Without more information nobody can help. A program can't run if glibc doesn't match well enough yet you say it does. That can only imply the glibc version matches well enough for it to run and it follows it must be the program itself issuing the warning. You neglected to say which program or the error. I can't think of a program I've ever seen which does this. Indeed, the only sane reason I can think of is that it's checking for a newer feature.
Consider libc and a kernel to be tightly coupled. You're best off downgrading the program to its previous version then twiddle the correct knobs to prevent it updating again.
Consider libc and a kernel to be tightly coupled. You're best off downgrading the program to its previous version then twiddle the correct knobs to prevent it updating again.
Statistics: Posted by swampdog — Sun Sep 29, 2024 12:46 am