Installing or uninstalling Wine
A standard Wine distribution form (which you probably downloaded
according to chapter Getting Wine)
includes quite a few different programs, libraries
and configuration files. All of these
must be set up properly for Wine to work well. In order to
achieve this, this chapter will guide you through the necessary steps
to get the Wine files
installed on your system. It will not
deal with how to get Wine's Windows environment
configured; that's what the next chapter
will talk about.
When installing Wine, you should make sure that it doesn't happen
to overwrite a previous Wine installation (as this would cause
an overwhelming amount of annoying and fatal conflicts);
uninstalling any previous Wine version (as explained in this chapter)
to avoid this problem is recommended.
Installing or uninstalling Wine packages
Now that you have downloaded the Debian or RPM or whatever Wine
package file, probably via the instructions given in the
previous chapter, you may be wondering "What in the world do I
do with this thing?".
This section will hopefully be able to put an end to your
bewildered questioning, by giving detailed install instructions
for all sorts of well-known package types.
Debian Linux
In case you haven't downloaded and automatically installed the
Wine package file via apt-get as described
in the Getting Wine
section, you now need to use dpkg to
install it. Switch to the directory you downloaded the Debian
.deb package file to. Once there, type these commands,
adapting the package file name as required:
$ >su ->
Password:
# >cd /home/user>
# >dpkg -i wine_0.0.20030115-1>.deb>
(Type the root password at the "Password:" prompt)
You may also want to install the
wine-doc package, and if you are
using Wine from the 2.3 distribution (Woody), the
wine-utils package as well.
Uninstalling an installed Wine Debian package can be done by
running:
# >dpkg -l|grep wine>
The second column of the output (if any) of this command will
indicate the installed packages dealing with "wine".
The corresponding packages can be uninstalled by running:
# >dpkg -r <package_name>>>
where <package_name> is the name of the Wine-related package
which you want to uninstall.
Linux Red Hat, Mandrake, SUSE and other distributions using RPM
Most distributions provide a graphical tool for installing
RPM packages, you can use it by simply clicking (Or double clicking,
depending on your system settings) on the RPM. If you don't have a
graphical RPM manager installed, using a shell, switch to the
directory where you downloaded the RPM package file to.
Once there, type this one command as root, adapting the
package file name as required:
# >rpm -ivh wine-20031212.i386>.rpm>
You may also want to install the
wine-devel package.
If you've installed wine graphically, you can uninstall it
using your graphical RPM manager (Gnorpm, Kpackage, Yast,
Mandrake Control Center and so on), alternatively, uninstalling
a installed Wine RPM package can be done from a shell, by running:
# >rpm -qa|grep -i wine>
This command will indicate the installed packages dealing with "wine".
The corresponding packages can be uninstalled by running:
# >rpm -e <package_name>>>
where <package_name> is the name of the Wine-related package
which you want to uninstall.
Installing or uninstalling a Wine source code tree
If you are in the directory of the Wine version that you just
compiled (e.g. by having run make depend && make), then you may now install this Wine version by running as root:
# >make install>
This will copy the Wine binary files to their final destination
in your system. You can then proceed to the Configuration chapter to
configure the Wine environment.
If instead you want to uninstall the currently installed Wine
source code version, then change to the main directory of this
version and run as root:
# >make uninstall>