:
After I tried apt-get install ia32-libs, but apt package tool suggest that;
Package ia32-libs is not available, but is referred to by another package.
This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or is only available from another source.
However the following packages replace it:
lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0
Then the above code works for me.
This works great in Ubuntu 13.04 64bit version
You can no longer install ia32-libs, so you must the individual 32 bit libraries needed by adb
sudo apt-get install libc6-i386 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 lib32ncurses5
On Arch linux:
Enable the "multiarch" repositories in /etc/pacman.conf
then run:
root#box#pacman -Syu
root#box#pacman -S lib32-glibc lib32-zlib lib32-libstdc++5 lib32-ncurses lib32-gcc-libs
I am running Ubuntu 12.04 LTS and this command is the only thing that worked for me:
sudo apt-get install lib32z1 lib32z1-dev
Once I ran that from a command line, I was able to get the R.java file to generate (the tell-tale sign that something in your Android SDK tools installation is not quite right) by doing a Project > Clean in Eclipse.
For multiarch Debian 7.0, add:
dpkg --add-architecture i386
apt-get install libc6:i386 libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386
On Fedora 17 or 18:
sudo yum install redhat-lsb.i686
You need to install the ia32-libs (IA32 libraries) package for this to work.
I did it in my Linux Mint 12:
chmod +x PATH/adb
if you're having this problem in 64bits, try this (worked for me):
$ apt-get install lib32gcc1 libc6-i386 lib32z1 lib32stdc++6
$ apt-get install lib32ncurses5 lib32gomp1 lib32z1-dev lib32bz2-dev
$ apt-get install g++-multilib
http://sixarm.com/about/ubuntu-apt-get-install-ia32-for-32-bit-on-64-bit.html
From the Ubuntu Multiarch HOWTO:
Some users using the Android SDK might encounter problems when trying to run build-tools or platform-tools on amd64 bit platform. As replacement for ia32-libs, users should be fine just installing the following libraries:
dpkg --add-architecture i386
aptitude update
aptitude install libstdc++6:i386 libgcc1:i386 zlib1g:i386 libncurses5:i386
Install these libraries in linux apt-get install ia32-libs
Run these commands below. Its worked for me
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs
in ubuntu 64 bits [12.04]-[14.10] and Elementary OS 64 bits
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386 zlib1g:i386
Sometimes it's just a matter giving sdk files the necessary permissions.
sudo chmod -R +x /path/to/android-sdk-linux
Restart Android Studio and see if that fix it.
Permission issues typically occur when you copy/move sdk files from a NTFS partition or copying from another computer.
sudo apt install adb
adb not installed in your pc
Try this.
http://abhinavasblog.blogspot.sg/2013/10/working-with-ubuntu-1304-and-1310-java.html
the blog explain resolution to Ubuntu 13.10 for installing Chrome, Java and Fixing Android SDK.
The correct current combo for Arch Linux is as follows: :
[This part is unchanged] Uncomment the following section in /etc/pacman.conf:
...
[multilib]
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
...
Then:
sudo pacman -Syu && sudo pacman -S multilib/lib32-libstdc++5 multilib/lib32-zlib
The difference with the other answer is that package names include the multilib/ part now.
(from Arch Wiki: Multilib#Enabling, Android#Troubleshooting)

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