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![]() Fri Apr 5 15:22:55 1996 Alexandre Julliard <julliard@lrc.epfl.ch> * [controls/button.c] [controls/static.c] Changes to use WND * wherever possible. * [debugger/dbg.y] [debugger/debug.l] Added 'info module' and 'walk module' commands. * [if1632/Makefile.in] [if1632/relay.c] [tools/build.c] Added assembly code generation to call from Wine into 32-bit code. Changed all 'call32' references in 'callfrom16' to avoid confusion with Win32 routines. * [include/callback.h] Added prototypes for 32-bit callbacks. * [loader/module.c] [if1632/relay32.c] [tools/build.c] Unified 16- and 32-bit modules. The fake module for 32-bit DLLs is now generated by the build program. * [include/module.h] Added extra info to NE_MODULE for Win32 modules to point to the PE module data. * [include/pe_image.h] [loader/pe_image.c] [win32/resource.c] Removed the wine_files list. The PE data for a module can now be accessed with the NE_WIN32_MODULE macro. * [loader/signal.c] [miscemu/instr.c] Don't start the BIOS timer at startup, but only after an access to the 0x40 segment. * [memory/local.c] Changed LOCAL_Lock() to return a 32-bit pointer. * [misc/main.c] [include/dlls.h] Some built-in DLLs (like KERNEL) can no longer be disabled from the command-line. Thu Apr 4 19:54:39 1996 Keith Reynolds <keithr@sco.COM> * [*/*] A lot of small changes to support SCO OpenServer 5. Thu Apr 4 15:38:13 1996 Frans van Dorsselaer <dorssel@rulhm1.leidenuniv.nl> * [controls/edit.c] Fixed GetKeyState() call to use 0x8000 convention. * [include/windows.h] Added undocumented messages EM_SCROLL and EM_GETTHUMB. Thu Apr 4 09:52:52 1996 John Harvey <john@division.co.uk> * [if1632/except.S] Modified code to assemble on unixware. Wed Apr 3 09:38:26 1996 Juergen Marquardt <marqu@lunar.advantest.de> * [objects/font.c] Implementation of a second font cache which will be updated dynamically. Mon Apr 1 16:47:40 1996 Robert Pouliot <krynos@qbc.clic.net> * [resources/sysres_Cz.rc] [resources/sysres_Da.rc] [resources/sysres_De.rc] [resources/sysres_Eo.rc] [resources/sysres_Es.rc] [resources/sysres_Fi.rc] [resources/sysres_No.rc] [resources/TODO] Updated FIND_TEXT and REPLACE_TEXT to work like the English version. |
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controls | ||
debugger | ||
documentation | ||
etc | ||
files | ||
if1632 | ||
include | ||
ipc | ||
library | ||
libtest | ||
loader | ||
memory | ||
misc | ||
miscemu | ||
multimedia | ||
objects | ||
programs | ||
rc | ||
resources | ||
tools | ||
win32 | ||
windows | ||
ANNOUNCE | ||
BUGS | ||
ChangeLog | ||
DEVELOPERS-HINTS | ||
LICENSE | ||
Make.rules.in | ||
Makefile.in | ||
README | ||
RELEASE-NOTES | ||
WARRANTY | ||
configure | ||
configure.in | ||
wine.ini | ||
wine.man |
README
1. INTRODUCTION Wine is a program that allows running MS-Windows programs under X11. It consists of a program loader, that loads and executes an MS-Windows binary, and of an emulation library that translates Windows API calls to their Unix/X11 equivalent. Wine is free software. See the file LICENSE for the details. Basically, you can do anything with it, except claim that you wrote it. 2. COMPILATION You must have one of: Linux version 0.99.13 or above NetBSD-current FreeBSD-current or FreeBSD 1.1 You also need to have libXpm installed on your system. The sources for it are probably available on the ftp site where you got Wine. They can also be found on ftp.x.org and all its mirror sites. To build Wine, first do a "./configure" and then a "make depend; make". The executable "wine" will be built. "wine" will load and run 16-bit Windows executables. To upgrade to a new release by using a patch file, first cd to the top-level directory of the release (the one containing this 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". 3. SETUP Once Wine has been built correctly, you can do "make install"; this will install the wine executable and the man page. Wine requires you to have a file /usr/local/etc/wine.conf (you can supply a different name when configuring wine) or a file called .winerc in your home directory. The format of this file is explained in the man page. The file wine.ini contains a config file example. 4. RUNNING PROGRAMS When invoking Wine, you must specify the entire path to the executable, or a filename only. For example: to run Windows' solitaire: wine sol (using the searchpath to locate the file) wine sol.exe wine c:\\windows\\sol.exe (using a dosfilename) wine /usr/windows/sol.exe (using a unixfilename) Note: the path of the file will also be added to the path when a full name is supplied on the commandline. Have a nice game of solitaire, but be careful. Emulation isn't perfect. So, occasionally it may crash. 5. GETTING MORE INFORMATION The best place to get help or to report bugs is the Usenet newsgroup comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine. The Wine FAQ is posted there every month. If you add something, or fix a bug, please send a patch ('diff -u' format preferred) to julliard@lrc.epfl.ch for inclusion in the next release. -- Alexandre Julliard julliard@lrc.epfl.ch