- #Wine emulator performance install
- #Wine emulator performance update
- #Wine emulator performance windows
#Wine emulator performance windows
Wine32-preloader and wine32-development-preloader each provide the prelinked loader for 32-bit Windows applications. Wine64 and wine64-development each provide the binary loader for 64-bit Windows applications. Wine32 and wine32-development each provide the binary loader for 32-bit Windows applications. Wine and wine-development each provide essential wrappers and convenience tools for the standard Wine components, and the alternatives system to provide the usual Wine command names. Some are optional and might not be installed automatically: Wine and wine-development consist of a suite of packages.
#Wine emulator performance install
Sudo apt install -install-recommends winehq-staging Sudo apt install -install-recommends winehq-devel Install one of the following versions of wine: sudo apt install -install-recommends winehq-stable Update the package lists sudo apt updateĥ. Add the bullseye winehq repo: sudo echo "deb bullseye main" > /tmp/winehq.listĤ. Sudo apt install -install-recommends winehq-stableģ.
#Wine emulator performance update
Update and install the latest stable version of wine: sudo apt update Add the bullseye winehq repo: sudo echo "deb bookworm main" > /tmp/winehq.list NOTE: apt-key(8) will not be available in Debian Bookworm/12.ģ. Add the i386 architecture: sudo dpkg -add-architecture i386 Here are the installation instructions.ġ. These packages are only available for the amd64 architecture. WineHQ offers newer builds of wine for Buster, Bullseye and Bookworm. Libwine-development:i386/stretch-backports \ You'd end up with dependency packages installed unnecessarily from stretch-backports and have a high risk of "broken dependencies" because some new i386 dependency packages wouldn't match the versions of their already installed amd64 counterparts. The following example commands make sure that all required packages are pulled from stretch-backports instead of stretch.ĭo not simply use "apt install -t stretch-backports wine" instead of the following example commands. But once they are installed you receive automatic updates. Packages from backports are not installed automatically. To enable stretch-backports add this line to your sources.list (or add a new file with the ".list" extension to /etc/apt//): deb stretch-backports main Install wine-development on a 32-bit architecture: sudo apt install \įor Debian Stretch wine is available as backport. Install wine-development on a 64-bit architecture (amd64 with i386 as foreign 32-bit architecture): sudo dpkg -add-architecture i386 & sudo apt update Install wine on a 32-bit architecture: sudo apt install \ Install wine on a 64-bit architecture (amd64 with i386 as foreign 32-bit architecture): sudo dpkg -add-architecture i386 & sudo apt update "sudo apt install libpulse0:i386/testing"), and then continue to install Wine. To solve this install the i386 package from the same suite as the already installed amd64 package (e.g. Debian Backports or Unstable) then some newly needed i386 packages might have another version, and you face broken dependencies. But if you install Wine from another suite (e.g. These packages are the versions from your default release, e.g. Usually you already have most of the required amd64 library packages installed. amd64 and i386 to be in exactly the same version. It's quite easy to run into broken dependencies when installing Wine: The multiarch setup requires packages from e.g. To run 32-bit Windows applications (this is the most common case, independently of your Debian architecture) make sure that wine32 (or wine32-development) is installed (requires step 1). This should automatically install all other required packages if you already have enabled multiarch (step 1). You always need to install the wine (or wine-development) package. Enable it with the following command: sudo dpkg -add-architecture i386 & sudo apt update for amd64 (which most users have) you need i386. You can identify your architecture with the following command: dpkg -print-architectureĮ.g. This is needed for running 32-bit Windows applications (many modern apps are still 32-bit), but also for large parts of the Windows subsystem itself. On 64-bit systems you should enable a 32-bit architecture for multiarch. If you install both sets, "wine" will take precedence unless you configure your system otherwise, see "Usage" below. You can either install both sets at the same time, or only one of them. Do not mix this up with the *-dev packages which contain the header files and development libraries. version 5.12).ĭespite its name wine-development is also intended to be used by regular users. version 5.0.1), and wine-development the development releases (e.g. Wine tracks the stable releases from (e.g. Since Debian Jessie you can choose between two sets of Wine packages: wine and wine-development.