Gdb, coreutils, unzip, bash, procps, grep, sed,įrom the Depends line, control file should now look lihe this: Open the file control in edit mode and remove the following: (here it is a good idea to show hidden files, done by pressing Ctrl+H while in file browser) Go into the ibm-notes-9.0.i586 folder and into the DEBIAN folder Unpack your downloaded tar files and extract the file ibm-notes-9.0.b to ibm-notes-9.0.i586 folder and the rename ibm-notes-9.0.b to original-ibm-notes-9.0.b If you have earlier installations you should be able to uninstall them one by one with the following: Sudo dpkg -l ‘ibm*’:i386 | grep ii (in 32 bit it is sudo dpkg -l ‘ibm*’ | grep ii) To check out if there are any other ibm/lotus installations present use the following command in a terminal window (open it an expand it to see all information): No other Notes installations are present to begin with. You are using an administrative account and you are using Ubuntu 12.04 LTS 64 bitĢ.
Ibm notes 9.0 install#
To install Notes 9 in Ubuntu 64 I’m assuming the following:ġ.
The goal for me was to install this without broken dependencies and a fully functional operating system without warnings inside update manager. I googled on this and got no satisfactory solution for implementing this in a corporate production environment as all of the solutions were using force to install and some ended up with broken dependencies and so on. Customer running 64 bit Ubuntu 12.04 LTS as their primary client platform.Ĭustomer wants Notes 9.0 to be their primary collaboration client.