Wine 1.0-rc2 Released 138
An anonymous reader writes notes the availability of Wine 1.0-rc2. Binaries for major distros are up now.
A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson
Spill (Score:3)
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Astounding... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Astounding... (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps if you were paying attention, you'd know that Wine 1.0 has been 15 years in the making. Furthermore, Wine is hardly "a random open source project", Wine reaching 1.0 is a very significant milestone.
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News? Sure. Relevant? Not quite. Should be in frontpage? Definitely no.
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No pin the tail on CowboyNeal for you Mr. Snarky Poster.
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So from an end-user perspective, the move to 1.0 is not noteworthy as a release. But for developers, you hope that contributing to the project becomes easier with a higher likelihood of forward compatibiliy.
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Why should anyone celebrate your birthday? You're only a day older than the day before your birthday, after all.
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Sweet! (Score:3, Informative)
Are you telling me that it is now possible to run Visual Studio 2005... IN LINUX?
See ya, Windows! I won't be calling you again. Ever.
Re:Sweet! (Score:5, Funny)
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Garbage
(but close to a working version)
http://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=version&iId=4494 [winehq.org]
I see this a hopeful. We aren't there yet, but I am confident that this will work in a not too large timespan.
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But what we really want to know is... (Score:1, Insightful)
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Iteratively actually, IIRC.
really getting good (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to help: (Score:5, Informative)
Go to this page : http://test.winehq.org/data/3c1c6172779510a7ed693d922fb3061948999ea1/ [winehq.org]
Click on the big alphanumerical hyperlink and download the exe.
Give an alias and run it.
This will do conformance tests on your computer and it is very important to the wine project.
Don't try to do anything usefull while testing since it will do a wide range of things including directX tests which will make your screen display colorfields.
If you get errors or crashes, just click on OK or close. This is part of the testing. I'm sure the people working on the wine project will be very happy with it.
MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
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man they have came a LONG way though.
I remember when the most basic programs barely ran.. now I'm hearing the adobe suite is working..
promising indeed!
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I would sure like to help by playing my little part and I also have a native windows installation on my laptop but I wouldn't want to boot into it unless I really need to
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What exactly is this testing, and what do the results mean?
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My wife is an architect. She has just started using CAD (Autodesk Revit). We were at the shop yesterday looking for a new windows box for her to use but she fell in love with an iMAC which was on display.
I can get more RAM for the MAC, and parallels, but is it likely to be practical to run Revit on parallels? I know that it would be hopeless on vmware. She needs mouse interaction to be perfect.
I am just looking for an indication of how fast windows runs in parallels.
T
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Every day kind of windows things like running Internet Explorer are flawless and fast. I've had a little luck with some games, but performance is diminished. Since AutoCAD is graphical, I would imagine the answer is a big "it depends." It does seem like there are a number of google hits for Parallels and Revit,s you might have some luck reading forums etc.
Also (I'm sure you know thi
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I use VMware Fusion regularly on Mac OS X, and do not have any problems with the mouse integration; both the trackpad on my MacBook Pro and any attached mice work as they should. Is there some reason that you feel this isn't the case?
From my experience, VMware Fusion (especially the latest 2.0 beta) seems superior to Parallels, and is more portable (e.g. if you want to use a virtual machine on a non-Mac OS, i.e. in VMware Player or Workstation). If you use the beta, be sure to turn off debugging for bet
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My wife is an architect. She has just started using CAD (Autodesk Revit). We were at the shop yesterday looking for a new windows box for her to use but she fell in love with an iMAC which was on display.
If she "fell in love" with it just because of the 'looks cool' factor, rather than OSX, then just install Windows on it...
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Install it to a bootcamp partition. Then you can either boot directly to it or point your VMware at the partition and run it from OS X. That's what I do. I have not seen any mouse issues with the latest versions of VMware Fusion, BTW. This is the way we have all our Apple machines configured for people who need windows-only software - no problems to date.
With this configuration you can see if it runs acceptably in the virtualized environment, but if it doesn't you can always boot windows directly and r
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They're conformance tests, so they check the behaviour of various API calls to make sure that a) Windows does what it's supposed to, and b) Wine does what Windows does.
The first point is significant because MSDN is wrong quite often, and the API often changes behaviour from one Windows version to the next. So the only way to find out what Wine should really be doing is to write conformance tests and run them everywhere you can.
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Is there a way to capture a report from this?
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Re:If you want to help: (Score:5, Funny)
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I do that for trivial things I want to share between Windows/Linux/different computers (ie, things not worth getting out a thumb drive for.)
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I mean, if you keep going, the last one that has a meaningful date in it is: http://test.winehq.org/data/200805201000/ [winehq.org] from 4 days ago, I'm assuming.
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By the way, the conformance is going A OK. They are a huge success and the number of reports is 5 times the usual. Thanks for the help,
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Re:If you want to help: (Score:5, Funny)
The people who do run Linux pretend to run *BSD, to maintain their elite status.
No one actually runs *BSD except Theo de Raadt (he actually runs NetBSD, OpenBSD is a hoax) ~
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Now if Linux would just adopt "third-party" program and driver installation standards
But I DO run BSD and Linux! (Score:1)
Which, if you're right, would mean I run Windows and... euhm...
What's below Windows on the evolutionary/social status ladder?
Nothing, I guess
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Now, if only I could duplicate the feat while sober.
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What if the test generates an error in d3d9_test.exe, and reboots the PC shortly thereafter?
Blue screen (Score:2)
Re:If you want to help: (Score:5, Interesting)
http://wiki.winehq.org/MakeTestFailures [winehq.org]
and
http://wiki.winehq.org/ConformanceTests [winehq.org]
For those wondering where the latest data is: in http://test.winehq.org [winehq.org], click on the "Last Modified" column twice, that will bring the latest data to the top.
Thanks to everyone who submitted data so far! We have enough reports for XP now, but any other version of Windows would be handy.
Be sure to run this again when wine-1.0-rc3 comes out next week.
Cheers,
Jeremy
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Catch 22 situation (Score:4, Interesting)
If you look at the AppDb you'll see a lot of apps still not working 100%. F.i. Graphpad prism disappointed me last week. Most of them don't work because of some minor glitz. Before you say, well fix it you stupid, repairing them would introduce new regressions.
I think its mostly because of some "hacks" used by lazy/clever/performance programmer, but therefore very intolerant to a "windows-like" environment.
I hope Wine will get to the point, where it's influence will force programmers to stick to the specifications, as his/her boss is asking:" but will it also run under Wine???".
Ps. I hope the number of RC's will remain below 40.
Re:Catch 22 situation (Score:4, Insightful)
Because Windows itself is incredibly hackish, especially when it comes to backwards compatibility. If Wine was simply striving to be a good Win32 implementation, they'd be pretty much done already -- someone developing an app, from the ground up, to be able to run on Windows and Wine shouldn't have too much more trouble than someone designing a web app, from the ground up, to run in IE and Firefox.
But Wine strives for bug-for-bug compatibility. There are a lot of bugs in Windows, and a lot of apps depend on those bugs.
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I'm reasonably familiar with the common syscalls in Linux, and usually when a question on its specific behavior comes up I RTFM and usually get the answer. I've been playing with Win32 a while ago, and the API simply feels like a mess to me. Maybe it's just because I'm a rookie, but whenever I have need a clarification on the (supposed) behavior I usually don't find it in the official docs, and I'd be lucky to find some "rumors"/"tips"/"tricks" from some "expert sites" that touches upon the issue.
Microsoft Office 2003 bug fix (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks, guys! Great work!
Does Wine work... (Score:3, Interesting)
- can you run a windows installer and then run the installed program ?
- can you do this also if the installer puts some dlls in the windows system directory ?
- what kind of programs won't work ?
- Photophop ?
- How much of a performance hit do you take ?
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-Yes, usually.
-Specific programs don't work, not general categories.
-Mostly. Go check out its entry on "appDB.winehq.org" for specifics.
-Wine isn't an emulator. For programs that wine works properly with there is no performance hit.
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-Running the installer worked
-I had to fiddle with the WINE registry a bit, fortunately some forum explained how to do that
-now DOD runs crash-free (since yesterday, RC1 still had a bug that made it crash)
-yes, DirectX works (good enough to support the HL2 engine, but probably not 100% complete yet)
-the performance hit is significant, so don't expect to run the very latest games on WINE yet
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There's no inherent performance hit with using Wine, indeed many programs/games run at the same speed (or faster) than on Windows itself. The places where you see slowdown is typically where support is incomplete, possibly causing software fallbacks.
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-The NVidia Linux drivers being inferior to the Windows ones (I'm running their closed source driver for Linux).
-more overhead in the Xserver compared to the Windows DirectX API
-overhead in WINE's translation from DirectX to OpenGL, including software fallbacks as you suggested.
Obviously not all of those would be the fault of the WINE team, an
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The only games I've tried to get working under Wine lately are a small 2D MMO called Nexus TK, for which performance hardly matters (but it's nice to be able to force it into a window), and Warcraft III, which has some hidden OpenGL mode, and works flawlessly once you put it in that mode.
For the most part, though, I have a few games that are worth booting into Windows for, and which I'll be
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You do realize that NVIDIA's Linux video drivers and Windows video drivers and Solaris video drivers and FreeBSD video drivers and Mac OSX video drivers are all the same, with a OS specific wrapper that allows it to talk to the hardware via the kernel.
I do.
Do you realize that NVIDIA's Linux video drivers frequently crash? Anywhere from the X server segfaulting to the entire machine locking up? And when they don't crash, they occasionally freeze...
We have only their word that as much code is shared as they say it is. Even if that's true, there could still be something happening with the OS-specific wrapper. And if they can outright crash more on Linux than they do on Windows, I wouldn't be at all surprised if there might be a difference in performance.
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To take a much older example, Quake 3 Arena ran faster under Wine/Linux than it did under Windows 2000 (on the same machine), and the native Linux version was even faster than that. So any performance hit is really a particular implementation of Wine, combined with a particular app -- sometimes it's faster, sometimes it's slower, just like sometimes it wor
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Yes, unless the installer tries to do something that wine doesn't support.
- can you do this also if the installer puts some dlls in the windows system directory ?
Yes. Wine keeps its own windows system directory and applications can put their junk anywhere on the virtual C drive.
- what kind of programs won't work ?
I tried to install a
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- You can run a Windows installer, that's the normal way of installing software under Wine, in fact. Standard installers work fine most of the time.
- You need to override some DLLs for some application - fortunately it's easily done through wineconfig, and the Wine App DB is helpful in specifying settings that improve the compatibility for a certain app. Generally, installers that want to put stuff into c:\windows aren't a problem as Wine maintains a virtual C: drive.
- Some
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Photoshop 7 is well supported and has been for a while.
CS is well supported although there are a few quirks.
CS2 works well enough to be usable, but activation is broken for numerous reasons (although a solution has been worked out).
CS3 doesn't work at all.
Considering I've spent a great deal of time and money on training and software, and regularly depend on the features of CS2 and CS3, only being able to use CS an
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I popped in an install cd for Fallout, navigated to the cd in Konqueror, right clicked on the 'setup.exe' file, selcted 'run with wine' and it was just like being on windows after that until I exited the finished install.
To further the "Windows" experience, you can then go your appli
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- can you run a windows installer and then run the installed program ?
Integration is fairly good, for a single user. With the standard Ubuntu Wine package, you can double-click on EXEs to run them. Installers work fine, and at least on Kubuntu, they can install working shortcuts to your desktop, and the Windows start menu is under the K-menu, under "Wine" (so I can go K->Wine->Programs->Accessories->Notepad, for example).
- can you do this also if the installer puts some dlls in the windows system directory ?
Wine lives in ~/.wine, with a fake C drive at ~/.wine/drive_c (by default). So I don't really see any reason this wouldn't work -- the DLL woul
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This hasn't been working for a while now. Konqueror shows .EXEs as Windows Executables... fine. Wine Windows Emulator is that filetype's Preferred Application... fine. And they run just fine from the context menu, too! Just not with a double-click. Dumps this in the console (for example): "run-detectors: unable to find an interpreter for /mnt/windows/Programme/firefox/firefox.exe"... as though I'd tried to directly run just
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I generally run installers from the commandline, but once installed, it even seems to keep track of things like WINEPREFIX -- and those "Start Menu" entries did work, last I tried.
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- installer runs
- C:\Program_Files C:\.. all exist fake hierarchy
- very little performance hit some things are faster
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Guild Wars has no anti-alias under Wine, and consequently the performance is better than on Windows. I've seen a few graphical glitches, but they're nowhere near as bad as under Cedega.
Increment (Score:2)
Ran the test and... (Score:1)
15 years in the making... (Score:2)
Regardless, WINE is an amazing project.
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Why isn't Microsoft working with the Wine project?
Why should they help a direct competitor?
Why hasn't Microsoft absolved the Wine project from any lawsuits?
What can MS sue them for?
Where is Microsoft doing anything to increase interoperability with Linux and Windows as they have said they were several times?
Some work with Novell in the network integration area, and they (begrudgingly) handed over neccisary details of AD to SAMBA.
Where is DirectX for Linux from Microsoft?
Why would we want that? I think we would prefer that games be written in OpenGL.
Why does Microsoft have an interoperability forum on their website where you can discuss it but no ports of their software for Linux? How many years and versions of Microsoft Office, Media Player, Internet Explorer, and other tools have been released without a Linux version for purchase (and the latter examples, for download)? Why should we have to rely on Wine, Cedega, and other projects to attempt support for Windows programs on Linux when Microsoft has claimed they were all about Open Source and interoperability?
Because it looks good to the press. We all have known that for some time now.
When will justice come down on Microsoft for its crimes? Is the Department of Justice blind?
Thursday