BuildingWineFromSource

Differences between revisions 5 and 23 (spanning 18 versions)
Revision 5 as of 2006-04-25 10:04:53
Size: 1630
Editor: 202-155-165-25
Comment:
Revision 23 as of 2006-05-29 13:00:20
Size: 3833
Editor: cpe-069-134-168-042
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 7: Line 7:
This guide was written for Breezy, using Wine 0.9.12. This guide was written for Dapper, using Wine 0.9.14.   WARNING: The authors of this howto give no guarantees. This is totally YMMV.
Line 13: Line 15:
If not already done, enable the Sourceforge repo. Using synaptic, add the following custom repo Enable the Sourceforge source repo. Using synaptic, add the following custom repo
Line 15: Line 17:
{{{deb http://wine.sourceforge.net/apt source}}} {{{
deb-src http://wine.budgetdedicated.com/apt dapper main
}}}
Line 23: Line 27:
{{{sudo apt-get build-dep wine}}} {{{
sudo apt-get build-dep wine
}}}
Line 27: Line 33:
Create the directory you're going to install Wine into Create the directory you're going to install Wine into (wine-0.9.12), and download the source into it. You'll need at least 1.4Gig of free disk to install and build successfully. Last, cd to the directory containing the source code (wine-0.9.12~winehq1), as that's where we'll be working from.
Line 29: Line 35:
{{{mkdir wine-0.9.12 {{{
mkdir wine-0.9.14
Line 31: Line 38:
cd wine-0.9.12 cd wine-0.9.14
Line 33: Line 40:
apt-get source wine}}} sudo apt-get source wine

cd wine-0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06
}}}
Line 39: Line 49:
{{{patch -p0 < wine-patch#1.patch {{{
patch -p1 < wine-patch#1.patch
Line 41: Line 52:
patch -p0 < wine-patch#2.patch patch -p1 < wine-patch#2.patch
Line 43: Line 54:
etc.}}} etc.
}}}

eg. Applying the WoW patch

Wine needs to be patched for WoW to work properly. Download 0.9.14 patch from http://appdb.winehq.org/appview.php?versionId=4031 to your home folder and apply the patch to the Wine code.

{{{
patch -p1 < ~/wow.new.patch.0.9.13-1
}}}

== Install additional libraries ==

Add the recommended packages from: http://wiki.winehq.org/Recommended_Packages

'''Breezy:'''
{{{
sudo apt-get install libasound2-dev libarts1-dev libartsc0-dev libaudiofile-dev libesd0-dev libaudio-dev libcapi20-dev liblcms1-dev libcupsys2-dev libsane-dev freeglut3-dev libc6-dev libexpat1-dev libfontconfig1-dev libfreetype6-dev libgcrypt11-dev libglib1.2-dev libglib2.0-dev libgnutls11-dev libgpg-error-dev libice-dev libieee1284-3-dev libjpeg62-dev libldap2-dev libltdl3-dev libmad0-dev libmng-dev libncurses5-dev libogg-dev libopencdk8-dev libpng12-dev libqt3-mt-dev libsm-dev libtasn1-2-dev libusb-dev libvorbis-dev libx11-dev libxcursor-dev libxext-dev libxft-dev libxi-dev libxml2-dev libxmu-dev libxrandr-dev libxrender-dev libxslt1-dev libxt-dev libxv-dev render-dev unixodbc-dev x-dev zlib1g-dev xlibs-dev libxxf86dga-dev libxxf86vm-dev libjack0.80.0-dev libicu34-dev libungif4-dev libssl-dev
}}}

'''Dapper:'''
There's a script written by Dan Kegel that will do all the work:

Download and run the script
{{{
wget http://kegel.com/wine/dapper.sh
chmod +x dapper.sh
sudo ./dapper.sh
}}}
Line 47: Line 86:
{{{apt-get build-package -hfakeroot -cu -b}}} {{{
d
pkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -uc -b
}}}
Line 57: Line 98:
{{{dpkg --purge wine {{{
sudo
dpkg --purge wine
Line 61: Line 103:
sudo dpkg -i wine_0.9.12~winehq1-1_i386.deb}}} sudo dpkg -i wine_0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06-1_i386.deb
}}}

== Clean up ==

Once you're satisfied that Wine is working properly, you can now clean up the files used for building Wine, as this frees up quite a bit of disk. Of course, deleting make's working files will mean that if you need to rebuild, make will have to start right from the beginning.

{{{
cd wine-0.9.14/wine-0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06

make distclean
}}}

Reasons why one needs to build from source rather than relying on repos:

1 - One needs a more up to date version of Wine

2 - One needs to apply a patch to the stock Wine release

This guide was written for Dapper, using Wine 0.9.14.

WARNING: The authors of this howto give no guarantees. This is totally YMMV.

The process for building Wine from source is as follows:

Enable the Sourceforge source repository

Enable the Sourceforge source repo. Using synaptic, add the following custom repo

deb-src http://wine.budgetdedicated.com/apt dapper main

(see: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/AddingRepositoriesHowto for more details)

Install the Wine build dependencies

The purpose of this step is to install any dependencies necessary to the build process.

sudo apt-get build-dep wine

Download the Wine source

Create the directory you're going to install Wine into (wine-0.9.12), and download the source into it. You'll need at least 1.4Gig of free disk to install and build successfully. Last, cd to the directory containing the source code (wine-0.9.12~winehq1), as that's where we'll be working from.

mkdir wine-0.9.14

cd wine-0.9.14

sudo apt-get source wine

cd wine-0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06

Apply patches, if necessary

Sometimes the reason you're building from source is because you need to patch the stock release. (eg to apply the WoW patch)

patch -p1 < wine-patch#1.patch

patch -p1 < wine-patch#2.patch

etc.

eg. Applying the WoW patch

Wine needs to be patched for WoW to work properly. Download 0.9.14 patch from http://appdb.winehq.org/appview.php?versionId=4031 to your home folder and apply the patch to the Wine code.

patch -p1 < ~/wow.new.patch.0.9.13-1

Install additional libraries

Add the recommended packages from: http://wiki.winehq.org/Recommended_Packages

Breezy:

sudo apt-get install libasound2-dev  libarts1-dev libartsc0-dev libaudiofile-dev libesd0-dev libaudio-dev libcapi20-dev liblcms1-dev libcupsys2-dev libsane-dev freeglut3-dev libc6-dev libexpat1-dev libfontconfig1-dev libfreetype6-dev libgcrypt11-dev libglib1.2-dev libglib2.0-dev libgnutls11-dev libgpg-error-dev libice-dev libieee1284-3-dev libjpeg62-dev libldap2-dev libltdl3-dev libmad0-dev libmng-dev libncurses5-dev libogg-dev libopencdk8-dev libpng12-dev libqt3-mt-dev libsm-dev libtasn1-2-dev libusb-dev libvorbis-dev libx11-dev libxcursor-dev libxext-dev libxft-dev libxi-dev libxml2-dev libxmu-dev libxrandr-dev libxrender-dev libxslt1-dev libxt-dev libxv-dev render-dev unixodbc-dev x-dev   zlib1g-dev xlibs-dev libxxf86dga-dev libxxf86vm-dev libjack0.80.0-dev libicu34-dev libungif4-dev libssl-dev

Dapper: There's a script written by Dan Kegel that will do all the work:

Download and run the script

wget  http://kegel.com/wine/dapper.sh
chmod +x dapper.sh
sudo ./dapper.sh

Build Wine

dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -uc -b

The build will take a LONG time, even with a fast machine, around an hour or so on a 2Gig CPU with 1Gig of Ram, so take a break.

Install the new Wine deb

The build process, once it's complete, will create a .deb in the parent directory. This is your new Wine package.

First remove the old Wine package

sudo dpkg --purge wine

cd ..

sudo dpkg -i wine_0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06-1_i386.deb

Clean up

Once you're satisfied that Wine is working properly, you can now clean up the files used for building Wine, as this frees up quite a bit of disk. Of course, deleting make's working files will mean that if you need to rebuild, make will have to start right from the beginning.

cd wine-0.9.14/wine-0.9.14~winehq1~ubuntu~6.06

make distclean

BuildingWineFromSource (last edited 2008-08-06 16:41:12 by localhost)