|  | <!-- *** Wine FAQ *** --> | 
|  | <title>Wine FAQ</title> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | For technical questions, visit the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/fom-meta/cache/19.html"> | 
|  | Wine Troubleshooting Guide</ulink> instead. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaset> | 
|  | <qandadiv id="About-this-FAQ"><title>About this FAQ</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Who-maintains-this-FAQ"> | 
|  | <para>Who maintains this FAQ ?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para>Dave Gardner maintained it from 1995-1998.</para> | 
|  | <para>Douglas Ridgway (ridgway@winehq.com) took it over in 1999.</para> | 
|  | <para>Andreas Mohr (amohr@codeweavers.com) converted it to FAQ-O-Matic in 2000.</para> | 
|  | <para>Dimitrie O. Paun, Keith Matthews and Thomas Wickline reorganised it in 2002.</para> | 
|  | <para>For suggestions/additions/complaints regarding this FAQ, please send an email to | 
|  | <ulink url="mailto:wine-faq@winehq.org">wine-faq@winehq.org</ulink></para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-is-the-copyright-on-the-FAQ-And"> | 
|  | <para>What is the copyright on the FAQ ? And how may I use it ?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para>The original Wine FAQ, which this FAQ was based on, was copyright © 1995-1998 David Gardner.</para> | 
|  | <para>It may be reproduced and modified under the same terms as Wine itself.</para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  | <qandadiv id="General-Questions-about-Wine"> | 
|  | <title>General Questions about Wine</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <question id="What-is-Wine-and-what-is-it-supposed-to"> | 
|  | <para>What is Wine and what is it supposed to do ?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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, often | 
|  | without many changes in the source. Wine is free software, | 
|  | and its license (contained in the file LICENSE | 
|  | in each distribution) is LGPL style. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-Wine-an-emulator"> | 
|  | <para> Is Wine an emulator?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Fortunately, no. Wine provides low-level binary compatibility, | 
|  | but currently only for OSes running on Intel-compatible chips. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Are-here-any-alternatives-to-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Are there any alternatives to Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, there are. You can use VMWare to run a Windows installation | 
|  | inside a virtual machine, or use Win4Lin to run a specially | 
|  | adapted Windows version on Linux. Both solutions cost money for | 
|  | both the software itself and a Windows license. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Note that, like Wine, they can only use the hardware platform that | 
|  | the target programs were originally compiled for (see below). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Difference-between-Wine-and-emulators"> | 
|  | <para>What is the difference between Wine and x86 hardware emulators?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | There are two free x86 hardware emulators: | 
|  | <ulink url="http://bochs.sourceforge.net"> bochs</ulink>, and | 
|  | <ulink url="http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/plex86"> plex86</ulink> | 
|  | that allow use of hardware other than x86 to run x86 programs. Both | 
|  | use the GPL. Bochs is older than plex86, seems to be easier to | 
|  | install, but plex86 will run faster because plex86 uses a real | 
|  | time binary compiler. The drawback of all emulators is that you | 
|  | need a version of Windows in order to run Windows. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Why-would-anyone-want-Wine-Windows-suck"> | 
|  | <para>Why would anyone want Wine? Doesn't Windows suck?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | First Wine is not about running Windows but about running Windows | 
|  | applications. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | So if all your computing needs are fulfilled by native Unix | 
|  | applications, then you do not need Wine and should not be using | 
|  | it. However, if you depend on one or more of the tens of | 
|  | thousands of Windows applications, then Wine is the best way to | 
|  | use it without giving up on Unix. Let's look at the alternatives | 
|  | to see why: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The most obvious alternative is to dual-boot. This is the solution | 
|  | that provides the best compatibility. However it requires that you | 
|  | acquire a Windows license and then dedicate a good chunk of your | 
|  | hard-drive to Windows. But the worst is yet to come. Each time you | 
|  | will want to use that application you will have to reboot to | 
|  | Windows. This is especially significant if external factors dictate | 
|  | when you must use this application (e.g. credit card to process, | 
|  | email to retrieve from a Lotus Notes server). Then you will find | 
|  | yourself forced to close all your Linux applications just to run | 
|  | that one Windows application. You may quickly get tired of this, or | 
|  | will find that such a situation is impossible to justify in a | 
|  | business environment. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The next solution is to install virtual machine emulation software | 
|  | such as VMWare, Win4Lin or Plex86. Then you can use windows | 
|  | applications without suffering such a big disruption. But it still | 
|  | requires that you acquire a Windows license and dedicate as much | 
|  | disk space to Windows. Furthermore you will pay for the added | 
|  | convenience: if using VMWare or Win4Lin you have to buy another | 
|  | license, and more importantly you now have to dedicate a good chunk | 
|  | of your computer's memory to the virtual machine. Performance will | 
|  | take a significant hit too. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Using Wine lets you avoid all of that overhead: Windows license, | 
|  | hard-drive space required by Windows, memory and performance hit | 
|  | taken by emulated virtual machines. Now you can start your Windows | 
|  | application straight from your regular desktop environment, place | 
|  | that application's window side by side with native application | 
|  | windows, copy/paste from one to the other, and run it all at full speed. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | It is also a pretty vital part of migrating a large organisation, | 
|  | you can't change a 5000 desktop setup overnight without a lot of risk. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Which-one-of-the-different-Wine-packages"> | 
|  | <para>Which one of the different Wine packages out there is good for me?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Currently there is a broad selection of different Wine packages/versions: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <variablelist> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://www.winehq.com">Wine</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | This is the "standard" source distribution of Wine. Its license is | 
|  | LGPL, it can be downloaded for free. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://rewind.sourceforge.net">ReWine</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | This is a forked Wine tree that got created when Wine changed its | 
|  | license from X11 to the more restrictive LGPL, in order to let | 
|  | people continue to maintain an X11 licensed Wine version. Its | 
|  | license is X11, it can be downloaded for free. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://www.transgaming.com">Transgaming's WineX</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | This is TransGaming's Wine version specially suited for games. | 
|  | It includes Direct3D support (thus its DirectX support is much | 
|  | more complete than Wine's) and copyprotection support. Its license | 
|  | is AFPL, the source distribution can be downloaded for free, but | 
|  | the binary pack ages that include copy protection support and good | 
|  | support are only for subscribed customers ($5/month). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://wine.codeweavers.com">Codeweavers' Wine preview</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | This is a specially packaged and more stable/older version of Wine | 
|  | which has a nice setup for easy installation. License X11, free | 
|  | download. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://www.codeweavers.com/products/crossover/">Codeweavers' Crossover Plugin</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Special Wine installation to be used for running win32 browser | 
|  | plugins such as e.g. Quicktime in Linux browsers. Costs $24.95. | 
|  | Well worth it (very stable and useful packaging). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://www.codeweavers.com/products/office/">Codeweavers' Crossover Office</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine version with special packaging to make sure almost all | 
|  | important Office type programs work pretty well. Costs $54.95. | 
|  | Seems to be well worth it so far according to some comments. | 
|  | (note: you're supporting a company actively contributing to wine | 
|  | if you decide to buy either Plugin or Office. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <varlistentry> | 
|  | <term><ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/download/">Other packaged versions of Wine</ulink></term> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Various wine packages can be downloaded for free, to be found at | 
|  | Wine HQ. They're not officially packaged by Wine HQ, and as such | 
|  | may have some configuration inconsistencies. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </varlistentry> | 
|  | </variablelist> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Whats-the-history-of-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>What's the history of Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The Wine project started in 1993 as a way to support running Windows 3.1 | 
|  | programs on Linux. Bob Amstadt was the original coordinator, but turned | 
|  | it over fairly early on to Alexandre Julliard, who has run it ever | 
|  | since. A <ulink url="news:comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine">newsgroup</ulink> | 
|  | was created in July 1994. Over the years, ports for | 
|  | other Unixes have been added, along with support for Win32 as Win32 | 
|  | applications became popular. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | For more information, see <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/about.shtml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/about.shtml</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-is-the-current-version-of-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>What is the current version of Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | A new version of Wine is distributed about every month. You will be | 
|  | able to keep up on all the latest releases by reading the newsgroup | 
|  | <ulink url="news:comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine"> | 
|  | comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine</ulink>, or by visiting the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com">Wine HQ homepage</ulink>. When | 
|  | downloading Wine from your FTP site of choice (see | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/download.shtml">the Download page</ulink> | 
|  | 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 October 31, 2002 | 
|  | was called Wine-20021031.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. <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml"> | 
|  | Read-only CVS</ulink> access is also available. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-is-the-current-Status-of-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>What is the current Status of Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | As of mid 2002, Wine consists of over 1 million lines of C code, | 
|  | written by more than 300 developers from dozens of countries around | 
|  | the world. Wine is in active use by an estimated 100K people. Wine | 
|  | implements more than 90% of the calls in popular Windows | 
|  | specifications such as ECMA-234 and Open32. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | You may also want to look at the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/about/index.php?status"> | 
|  | Status page</ulink> for a global view on Wine's implementation progress. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="When-will-Wine-be-finished"> | 
|  | <para>When will Wine be finished?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Large software projects are never finished, only released. In any | 
|  | case Wine is chasing a moving target since every new release of | 
|  | Windows contains new API calls or variations to the existing ones. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Because Wine is being developed by volunteers, it is difficult to | 
|  | predict when it will be ready for general release. But due to the | 
|  | much increased interest by companies in porting apps via Wine, Wine | 
|  | development is constantly getting more and more active. Right now | 
|  | we are working on releasing Wine 0.9 during 2003 | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Who-is-responsible-for-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Who's responsible for Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is available thanks to the work of many people. Please see the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/source/AUTHORS">AUTHORS</ulink> | 
|  | file in the distribution for the complete list. Some companies that | 
|  | are or have been involved with Wine development are Codeweavers, | 
|  | TransGaming, Corel, and Macadamian. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="folks-who-contributed-money-or-equipment"> | 
|  | <para>Who are the folks and organizations who have contributed money or equipment to the Wine project?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | People and organizations who have given generous contributions of | 
|  | money, equipment, or licenses, include: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>David L. Harper</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>Bob Hepple</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>Mark A. Horton</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>Kevin P. Lawton</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>The Syntropy Institute</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>James Woulfe</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | VMWare Inc. <ulink url="http://www.vmware.com"> | 
|  | (http://www.vmware.com)</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Corel <ulink url="http://linux.corel.com"> | 
|  | (http://linux.corel.com)</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-undocumented-APIs-are-not-understood"> | 
|  | <para>What undocumented APIs / interfaces are not understood? Would | 
|  | seeing Microsoft source help? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The best would be if the Windows API was 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-TransGamings-last-patch-included-in-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Is TransGaming's latest patch included in the standard Wine release?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | No, it's not. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | TransGaming make money via a subscription service. Thus they | 
|  | submitted their DirectDraw and some DirectSound work, but they will | 
|  | not submit their OpenGL wrapper based Direct3D support. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-there-be-a-Windows-version-of-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Will there be a Windows version of Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Some people are working on getting Wine code to compile on Windows. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Cygwin <ulink url="http:/www.cygwin.com"> | 
|  | (http://www.cygwin.com/)</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Reactos <ulink url="http://www.reactos.com/"> | 
|  | (http://www.reactos.com/)</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | There's some progress, so a Wine version that's usable on Windows | 
|  | might be available at some time. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  | <qandadiv id="What-do-I-need-in-order-to-use-Wine"> | 
|  | <title>What do I need in order to use Wine?</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Under-what-platforms-will-Wine-run"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Under what hardware platform(s) and operating system(s) will | 
|  | Wine(Lib) run? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is being developed specifically to run on the Intel x86 class | 
|  | of CPUs under certain UNIXes that run on the x86 platform. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The Wine development team hopes to attract the interest of other | 
|  | commercial UNIX and UNIX clone vendors as well. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | BeOS: porting efforts used to be pretty strong, but BeOS has severe | 
|  | limitations in Unix call support, so a port will probably never | 
|  | happen. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | FreeBSD: Should work, with limitations in specific areas (mainly | 
|  | missing device/hardware support) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Linux/x86: WORKS. If it doesn't, You may also want to see the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/fom-meta/cache/19.html">Wine | 
|  | Troubleshooting Guide</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-minimum-CPU-must-I-have"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | What minimum CPU must I have in my computer to be able to run Wine | 
|  | and MS Windows applications smoothly? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | We need to differentiate between Wine and Winelib here. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine won't run on any x86 CPU less than an 80386 due to address | 
|  | management limitations | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | It is known to also work in the 80486 and upwards compatible CPUs. | 
|  | The basic test is, if you can run X11 now, you should be able to run | 
|  | Wine and MS Windows applications under it. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Depending on your application you may find that faster speeds are | 
|  | required for sensible use. We can't give specific advice on that due | 
|  | to the vast range of applications out there. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-much-disk-space-will-Wine-take"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | How much disk space will the Wine source code and binaries take on my | 
|  | hard drive? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | You need approximately 250 megabytes of free hard drive space to | 
|  | store and compile the source code. Wine also needs about 18 megs in | 
|  | your /tmp directory. And about 50 MB are needed to do a make install. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="What-other-software-do-I-need-to-compile"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | What other software do I need to have installed to compile and run | 
|  | Wine? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/source/README"> | 
|  | (http://www.winehq.com/source/README)</ulink>. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | To run Wine, you will need the following: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>The compiled Wine binary</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>A properly configured wine.conf file (or ~/.winerc file)</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>An installed and working X Window system</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para>Some Windows programs to test</para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-much-RAM-do-I-need"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | How much RAM do I need to have on my UNIX system to be able to run | 
|  | Wine and MS Windows applications smoothly? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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, depending | 
|  | on how memory hungry the application is. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | A Wine workstation will work with 16 megabytes of RAM and a 16 | 
|  | megabyte swap partition as long as you have a reasonable graphics | 
|  | card. Most applications will run reasonably with 64/64 Mb, | 
|  | interactive games are likely to need more. You can run Wine with 8/8, | 
|  | but it is going to be unusably slow and very constraining on the | 
|  | applications you can run. If you wish to be part of the development | 
|  | team and program Wine itself, be aware that the 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-long-does-Wine-take-to-build"> | 
|  | <para>How long does Wine take to build</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is getting to be quite large, and building from scratch takes a | 
|  | lot of processing. As of September 2002, compile times were around 20 | 
|  | minutes on an Athlon 1200 with 640 Mb and 45-50 minutes on a Cyrix | 
|  | 300 with 64 Mb. If you have a CVS copy, you may not need to rebuild | 
|  | the whole thing every time you update. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="I-have-a-Drivespaced-partition"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I have a Drivespaced, Doublespaced or Stackered DOS partition. Can | 
|  | Wine run MS Windows binaries located in such a partition? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, but only if the operating system supports mounting those types | 
|  | of drives.There is a Linux file system 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 | 
|  | <ulink url="ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/filesystems/dosfs/"> | 
|  | ftp://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/file systems/dosfs/</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Do-I-need-to-have-a-DOS-partition"> | 
|  | <para>Do I need to have a DOS partition on my system to use Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 (i.e. application) if it is to run it. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Does-MS-Windows-need-to-be-installed"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Does MS Windows need to be loaded into that partition in order to | 
|  | run MS Windows programs under Wine? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Many folks have successfully installed and run some small programs | 
|  | in their UNIX filesystem without having a DOS partition or MS | 
|  | Windows. However, in many cases you need a directory and file | 
|  | infrastructure that is similar to an existing Windows installation. | 
|  | 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 | 
|  | file system, those programs will not install correctly and probably | 
|  | will not run well, if at all. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Here's an example, copied from a machine which has no DOS partition | 
|  | but successfully runs Wine: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | [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: | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | In <filename>/var/lib/wine/windows</filename>, you will need to | 
|  | install a <filename>win.ini</filename> config file that you might | 
|  | find on a typical MS Windows 3.1 machine. The directory | 
|  | <filename>/var/lib/wine/windows/system</filename> should exist, but | 
|  | doesn't need to contain anything. However, to use MS DLLs, you can | 
|  | copy them into that directory. Note that this is a contravention of | 
|  | the Windows licence unless Windows is properly installed on the | 
|  | machine. If you have DOS/MS Windows installed on your system, you can | 
|  | mount that partition at bootup by modifying the file | 
|  | <filename>/etc/fstab</filename> in your UNIX partition (assuming that | 
|  | the UNIX kernel supports the DOS/MS Windows filesystem type). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If you edit this file by hand, it should contain something similar | 
|  | to the following: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | /dev/hda1 /dosc msdos uid=0,gid=100,umask=007 0 0 | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | This will allow you to read and write to the DOS partition without | 
|  | being root. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="If-Wine-completely-replaces-MS-Windows"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If Wine completely replaces MS Windows, will it duplicate all of the | 
|  | functions of MS Windows? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-I-install-on-ony-UNIX-file-system"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Will I be able to install MS Windows applications in any flavor of a | 
|  | UNIX file system? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is written to be file system independent, so MS Windows | 
|  | applications will install and run under virtually any file system | 
|  | supported by your brand of UNIX. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-Wine-run-only-under-X"> | 
|  | <para> Will Wine run only under X, or can it run in character mode?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Most of Wine's development effort is geared against MS Windows' GUI, | 
|  | but some limited support for character mode has appeared, by setting | 
|  | <parameter>GraphicsDriver=ttydrv</parameter> in wine.conf's | 
|  | <parameter>[wine]</parameter> section. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine's infrastructure is already somewhat prepared for supporting | 
|  | other graphics drivers than x11drv, but no real "alternative" | 
|  | graphics driver has been used yet. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-Wine-run-under-any-X-window-manager"> | 
|  | <para>Will Wine run under any X window manager? Does it require a window manager at all?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is window manager independent, so the X window manager you | 
|  | choose to run has (almost) 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 by modifying Managed or Desktop settings as described | 
|  | in <command>man wine.conf</command>. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-32-bit-applications-run-under-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Will 32-bit Windows 95/98 applications run under Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, 32-bit programs are now about as well supported as 16-bit | 
|  | programs. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Getting-Wine-faq"> | 
|  | <title>Getting Wine</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Where-can-I-get-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Where can I get Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/ALPHA/wine/development/"> | 
|  | http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/ALPHA/wine/development/ | 
|  | </ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="ftp://ftp.infomagic.com/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ALPHA/wine/development/"> | 
|  | ftp://ftp.infomagic.com/pub/mirrors/linux/sunsite/ALPHA/wine/development/ | 
|  | </ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="ftp://ftp.fu-berlin.de/unix/linux/mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/ALPHA/wine/development/"> | 
|  | ftp://ftp.fu-berlin.de/unix/linux/mirrors/sunsite.unc.edu/ALPHA/wine/development/ | 
|  | </ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="ftp://orcus.progsoc.uts.edu.au/pub/Wine/development/"> | 
|  | ftp://orcus.progsoc.uts.edu.au/pub/Wine/development/ | 
|  | </ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | It should also be available from any other site that mirrors | 
|  | ibiblio.org. For more download locations, see | 
|  | <ulink url="http://ftp search.lycos.com.">lycos</ulink> 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 file name, which will take the form | 
|  | Wine-YYYYMMDD.tar.gz. Simply replace YYYYMMDD in the distribution | 
|  | file name with the numbers for year, month and date, respectively. | 
|  | The latest one is the one to get. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine binary packages are available for several OS'es and | 
|  | distributions. See | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/download.shtml"> | 
|  | the download page</ulink> for the most recent list. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-there-a-CVS-tree"> | 
|  | <para>Is there a CVS tree?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | To login to the CVS tree, do | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | export CVSROOT=:pserver:cvs@cvs.winehq.com/home/wine | 
|  | cvs login | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Use "cvs" as the password (without the quotes). Note that | 
|  | <filename>/home/wine</filename> is a path on the server, not on your | 
|  | machine. To check out the entire Wine source tree (which may be | 
|  | slow), use | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | cvs -z 3 checkout wine | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | or if you just want a subtree, or individual file, you can do that | 
|  | too with | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | cvs -z 3 checkout wine/ANNOUNCE | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. For a CVS mirror list, see | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine-YYYYMMDD.diff.gz | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | gunzip -c patch-file | patch -p1 | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | where patch-file is the name of the patch file something like | 
|  | Wine-YYYYMMDD.diff.gz. You can then re-run ./configure, and then run | 
|  | make depend && make | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If you are mirroring the Wine distribution from the tsx-11 site and | 
|  | wish to be listed here in this FAQ, please add it to the | 
|  | "things to go into the documentation" area. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Can-I-get-Wine-using-cvsup"> | 
|  | <para>Can I get Wine using cvsup?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The CVS mirrors don't offer cvsup support yet, but the main server | 
|  | does. Use a <filename>wine.sup</filename> file of: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | *default host=cvs.winehq.com | 
|  | *default base=/cvs | 
|  | *default prefix=/cvs/wine | 
|  | *default release=wine | 
|  | *default delete | 
|  |  | 
|  | # If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line. | 
|  | #*default compress | 
|  |  | 
|  | *default use-rel-suffix | 
|  | wine | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Installing-And-Configuring-Wine"> | 
|  | <title>Installing And Configuring Wine</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-compile-the-Wine-source-code"> | 
|  | <para>How do I compile the Wine distribution source code?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | See the README (<ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/source/README"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/source/README</ulink>) for instructions. | 
|  | Additionally, you may want to set the <parameter>TMPDIR</parameter> | 
|  | environment variable <command>TMPDIR=~/tmp</command> or | 
|  | <command>TMPDIR=/tmp</command> (if you are root). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-install-Windows-in-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>How do I install Windows in Wine under Linux?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Simple answer: you CAN'T. Windows demands direct access to the | 
|  | hardware and cannot get it with Wine and UNIX in the way | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is supposed to be used WITHOUT Windows primarily. If you want | 
|  | to use a Windows installation, then use an existing installation | 
|  | alongside the UNIX installation (see the dual-boot HOWTO for your OS | 
|  | for more details). Or alternatively use the cabextract utility to | 
|  | extract Windows install archives to a directory that you want to use | 
|  | as Wine's Windows tree. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-configure-Wine-to-run-on-my-system"> | 
|  | <para>How do I configure Wine to run on my system?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine requires that you have a config file as | 
|  | <filename>~/.wine/config</filename>. The format of this file is | 
|  | explained in the <filename>wine.conf</filename> man page. The file | 
|  | <filename>documentation/samples/config</filename> ( | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/source/documentation/samples/config"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/source/documentation/samples/config</ulink>) | 
|  | contains a config file example. More explicit directions can be | 
|  | found in the <filename>README</filename> file ( | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/source/README"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/source/README</ulink>) that will be located in | 
|  | the base Wine directory after you gunzip and untar the distribution | 
|  | file. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="If-I-use-Windows-which-versions-OK"> | 
|  | <para>If I want to use a Windows install, which versions are OK?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Either use a classic no-windows install (Wine is getter better all | 
|  | the time) or use a Win9x install (Win95, 98, 98SE, ME). DON'T | 
|  | configure Wine to use an NT-based Windows install (NT, Win2K, WinXP). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="If-I-use-Windows-which-one-works-best"> | 
|  | <para>If I use a Windows install with Wine, which one works best?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | As of 02/2002: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I'd say Win98SE is the best version to use with Wine, as it's fairly | 
|  | widespread amongst developers and relatively old. Using Win2K files | 
|  | is <emphasis>definitely</emphasis> worse than a plain no-windows | 
|  | Wine install, and Win ME is said to be problematic, too (as probably | 
|  | no developer uses it). In short: all Win9x <= W98SE are good. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Installing-Visual-Basic-apps-wont-run"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Installing applications generated by Visual Basic won't run. What | 
|  | should I do? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Make sure you have all the VB runtime libraries installed. You may | 
|  | need to use the native dll vbrun60.dll | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="When-I-click-on-exe-file-nothing-happens"> | 
|  | <para>When I click on *.exe file in my file Manager, nothing happens</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The normal Wine releases don't have .exe extensions registered for | 
|  | Wine in KDE/Gnome yet. You have to open a terminal window instead | 
|  | (often an icon showing a "black screen") and type something like: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | cd /my/windows/program/directory | 
|  | wine myprogram.exe | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Or alternatively you could download the CodeWeavers Wine preview | 
|  | which includes .exe extension registration for KDE/Gnome and a nice | 
|  | setup program. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="bash-wine-Command-not-found-What-can-I-do"> | 
|  | <para>bash "wine: Command not found" What can I do?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Try to relogin into bash. That might fix it. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If it doesn't, then make sure the wine binary is in your | 
|  | <parameter>PATH</parameter>. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Run as root: | 
|  | </Para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | find / -name "wine" -type f -perm +111 | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | to find the path where the wine binary is in. Then check whether | 
|  | <parameter>PATH</parameter> includes it: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | echo $PATH | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If not, add that e.g. to <filename>/etc/profile</filename> by doing: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/wine/binary | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | That should help. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If you used a package manager (<command>rpm</command> or | 
|  | <command>apt</command>) - Verify your packages. The package | 
|  | <filename>winesetuptk.rpm</filename> is only a front-end for | 
|  | making a meaningfull config file, it DOES NOT install the wine | 
|  | package... | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | For complete packages, use <ulink url="http://www.rpmfind.net/"> | 
|  | www.rpmfind.net</ulink> or the <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/download/"> | 
|  | Download</ulink> section. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-remove-Wine-from-my-Computer"> | 
|  | <para>How do I remove Wine from my Computer?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | All you have to do is to type: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <screen> | 
|  | rm -fR \[/path/\]Wine* | 
|  | </screen> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Make sure that you specify the exact path when using the powerful | 
|  | <command>rm -fR</command> command. If you are afraid that you might | 
|  | delete something important, or might otherwise delete other files | 
|  | within your filesystem, <command>cd</command> into each Wine | 
|  | subdirectory singly and delete the files found there manually, | 
|  | one file or directory at a time. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="About-running-Wine"> | 
|  | <title>About running Wine</title> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | In case of problems when running Wine, You may also want to see the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/fom-meta/cache/19.html"> | 
|  | Wine Troubleshooting Guide</ulink>. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-run-an-MS-Windows-program"> | 
|  | <para>How do I run an MS Windows program under Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <command>wine sol</command> or <command>wine sol.exe</command> | 
|  | (using the search path to locate the file). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <command>wine c:\\windows\\sol.exe</command> | 
|  | (using a DOS filename). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <command>wine /usr/windows/sol.exe</command> | 
|  | (using a UNIX filename). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <command>wine "c:\windows\sol.exe"</command> | 
|  | (using quoted DOS filename). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The path of the file will also be added to the path when a full name | 
|  | is supplied on the command line. | 
|  |  | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Wine-cannot-find-MS-Windows-on-my-drive"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I have installed and configured Wine, but Wine cannot find MS | 
|  | Windows on my drive. Where did I go wrong? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If you have a DOS partition, first make sure that you have mounted | 
|  | it, either by putting the entry into <filename>/etc/fstab</filename>, | 
|  | or by manually mounting it. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Check your path statements in the <filename>wine.conf</filename> | 
|  | file. No capital letters may be used in paths, as they are | 
|  | automatically converted to lowercase. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Parts-of-my-app-do-not-work-What-is-wrong"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I was able to get various MS Windows programs to run, but parts of | 
|  | them do not work. What is wrong? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Menus-do-not-work-how-can-I-exit"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I have run various MS Windows programs, but since the program menus | 
|  | do not work, how can I exit these programs? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Can-I-use-Wine-with-other-Linux-Distros"> | 
|  | <para>Can I use Wine with SuSe, Peanut or other Linux Distro's?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | You can use Wine on any sufficiently recent Linux installation. The | 
|  | amount of work getting Wine up and running depends on whether there | 
|  | are proper packages available or a source compile has to be done. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Does-Wine-work-with-AMD-Processors"> | 
|  | <para>Does Wine work with AMD Processors?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, it does. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Can-I-launch-Unix-app-from-Windows-app"> | 
|  | <para> Can I launch a Unix program from a Windows program?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Sure, Wine supports that. Just enter the unix program name wherever | 
|  | a program has something that it's supposed to execute,and then it | 
|  | should just work. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Getting-help"> | 
|  | <title>Getting help</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-there-any-documentation-for-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Is there any documentation for Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, see <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/support.shtml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/support.shtml.</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="I-have-written-some-documententation"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Updates and additions to the Wine documentation directory should be | 
|  | sent to the wine-patches mailing list at | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml</ulink>. Website and FAQ | 
|  | additions should be added to the appropriate Wine Knowledgebase | 
|  | directory. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-there-a-Usenet-newsgroup-for-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Is there a Usenet newsgroup for Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Yes, and it's called | 
|  | <ulink url="news:comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine"> | 
|  | comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine</ulink>. The newsgroup serves as a | 
|  | place for users and 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: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="news:comp.os.linux.announce"> | 
|  | comp.os.linux.announce</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="news:ccomp.windows.x.announce"> | 
|  | comp.windows.x.announce</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | <ulink url="news:ccomp.emulators.announce"> | 
|  | comp.emulators.announce</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | If your Usenet site does not carry these newsgroups, please urge | 
|  | your ISP's sysadmin to add and/or uplink them. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-there-a-World-Wide-Web-site-for-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Is there a World Wide Web site for Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine HQ (<ulink url="http://www.winehq.com"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com</ulink>) is the official site. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Is-there-an-IRC-channel-for-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>Is there an IRC channel for Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Sure. It's channel <filename>#WineHQ</filename> on | 
|  | <filename>irc.openprojects.net</filename> see | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://openprojects.nu/services/irc.html"> | 
|  | http://openprojects.nu/services/irc.html</ulink>). Usually several | 
|  | Wine developers hang out there just to help YOU ;-) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="I-think-I-found-a-bug-How-do-I-report-it"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I think I've found a bug. How do I report this bug to the Wine | 
|  | programming team? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Bug reports should be submitted to our online Bugzilla system | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://bugs.winehq.com"> | 
|  | http://bugs.winehq.com/</ulink>). You should include at least the | 
|  | following: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The Wine version tested | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The MS Windows program name and, if possible, the version number | 
|  | of the software tested | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | A brief description of the bug | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | The relevant part(s) of the output of the Wine debugger | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | A screenshot of the visual problem, if applicable | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | For more information about reporting bugs please see the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/Docs/wine-user/bug-reporting.shtml"> | 
|  | How to report a bug</ulink> section of the Wine Users Guide. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Helping-Wine-or-becoming-a-Wine-developer"> | 
|  | <title>Helping Wine or becoming a Wine developer</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-do-I-become-a-Wine-developer"> | 
|  | <para>How do I become a Wine developer? What do I need to know?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | 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 (<ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml</ulink>). 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). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-can-I-contribute-to-the-Wine-project"> | 
|  | <para>How can I help contribute to the Wine project, and in what way(s)?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | You can contribute programming or documentation skills, or monetary | 
|  | or equipment donations, to aid the Wine developers in reaching their | 
|  | goals. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | For a list of ideas of how you can help, please consult the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/about/index.php?contrib"> | 
|  | Wine contrib page</ulink>. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="I-want-to-help-beta-test-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>I want to help beta test Wine. How can I do this?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine still consists of some Alpha code at this time. However, anyone | 
|  | is welcome to download the latest version, and try it out at any | 
|  | time. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="I-wrote-some-code-I-would-like-to-submit"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | I have written some code that I would like to submit to the Wine | 
|  | project. How do I go about doing this? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Patches are greatly appreciated and should be submitted to the | 
|  | wine-patches mailing list | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.com/dev.shtml#ml</ulink>). Also see this page for | 
|  | a description of what happens to submitted patches. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Developing-programs-using-Wine-WineLib"> | 
|  | <title>Developing programs using Wine/WineLib</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Can-I-use-Wine-to-port-Win32-sources-to-Unix"> | 
|  | <para>Can I use Wine to port my Win32 sources to Unix?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | That is the idea of Winelib. Right now you may still have some | 
|  | difficulties, but this is changing all the time. Read the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/Docs/winelib-user/"> | 
|  | Winelib User's Guide</ulink> for info. | 
|  |  | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Will-MFC-work-with-Wine-What-do-I-need-to-do"> | 
|  | <para>Will MFC work with Wine? What do I need to do?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Wine is not implementing an MFC replacement nor does it intend to. | 
|  | However it is possible (with a lot of work) to compile the MFC from | 
|  | source and thus produce an <filename>mfc42.dll.so</filename> library. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Please refer to the | 
|  | <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/Docs/winelib-user/"> | 
|  | Winelib User's Guide</ulink> for how to do this. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Are-there-commercial-apps-ported-using-Wine"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Are there any commercial applications which have been ported | 
|  | using Wine? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | A few examples of applications using Winelib: | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | <itemizedlist> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Corel's WordPerfect Office Suite | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://linux.corel.com/products/wpo2000_linux/index.htm"> | 
|  | http://linux.corel.com/products/wpo2000_linux/index.htm</ulink>) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Deneba's Canvas 7 | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://www.deneba.com/dazroot/softlibs/cv7_linux/default.html"> | 
|  | http://www.deneba.com/dazroot/softlibs/cv7_linux/default.html</ulink>) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | <listitem> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | IBM's Websphere | 
|  | (<ulink url="http://www7b.boulder.ibm.com/dl/swws/swwsgddb-p"> | 
|  | http://www7b.boulder.ibm.com/dl/swws/swwsgddb-p</ulink>) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </listitem> | 
|  | </itemizedlist> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Many other important applications have already been ported. (we are | 
|  | speaking of several top 500 applications here) | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-can-I-detect-Wine"> | 
|  | <para>How can I detect Wine?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | You really shouldn't want to do this. If there's a quirk in Wine | 
|  | you need to work around, it's much better to fix it in Wine (after | 
|  | all you're a developer, so you should be able to gather enough help | 
|  | and knowledge to fix it for real). | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandadiv id="Wine-HQ-issues"> | 
|  | <title>Wine HQ issues</title> | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="Why-are-the-maillists-set-to-reply-to-author"> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Why are the maillists set to reply to author, not to mailing list? | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | There are very valid reasons for doing so. | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <qandaentry> | 
|  | <question id="How-to-unsubscribe-from-the-mailing-lists"> | 
|  | <para>How to unsubscribe from the mailing lists?</para> | 
|  | </question> | 
|  | <answer> | 
|  | <para> | 
|  | Please see: <ulink url="http://www.winehq.org/development/#ml"> | 
|  | http://www.winehq.org/development/#ml</ulink> | 
|  | </para> | 
|  | </answer> | 
|  | </qandaentry> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </qandadiv> | 
|  |  | 
|  | </qandaset> | 
|  |  | 
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