[WineHQ Logo] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Wine FAQ Frequently asked questions about Wine. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Questions Click on the question to see its answer. About Wine 1. What is Wine? 2. What's UNIX? What's Linux? What's FreeBSD? What's GNU? 3. Is Wine an emulator? 4. What's the history of Wine? 5. Why would anyone want Wine? Doesn't Windows suck? 6. What is Wine, and what is it supposed to do? 7. What is the current version of Wine? 8. When will Wine be finished? 9. What undocumented APIs / interfaces are not understood? Would seeing Microsoft source help? Getting Wine 10. Do I need Unix first? Where can I get Linux? 11. Can I get Wine on CD? Common troubles with configuring Wine 12. This RPM requires libncurses.so.5, but the latest ncurses I can find is libncurses.so.4? 13. Why does it keep saying that Xpm is not installed? 14. What is this kernel/kernel32 mismatch warning? 15. I'm getting a X_OpenFont crash when starting Wine! 16. All my Wine windows stick on top and/or on all my desktops! 17. Wine looks like Windows 3.1, but I run Windows 95 applications? 18. I compiled Wine from source, but it can't find the .so files, like libavifil32.so! 19. Wine won't start on my new glibc2.1.3-based distribution (RedHat 6.2, Mandrake 7.0, etc)! Common troubles with running programs with Wine 20. I'm getting a relocation records stripped message, what's this? 21. I can't start programs in paths with spaces in them! 22. I tried to run a setup application, but it complains that it can't create start menu entries, what can I do? 23. My application wants me to change disks/CD-ROMs, but I can't unmount it while it is running, what can I do? Getting Help 24. Is there any documentation for Wine? 25. I couldn't find the answer to my question in the documentation, but I've written a document explaining how to solve it. What should I do? Developing programs using Wine 26. Can I use Wine to port my Win32 sources to Unix? 27. Will MFC work with Wine? What do I need to do? 28. Are there any commercial applications which have been ported using Wine? 29. How can I detect Wine? Becoming a Wine developer 30. How do I become a Wine developer? What do I need to know? About this FAQ 31. How recent is this FAQ? Where can I get the latest version? 32. Who maintains this FAQ? What's its history? How do I submit additions? 33. What's the copyright on this FAQ? How may I use it? Capabilities 34. Which programs does Wine currently run? 35. Are there programs which Wine will never be able to run? 36. Can I use Wine to access my Winmodem? 37. Will MS Windows programs typically run faster or slower under UNIX and Wine than they do under DOS and MS Windows? Will certain kinds of programs run slower or faster? 38. Are there any advantages or disadvantages to running MS Windows applications under Wine that I should be aware of? 39. Will Wine support MS Windows networked applications that use winsock.dll? 40. I'm a software developer who wants to use UNIX to develop programs rather than DOS, but I need to write DOS and MS Windows programs as well. Will I be able to run my favorite DOS and/or MS Windows compilers under Wine? What You Need to Run Wine 41. Under what hardware platform(s) and operating system(s) will Wine run? 42. What minimum CPU must I have in my computer to be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications smoothly? 43. How much disk space will the Wine source code and binaries take on my hard drive? What other software do I need to have installed to compile and run Wine? 44. How much RAM do I need to have on my UNIX system to be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications smoothly? 45. I have a Drivespaced, Doublespaced or Stackered DOS partition. Can Wine run MS Windows binaries located in such a partition? 46. Do I need to have a DOS partition on my system to use Wine? Does MS Windows need to be loaded into that partition in order to run MS Windows programs under Wine? 47. If Wine completely replaces MS Windows, will it duplicate all of the functions of MS Windows? 48. Will I be able to install MS Windows applications in any flavor of a UNIX filesystem? 49. Will Wine run only under X, or can it run in character mode? 50. Will Wine run under any X window manager? Does it require a window manager at all? 51. Will 32-bit Windows 95/98 applications run under Wine? 52. What about NT specific programs, which use NT-only features? How to Find, Install, Configure and Run Wine 53. Where can I get Wine? 54. If I do not have an Internet account, how can I get Wine? 55. How do I install Wine on my hard drive? 56. How do I compile the Wine distribution source code? 57. How do I configure Wine to run on my system? 58. How do I run an MS Windows program under Wine? 59. I have installed and configured Wine, but Wine cannot find MS Windows on my drive. Where did I go wrong? 60. I'm running a DirectX game, but the graphics is slow, how can I speed it up? 61. I think I've found a bug. How do I report this bug to the Wine programming team? 62. I was able to get various MS Windows programs to run, but parts of them do not work. What is wrong? 63. I have run various MS Windows programs, but since the program menus do not work, how can I exit these programs? 64. How do I remove Wine from my computer? How to Get Help with Wine 65. Is there a Usenet newsgroup for Wine? 66. Is there a World Wide Web site for Wine? How You Can Help with the Wine Project 67. How can I help contribute to the Wine project, and in what way(s)? 68. I want to help beta test Wine. How can I do this? 69. I have written some code that I would like to submit to the Wine project. How do I go about doing this? Who's Responsible for Wine? 70. Who is responsible for writing and maintaining the Wine source code? 71. Who are the folks and organizations who have contributed money or equipment to the Wine project? Questions and Answers About Wine 1. What is Wine? Wine is Windows on UNIX. 2. What's UNIX? What's Linux? What's FreeBSD? What's GNU? UNIX refers to a number of OSes based on the OS started at Bell Labs in the 70's. GNU is a longstanding project to create a free Unix. Linux and FreeBSD are free Unixes, building on the GNU project. Some distributors, such as Debian, refer to the result as GNU/Linux in recognition of the GNU heritage. 3. Is Wine an emulator? Unfortunately, no. Wine provides low-level binary compatibility, but currently only for OSes running on Intel-compatible chips. 4. What's the history of Wine? As far as I remember it was a discussion in comp.os.linux about Windows emulation. The first real code came from Eric Youngdale (at this point he was toying around with object formats, i.e. he was writing the ELF infrastructure for Linux and applied this knowledge to write a simple loader for Windows binaries). Then Bob Amstadt got the actual project running (with TK widgets). -- Joerg Also see http://www.winehq.com/about.html. 5. Why would anyone want Wine? Doesn't Windows suck? Not everyone thinks so. And for those that don't, Windows programs would suck less when run on a more stable and flexible UNIX platform. 6. What is Wine, and what is it supposed to do? Wine is a program which allows the operation of DOS and MS Windows programs (Windows 3.x and Win32 executables) on UNIX. It consists of a program loader, which loads and executes a Windows binary, and a library that implements Windows API calls using their UNIX or X11 equivalents. The library may also be used for porting Win32 code into native UNIX executables. Wine is free software, and its license (contained in the file LICENSE in each distribution) is BSD style. Basically, this means that you can do anything with Wine except claim that you wrote it. 7. What is the current version of Wine? A new version of Wine is distributed about every three weeks. You will be able to keep up on all the latest releases by reading the newsgroup comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine where new release announcements are made. You can also subscribe to the wine-announce mailing list to be notified of new releases via email. When downloading Wine from your FTP site of choice (see http://www.winehq.com/download.html for some of these choices), you can make sure that you are getting the latest version by watching the version numbers in the distribution filename. For instance, the distribution released on June 20, 1994 was called Wine-940620.tar.gz. Patch files are also available. If you are current to the previous version, you can download and apply just the current patch file rather than the entire new distribution. The patch filenames follow the same conventions as the monthly distribution. Read-only CVS access is also available. See http://www.winehq.com/dev.html 8. When will Wine be finished? Large software projects are never finished, only released. Because Wine is being developed by volunteers, it is difficult to predict when it will be ready for general release. Between 90-98% of the functions used by MS Windows applets, and 80-90% of the functions used by major programs, have been at least partially implemented at this time. However, the remaining 10% will likely take another 90% of the time, not including debugging. 9. What undocumented APIs / interfaces are not understood? Would seeing Microsoft source help? The best would be if the Windows API would be fully documented, so Wine could be a perfect "clean-room" implementation. Seeing the source code might make it harder to prove that no copyright violations have taken place. That said, the documentation is often bad, nonexistent, and even misleading where it exists, so a fair amount of reverse engineering have been necessary, particularly in the shell (Explorer) interface. Getting Wine 10. Do I need Unix first? Where can I get Linux? The short answer is yes: Wine is not an OS, it runs on top of your OS. A project named Generic Windows, a prepacked setup of FreeBSD+XFree86+Wine, has been proposed, but its domain name, genericwindows.com, seems to have disappeared from the Web. 11. Can I get Wine on CD? You can get the source on any CD which mirrors a Wine site, such as the Metalab CD's marketed by Walnut Creek CDROM. Be warned that these might be slightly out of date by the time you get them. Common troubles with configuring Wine 12. This RPM requires libncurses.so.5, but the latest ncurses I can find is libncurses.so.4? RedHat has pulled a bad versioning trick; ncurses 5 is still installed as libncurses.so.4 in order to avoid having to recompile the rest of the distribution. If you must use a RPM rather than compile from source, make a symlink, like cd /usr/lib ln -s libncurses.so.4 libncurses.so.5 13. Why does it keep saying that Xpm is not installed? You need the Xpm development headers. On RedHat and SuSE, this is the xpm-devel package. On Debian, this is the xpm4g-dev package. Remember to rm config.cache (or make distclean) before trying again. 14. What is this kernel/kernel32 mismatch warning? An error in the configuration file, which unfortunately many RPM creators have overlooked. If you run win32 applications and have win95/winNT installed with this error, Wine will crash on startup. The wine.conf should contain something like this (but you may ignore the DllPairs section if it doesn't exist, as it was obsoleted a while ago): [DllPairs] krnl386 = kernel32 [DllOverrides] kernel32, gdi32, user32 = builtin krnl386, gdi, user = builtin 15. I'm getting a X_OpenFont crash when starting Wine! Make sure you have run mkfontdir in all your X font directories to make sure X has a current list of available fonts. Also, some Windows fonts do not work properly in X. When Wine starts, it queries the X server for the metrics of every font on the system, and for some fonts this may fail. Run wine -debugmsg +font -sync to see what fonts it was querying the X server about, then remove the offending font. 16. All my Wine windows stick on top and/or on all my desktops! Have you tried the -managed or -desktop command line options? See the man page for details. 17. Wine looks like Windows 3.1, but I run Windows 95 applications? The visual look and the API are completely different and independent things, think of the look as a theme, it does not change what the applications think they are running on. That said, to change the look, set the WineLook option under [Tweak.Layout] in your wine.conf. 18. I compiled Wine from source, but it can't find the .so files, like libavifil32.so! When compiling from source, the libraries go into /usr/local/lib by default. Most Linux distributions aren't set up to look there by default, you have to add /usr/local/lib to /etc/ld.so.conf (and then rerun ldconfig) yourself (or let tools/wineinstall do it for you). 19. Wine won't start on my new glibc2.1.3-based distribution (RedHat 6.2, Mandrake 7.0, etc)! There are severe bugs in stock glibc2.1.3. For towupper crashes, or errors about MENU_CopySysPopup and USER, you can work around the problem by defining the environment variable LC_ALL, i.e. export LC_ALL=en (in bash) or setenv LC_ALL en (in tcsh). Common troubles with running programs with Wine 20. I'm getting a relocation records stripped message, what's this? It means that a Win32 application tried to start another executable, but this new executable wanted itself loaded at an address typically already occupied by the old executable, and did not have the relocation records necessary for it to be loaded anywhere else (recent versions of MSVC++ removes (strips) this information by default). Sometimes you can get the application up anyway by just manually starting the other executable it was trying to run (this applies to Lotus Notes, for example). The root of this problem is that Win32 keeps separate address spaces for each Win32 process, so that two executables will never clash under Windows. However, there is a lot of work left before Wine can do the same, mostly having to do with how these applications are going to communicate with each other once they are separated. 21. I can't start programs in paths with spaces in them! Did you do something like wine /c/Program Files/foo/bar.exe? The shell sees unescaped spaces as argument separators, for obvious reasons. To tell it that it's all one argument, you must quote it. Examples: wine /c/Program\ Files/foo/bar.exe wine "/c/Program Files/foo/bar.exe" But the best and simplest idea is always to cd into the program's directory first and then just run wine bar.exe. Many applications depend on the current directory being the program directory, and they might not work otherwise. 22. I tried to run a setup application, but it complains that it can't create start menu entries, what can I do? If you're running without a real Windows installation, first you need to install the necessary registry entries, if you haven't already done so. See documentation/no-windows for more information. Next, you need to create directories for the paths in the registry. If your Drive C path is /c, you would type something like mkdir "/c/windows/Start Menu" mkdir "/c/windows/Start Menu/Programs" to prepare the start menus, and after this the install should succeed. (The newest version of tools/wineinstall should do all this for you.) 23. My application wants me to change disks/CD-ROMs, but I can't unmount it while it is running, what can I do? Use the Supermount kernel patch, and mount your removable media using the Supermount filesystem (read its README file). Supermount implements DOS/Windows-like behaviour (it allows you to change media (as long as no files are open) without unmounting). (Mandrake kernels are known to include this patch by default.) Getting Help 24. Is there any documentation for Wine? Yes, a bit. Look in the documentation/ directory of the source distribution. Also see the WineHQ website and the draft version of the Wine-HOWTO. 25. I couldn't find the answer to my question in the documentation, but I've written a document explaining how to solve it. What should I do? Updates and additions to the Wine documentation directory should be sent to the wine-patches mailing list. Website and FAQ additions should be sent to [email protected]. Developing programs using Wine 26. Can I use Wine to port my Win32 sources to Unix? That is the idea of Winelib. Right now you may have some difficulties, but this should change soon. 27. Will MFC work with Wine? What do I need to do? Work is underway to support this. 28. Are there any commercial applications which have been ported using Wine? At this time, Corel's WordPerfect Office Suite and Deneba's Canvas 7 are known to use Winelib. 29. How can I detect Wine? You shouldn't need to. If there's a quirk in Wine you need to work around, it's better to fix it in Wine. Becoming a Wine developer 30. How do I become a Wine developer? What do I need to know? If you can program C, that's a good start. Download the sources via CVS, subscribe to the mailing lists, look around the source, and pay attention to the comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine newsgroup and the mailing lists. See if there's anything that you think you can fix or work on. You won't have much trouble finding areas that need work in Wine (grep for FIXMEs in the source). About this FAQ 31. How recent is this FAQ? Where can I get the latest version? This document was last edited Fri Jul 21 11:43:09 EDT 2000. It is available from http://www.winehq.com/faq.html. 32. Who maintains this FAQ? What's its history? How do I submit additions? Dave Gardner maintained it from 1995-1998. Douglas Ridgway, the current maintainer, took it over in 1999. Proposed new questions should be sent to him. 33. What's the copyright on this FAQ? How may I use it? The original Wine FAQ, which this FAQ was based on, was copyright ╘ 1995-1998 David Gardner. It may be reproduced and modified under the same terms as Wine itself. Capabilities 34. Which programs does Wine currently run? Please see the Apps database. 35. Are there programs which Wine will never be able to run? Wine is designed to allow applications to run, and implements an application programming interface. It is not designed to interface directly with hardware, which is the responsibility of the underlying operating system. Wine does not in general allow using Windows drivers under Unix. That said, Wine has been used to support parallel devices, such as parallel port scanners for which no Unix driver is available. 36. Can I use Wine to access my Winmodem? No. These are usually cheap DAC/ADC boards that comes with software that consumes some of the processing power of your main CPU instead of letting the hardware do its own job of decoding/encoding the acoustic signals that carries data over the phone line. The software drivers use VxDs to access the hardware, which brings us to the previous question, above. See http://www.linmodems.org/ instead. 37. Will MS Windows programs typically run faster or slower under UNIX and Wine than they do under DOS and MS Windows? Will certain kinds of programs run slower or faster? When work on Wine is completed, programs should typically run at about the same speed under Wine as they do under DOS and MS Windows. Currently, there are debugging features built into each release, and this slows down the execution of programs. However, these debugging features will be removed for any post-development releases. 38. Are there any advantages or disadvantages to running MS Windows applications under Wine that I should be aware of? As with OS/2, you will be running MS Windows programs under a protected mode operating system, which brings certain advantages (and some disadvantages). For instance, there will be crash protection. That is, each MS Windows application running under Wine will be running in its own X window and its own portion of reserved memory. If one MS Windows application crashes, it will not crash the other MS Windows or UNIX applications that you may have running at the same time. However, be aware that some applications are broken and they access memory that they haven't properly (or at all) allocated. Under OS/2 or Wine, they will crash. Under MS Windows, they may work for a period of time, but then eventually you will have to reboot the machine. Also, MS Windows programs should run at about the same speed under Wine as they do under MS Windows. When Wine is finished, you will be able to run your favorite MS Windows applications in a UNIX environment. However, be aware that any application written for MS Windows will run much less efficiently than its native UNIX cousin. For Linux, there is a database of such applications at the Linux Apps Page. 39. Will Wine support MS Windows networked applications that use winsock.dll? Yes, Wine does support such applications, more so the 16-bit than the 32-bit version of winsock. Working applications include Agent (a Usenet newsreader), mIRC, ws-FTP and Internet Explorer. 40. I'm a software developer who wants to use UNIX to develop programs rather than DOS, but I need to write DOS and MS Windows programs as well. Will I be able to run my favorite DOS and/or MS Windows compilers under Wine? Wine now supports DOS applications natively, which means that you might be able to run command-line utilities. Some have reported success in running (to varying degrees of success) various C++ compilers, and the Borland Dephi and Turbo Pascal for Windows compilers. Others have reported success in running the Borland C++ 5.0 command line compiler (bcc) as well as some of the debugging tools in the MS SDK, but these compilers' IDEs generally do not run yet. What You Need to Run Wine 41. Under what hardware platform(s) and operating system(s) will Wine run? Wine is being developed specifically to run on the Intel x86 class of CPUs under certain UNIXes that run on the x86 platform. UNIXes currently being tested for Wine compatibility include Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris x86. NetBSD, OpenBSD, Unixware, and SCO OpenServer 5 worked at one time, but Wine now requires kernel-level threads which are not currently available (or understood by the Wine team) in those platforms. The Wine development team hopes to attract the interest of other commercial UNIX and UNIX clone vendors as well. There are side efforts underway to port Wine to the Alpha, OS/2, and BeOS platforms. You can find out more information about the OS/2 port at http://www.winehq.com/wine/documentation/wine_os2 42. What minimum CPU must I have in my computer to be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications smoothly? Wine won't run on any x86 CPU less than an 80386. It is known to also work in the 80486 and Pentium CPUs. Beyond that, the basic test is, if you can run X11 now, you should be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications under it. As always, the faster your CPU, the better. Having a math coprocessor is unimportant. However, having a graphics accelerated video card supported by X will help greatly. 43. How much disk space will the Wine source code and binaries take on my hard drive? What other software do I need to have installed to compile and run Wine? You need approximately 220 megabytes of free hard drive space to store and compile the source code. Wine also needs about 18 megs in your /tmp directory. Many development tools need to be installed in order to compile Wine. A list of required packages for several distributions is included in the README. To run Wine, you will need the following: o The compiled Wine binary o A properly configured wine.conf file (or ~/.winerc file) o An installed and working X Window system o Some MS Windows programs to test 44. How much RAM do I need to have on my UNIX system to be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications smoothly? If you can run X smoothly on your UNIX system now, you should be able to run Wine and MS Windows applications just fine too. A typical Wine workstation should realistically have at least 16 megabytes of RAM and a 16 megabyte swap partition. More is better, of course. You can run Wine with 8/8, but it is not recommended. If you wish to be part of the development team and program Wine itself, be aware that the new debugger is rather memory intensive. Some have suggested that 64 megabytes is the minimum RAM needed for Wine development, although some are able to work (albeit slowly) with 24 megabytes of physical RAM and lots of swap space. 45. I have a Drivespaced, Doublespaced or Stackered DOS partition. Can Wine run MS Windows binaries located in such a partition? Yes, but only if the operating system supports mounting those types of drives. There is a Linux filesystem driver called dmsdos that will allow read/write access through Doublespaced and Drivespace 1.0 drives. More specifically, it supports mounting DOS 6.0 and 6.2 Doublespaced, DOS 6.22 Drivespaced, and Windows 95 Doublespaced compressed partitions (read and write access works fine, but write access is slow). It can be found at ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/filesystems/dosfs/. 46. Do I need to have a DOS partition on my system to use Wine? Does MS Windows need to be loaded into that partition in order to run MS Windows programs under Wine? Unlike Wabi, you do not need a licensed and installed copy of DOS or MS Windows to install, configure and run Wine. However, Wine has to be able to 'see' an MS Windows binary if it is to run it. Some folks have successfully installed and run some small programs in their UNIX filesystem without having a DOS partition or MS Windows. However, not all programs will work this way yet. Some applications' installation programs want to distribute some of the package's files into the /windows and /windows/system directories in order to run, and unless these exist on your UNIX filesystem, those programs will not install correctly and probably will not run well, if at all. If you have a DOS partition with MS Windows installed in it, make sure that your UNIX system can 'see' this partition (check your /etc/fstab file or mount the partition manually) so that Wine can run the MS Windows binaries located in the DOS partition. When it is finished, Wine will not require that you have a DOS partition on your system at all, meaning that you will not need to have MS Windows installed either. Wine programmers will provide an application setup program to allow you to install your MS Windows programs straight from your distribution diskettes or CDs onto your UNIX filesystem, or from within your UNIX filesystem if you ftp an MS Windows program over the Internet. To run without a DOS partition, you need to set a UNIX path to be your drive C, and make sure that the /windows and /windows/system directories point to some place that actually exist. Here's an example, copied from a machine which has no DOS partition but successfully runs Wine [Drive C] Path=/var/lib/wine Type=hd Label=MS-DOS Filesystem=win95 [wine] Windows=c:\windows System=c:\windows\system Temp=e:\ Path=c:\windows;c:\windows\system;c: In /var/lib/wine/windows, you will need to install a win.ini config file that you might find on a typical MS Windows 3.1 machine. The directory /var/lib/wine/windows/system should exist, but doesn't need to contain anything. However, to use MS DLLs, you can copy them into that directory. If you have DOS/MS Windows installed on your system, you can mount that partition at bootup by modifying the file /etc/fstab in your UNIX partition. If you edit this file by hand, it should contain something similar to the following /dev/hda1 /dosc msdos uid=0,gid=100,umask=007 0 0 This will allow you to read and write to the DOS partition without being root. 47. If Wine completely replaces MS Windows, will it duplicate all of the functions of MS Windows? Most of them, yes. However, some applications and applets that come with MS Windows, such as File Manager and Calculator, can be considered by some to be redundant, since 32-bit UNIX programs that duplicate these applets' functions already exist. 48. Will I be able to install MS Windows applications in any flavor of a UNIX filesystem? Wine is written to be filesystem independent, so MS Windows applications will install and run under any filesystem supported by your brand of UNIX. 49. Will Wine run only under X, or can it run in character mode? Most of Wine's development effort is geared against MS Windows' GUI, but some limited support for character mode has appeared, by setting GraphicsDriver=ttydrv in wine.conf's [wine] section. 50. Will Wine run under any X window manager? Does it require a window manager at all? Wine is window manager independent, so the X window manager you choose to run has no bearing on your ability to run MS Windows programs under Wine. Wine uses standard X libraries, so no additional ones are needed. Wine has its own window management, which acts like MS Windows. It can be turned off to use the native window manager with the -managed command-line switch. 51. Will 32-bit Windows 95/98 applications run under Wine? Yes, 32-bit programs are now about as well supported as 16-bit programs. 52. What about NT specific programs, which use NT-only features? These are only poorly supported. How to Find, Install, Configure and Run Wine 53. Where can I get Wine? Because of lags created by using mirror, word of this newest release may reach you before the release is actually available at the ftp sites listed here. The sources are available from the following locations: o ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/ALPHA/wine/development/ o ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/ALPHA/Wine/development/ o ftp://ftp.infomagic.com/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ALPHA/wine/development/ o ftp://ftp.progsoc.uts.edu.au/pub/Wine/development/ It should also be available from any site that mirrors tsx-11 or metalab (formerly sunsite). Some of these ftp sites may archive previous versions of Wine as well as the current one. To determine which is the latest one, look at the distribution filename, which will take the form Wine-YYMMDD.tar.gz. Simply replace YYMMDD in the distribution filename with the numbers for year, month and date, respectively. The latest one is the one to get. Wine binary packages are available for several OS'es and distributions. See http://www.winehq.com/download.html for the most recent list. Current Wine sources are also available via anonymous client/server CVS. You will need CVS 1.9 or above. If you are coming from behind a firewall, you will either need a hole in the firewall for the CVS port (2401) or use SOCKS. To login to the CVS tree, do export CVSROOT=:pserver:[email protected]/home/wine cvs login Use "cvs" as the password (without the quotes). Note that /home/wine is a path on the server, not on your machine. To check out the entire Wine source tree (which may be slow), use cvs -z 3 checkout wine or if you just want a subtree, or individual file, you can do that too with cvs -z 3 checkout wine/ANNOUNCE Be aware, though, that getting the entire Wine source tree via CVS is pretty slow, especially compared to getting Wine from an FTP mirror near you. Patch files are also available, so that you don't have to download, install and configure the entire distribution each week if you are current to the previous release. Patch file release names follow the same numbering convention as do the general releases, and take the form Wine-YYMMDD.diff.gz Patch files are available from the same sites that distribute the full release. To upgrade to a new release by using a patch file, first cd to the top-level directory of the release (the one containing the README file), then do a "make clean", and patch the release with gunzip -c patch-file | patch -p1 where patch-file is the name of the patch file something like Wine-YYMMDD.diff.gz. You can then re-run ./configure, and then run make depend && make. If you are mirroring the Wine distribution from the tsx-11 site and wish to be listed here in this FAQ, please send email to the FAQ author/maintainer at [email protected] 54. If I do not have an Internet account, how can I get Wine? Some CD-ROM archives of Internet sites, notably those from Walnut Creek that archive ftp.cdrom.com and metalab.unc.edu, may include some versions of Wine on their CD releases. However, the age of these distributions should always be questioned, as the 'snapshot' of the ftp site may have been taken anywhere from 1-4 months (or more) prior to the CD's pressing date. Your best bet to get the very latest distribution of Wine, if you do not have your own Internet account, is to find a friend who does have an Internet account, and have him/her ftp the necessary file(s) for you. Unfortunately, since the Wine source no longer fits on a 1.44 MB floppy, you'll have to figure out some way to transfer the file to your computer. If you have an email account on a BBS that can reach the Internet through a gateway, you may be able to use 'email ftp' to get the Wine release sent to you; check with your BBS system operator for details. 55. How do I install Wine on my hard drive? Just un-gzip and un-tar the file, and follow the instructions contained in the README file that will be located in the base Wine directory. 56. How do I compile the Wine distribution source code? See the README for instructions. Additionally, you may want to set the TMPDIR environment variable TMPDIR=~/tmp or TMPDIR=/tmp (if you are root) 57. How do I configure Wine to run on my system? Wine requires that you have a file called usr/local/etc/wine.conf (you can supply a different filename when configuring wine) or a file called .winerc in your home directory. The format of this file is explained in the wine.conf man page . The file wine.ini contains a config file example. More explicit directions can be found in the README file that will be located in the base Wine directory after you ungzip and untar the distribution file. 58. How do I run an MS Windows program under Wine? When invoking Wine, you must specify the entire path to the executable, or by filename only. For example to run Windows' solitaire, type any of the following: o wine sol or wine sol.exe (using the search path to locate the file) o wine c:\\windows\\sol.exe (using a DOS filename) o wine /usr/windows/sol.exe (using a UNIX filename) The path of the file will also be added to the path when a full name is supplied on the command line. 59. I have installed and configured Wine, but Wine cannot find MS Windows on my drive. Where did I go wrong? If you have a DOS partition, first make sure that you have mounted it, either by putting the entry into [tt /etc/fstab], or by manually mounting it. Remember too that unless your version of UNIX can see through it, or you are running a utility that can see through it, your DOS partition must not be located on a Drivespaced, Doublespaced or Stackered partition, as neither Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD or Wine can natively 'see' files located in these compressed DOS partitions. Check your path statements in the wine.conf file. No capital letters may be used in paths, as they are automatically converted to lowercase. 60. I'm running a DirectX game, but the graphics is slow, how can I speed it up? If you're using XFree86, you can take advantage of DGA. You must have rw access to /dev/mem to do this. On many distributions, you can add yourself to the kmem group. Otherwise, you have to change /dev/mem permissions, or even play as root. 61. I think I've found a bug. How do I report this bug to the Wine programming team? Bug reports should be posted to the newsgroup comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine. See documentation/bugreports for a list of what to include. This means at least the following: o The Wine version tested o The MS Windows program name and, if possible, the version number of the software tested o A brief description of the bug o The relevant part(s) of the output of the Wine debugger 62. I was able to get various MS Windows programs to run, but parts of them do not work. What is wrong? Wine is not complete at this time, so some of each programs' features may not work. They will in time as more of the MS Windows API calls are included in Wine. 63. I have run various MS Windows programs, but since the program menus do not work, how can I exit these programs? Kill the xterm shell window that you called up to run your MS Windows program, and the X window that appeared with the program will be killed too. 64. How do I remove Wine from my computer? All you have to do is to type rm -fR \[/path/\]Wine* Make sure that you specify the exact path when using the powerful 'rm -fR' command. If you are afraid that you might delete something important, or might otherwise delete other files within your filesystem, cd into each Wine subdirectory singly and delete the files found there manually, one file or directory at a time. Neither the Wine developers and programmers, nor the Wine FAQ author/maintainer, can be held responsible for your deleting any files in your own filesystem. How to Get Help with Wine 65. Is there a Usenet newsgroup for Wine? Yes, and it's called comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine. The newsgroup serves as a place for developers to discuss Wine, and for minor announcements for the general public. Major announcements will be crossposted to other appropriate newsgroups, such as the following comp.os.linux.announce comp.windows.x.announce comp.emulators.announce If your Usenet site does not carry these newsgroups, please urge your ISP's sysadmin and/or uplink to add them. 66. Is there a World Wide Web site for Wine? Here are a few o WineHQ The official site. o http://www.qbc.clic.net/~krynos/wine_en.html If you are installing or maintain a WWW page pertaining to Wine that you feel would be useful for others to read, please inform the FAQ author/maintainer at [email protected]. How You Can Help with the Wine Project 67. How can I help contribute to the Wine project, and in what way(s)? You can contribute programming skills, or monetary or equipment donations, to aid the Wine developers in reaching their goals. To find out who, what, where, when and why, please post your desire to contribute to the newsgroup comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine 68. I want to help beta test Wine. How can I do this? Beta testers are currently not needed, as Wine is still Alpha code at this time. However, anyone is welcome to download the latest version and try it out at any time. 69. I have written some code that I would like to submit to the Wine project. How do I go about doing this? Patches are greatly appreciated and should be submitted to the wine-patches mailing list. Also see this page for a description of what happens to submitted patches. Who's Responsible for Wine? 70. Who is responsible for writing and maintaining the Wine source code? Wine is available thanks to the work of many people. Please see the file AUTHORS in the distribution for the complete list. 71. Who are the folks and organizations who have contributed money or equipment to the Wine project? People and organizations who have given generous contributions of money, equipment, or licenses, include o David L. Harper o Bob Hepple o Mark A. Horton o Kevin P. Lawton o the Syntropy Institute o James Woulfe o vmWare Inc. o Corel ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Home | News | About | Download | Documentation | Tools | References Others | Links | Development | Bugs | Applications | Projects | Contributing ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [email protected]
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