On a x86_64 Linux machine, I made another x86_64 chroot environment for FC9, and installed a 32-bit firefox in the chroot. The main host has as 64-bit firefox, old one - 1.5.x something (BonEcho). When I enter the chroot, and log in as root, I can start the 32-bit firefox. This opens up a new session and all is fine. When I enter the chroot, and log in as the same user as that in the parent host, then I'm unable to start a new firefox - it always starts up a window to the original firefox. And I can't even start a new instance - it always seem to start the the firefox from the original host - which is extremely confusing. I tried the --no-remote option to Firefox 3.0.3, that firefox immediately exits in the chroot. The chroot environment shares /tmp and hence all of X display with the main host. Is there a way to trick firefox into not locating the firefox running outside the chroot? I suspect it is the sharing of the tmp folder that allows firefox to get at this info., But I need to share the /tmp to make X11 work well in the chroot. Any tips/suggestions appreciated. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines