![]() ![]() Therefore, as you can already probably guess I didn't choose this solution. But it's a git version and it's not present in chaotic-aur meaning that you have to compile it yourself and it can take quite a long time depending on your CPU. using a more recent version of gcc from the aurįor the first solution you would have to install gcc-libs-git package from the aur, it allows you to have the version 13 in which the required library is present.However aur packages suppose that you have access to the latest version of every dependency. That's why we don't have the latest libstdc++ version. And here on manjaro the latest gcc version is 11.2.0-4 whereas it's 12.1.0-1 on archlinux. ![]() The reason to this is that to have a system "more stable" than archlinux, there is a bit of delay between the moment when a package is published on archlinux and the moment when it is published on manjaro. You can check all the version you have access to with strings /usr/lib/libstdc++.so | grep GLIBCXX The most recent version of it was libstdc++.so.6.0.29 The problem here was that the library libstdc++.so.6.0.30 (a library from gcc-libs) required by librewolf was missing. And after the update trying to start librewolf was giving me this error: /usr/lib/librewolf/librewolf: /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.30' not found (required by /usr/lib/librewolf/librewolf) Today I updated librewolf (I'm using the binary aur package on manjaro linux). But if someone has the same problem it will save him from redoing the same research as me. I'm posting the solution to a problem I encountered. ![]()
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