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error while loading shared library. cannot open shared object file
- This occurs when it can't load a shared library, use "ldd(1)" to determine which libraries this program is trying to link against and which ones are missing or can't be linked against. eg
- ldd /bin/cat
No such file or directory
If you see this message when trying to run a program, even though you can plainly see it right in front of you, there are a couple of possibilities:
- If it is some kind of script, it might point to an interpreter that doesn't exist on your system. For example, it used to be common to see perl scripts whose first line was
/usr/local/bin/perl
But if you had perl installed as /bin/perl or /usr/bin/perl you would get this message.
- Your dynamic binary executable is linked against a specific dynamic library on your system that has the same name (but different binary interfaces??) as the machine that the file was compiled on. This is particularly annoying as you can also get this message when trying to use ldd(1) to find out which dynamic library is causing the problem! If ldd(1) doesn't work, you are probably missing /lib/ld.so or /lib/ld-linux.so
- More commonly this program is linked against a library that doesn't exist on your machine. If all your programs are saying this, try echo /lib/*, you'll probably find it empty :)
Xlib: connection to ":0.0" refused by server
Xlib: connection to ":0.0" refused by server
Xlib: Client is not authorized to connect to Server
some_app: unable to open display ":0.0"
The user running the command is different to the user that started the X-server, or is otherwise not allowed by the X server to create new (graphical) windows.
Also see the XAuthNotes? page on giving other users permission to open graphical windows on your X server.
-bash: /path/to/script: /bin/bash: bad interpreter: Permission denied
- bash: /path/to/script: /bin/bash: bad interpreter: Permission denied
/bin/bash exists and runs fine; the probably cause is the "u+x" bit is not set on the script. (a+x should overwrite it, shouldn't it?)
My experimentation suggests that /bin/bash probably isn't executable, and since it is a bash script the kernel is trying to start bash. Judging by the number of people doing searchs we're having a large number of people have this problem with bash and perl. Still have no idea what's going on? try
chmod a+rx /bin/bash /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl /path/to/your/script/here
this will mark these all as executable and readable by everyone.
ping: sendto: Operation not permitted
PING 192.168.66.10 (192.168.66.10): 56 data bytes
ping: sendto: Operation not permitted
ping: wrote 192.168.66.10 64 chars, ret=-1
The interface you are pinging out of (192.168.66.10) is firewalled. Fix your firewall :)
Kernel/libc Error Messages
See ErrorMessages
Error Messages for specific Applications
See ApplicationErrorMessages
Humorous Error Messages
FunnyApplicationErrorMessages