Sweden-Number/documentation/no-windows

35 lines
1.7 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

1998-11-27 17:06:08 +01:00
Running Wine without Windows
1999-05-17 18:03:36 +02:00
============================
1998-11-27 17:06:08 +01:00
Sometimes you can bring applications to run by using some of the
1999-05-17 18:03:36 +02:00
native Windows DLL's, together with Wine. Here are some tips by
1998-11-27 17:06:08 +01:00
Juergen Schmied on how to proceed. This assumes that your C:\windows
directory in the configuration file does not point to a native Windows
installation but is in a separate Unix file system. (For instance,
C:\windows is really /home/ego/wine/drives/c).
- Create empty C:\windows and C:\windows\system directories.
Do not point Wine to a Windows directory full of old installations
and a messy registry. (Wine creates a special registry in your home
directory, in $HOME/.wine/*.reg. Perhaps you have to remove these
files).
1999-05-17 18:03:36 +02:00
- Point [Drive C] in wine.conf or .winerc to where you want C: to be.
Refer to the README file or man page. Remember to use filesystem=win95 !
- Use tools/wineinstall to compile Wine and install the default
registry. Or if you prefer to do it yourself, compile programs/regapi,
and run: programs/regapi/regapi setValue < winedefault.reg
1998-11-27 17:06:08 +01:00
- Run the application with -debugmsg +module,+file to find out
which files are needed. Copy the required DLL's one by one to the
C:\windows\system directory.
- Note that some network DLL's are not needed even though Wine is
looking for them. Do not copy the MPR.DLL into the directory,
use the internal implementation.
- Copy SHELL/SHELL32 and COMDLG/COMDLG32 COMMCTRL/COMCTL32
only as pairs to your Wine directory (these DLL's are
"clean" to use)
- Be consistent: Use only DLLS from the same Windows version
together.
- Put regedit.exe in the C:\windows directory (office95 imports
a *.reg file when it runs with a empty registry, don't know
about office97).