On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 1:54 PM, David C. Rankin <drankinatty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tuesday 01 December 2009 07:33:17 and regarding: >> Does "pacman -Qo <some of this weird files>" return anything? >> > > Flavio, > > Strangely, yes: > > 13:49 alchemy:/usr/x86_64-unknown-linux-uclibc/bin> for i in $(ls); do pacman > -Qo $i; done > ar is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > as is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > ld is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > nm is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > objcopy is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > objdump is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > ranlib is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > strip is owned by binutils-uclibc 2.19.1-2 > > 13:51 alchemy:/usr/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/arm-elf/lib> for i in $(ls); do [[ > ! -h $i ]] && pacman -Qo $i; done > libbfd-2.20.so is owned by cross-arm-elf-binutils 2.20-1 > libbfd.a is owned by cross-arm-elf-binutils 2.20-1 > libopcodes-2.20.so is owned by cross-arm-elf-binutils 2.20-1 > libopcodes.a is owned by cross-arm-elf-binutils 2.20-1 > > It looks like all the binutils files are unknown for some reason? > > Do you want me to post anything else? I guess I'll uninstall and try to > reinstall these packages and see if it happens again. Strange. Those packages are not essential to your system. binutils-uclibc and cross-arm-elf-binutils are primarily developer tools.