NAME
wine - run Windows programs on Unix
SYNOPSIS
wine program [arguments ...
]
wine --help
wine --version
For instructions on passing arguments to Windows programs,
please see the PROGRAM/ARGUMENTS section of the man page.
DESCRIPTION
wine loads and runs the given program,
where the program is a DOS, Windows 3.x, or Win32 executable (x86
binaries only).
For debugging wine, use winedbg instead.
For running CUI executables (Windows console programs), use
wineconsole instead of wine. This will display all
the output in a separate windows (this requires X11 to run). Not
using wineconsole for CUI programs will only provide very
limited console support, and your program might not function
properly.
When invoked with --help or --version as the only
argument, wine will simply print a small help message or its
version respectively and exit.
PROGRAM/ARGUMENTS
The program name may be specified in DOS
format ( C:rsrsWINDOWSrsrsSOL.EXE) or in Unix format (
/msdos/windows/sol.exe ). You may pass arguments to the
program being executed by adding them to the end of the command
line invoking wine (such as: wine notepad
C:rsrsTEMPrsrsREADME.TXT). Note that you need to 'rs' escape
special characters (and spaces) when invoking Wine via a shell,
e.g.
wine C:rsrsProgramrs FilesrsrsMyPrgrsrstest.exe
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
wine makes the environment
variables of the shell from which wine is started accessible
to the windows/dos processes started. So use the appropriate syntax
for your shell to enter environment variables you need.
- WINEPREFIX
- If set, the content of this variable is taken as the name of
the directory where wine stores its data (the default is
$HOME/.wine ). This directory is also used to identify the
socket which is used to communicate with the wineserver. All
wine processes using the same wineserver (i.e.: same
user) share certain things like registry, shared memory, and config
file. By setting WINEPREFIX to different values for
different wine processes, it is possible to run a number of
truly independent wine processes.
- WINESERVER
- Specifies the path and name of the wineserver binary. If
not set, Wine will try to load /usr/bin/wineserver, and if
this doesn't exist it will then look for a file named "wineserver"
in the path and in a few other likely locations.
- WINELOADER
- Specifies the path and name of the wine binary to use to
launch new Windows processes. If not set, Wine will try to load
/usr/bin/wine, and if this doesn't exist it will then look
for a file named "wine" in the path and in a few other likely
locations.
- WINEDEBUG
- Turns debugging messages on or off. The syntax of the variable
is of the form
[class][+/-]channel[,[class2][+/-]channel2].
-
class is optional and can be one of the following:
err, warn, fixme, or trace. If class is not
specified, all debugging messages for the specified channel are
turned on. Each channel will print messages about a particular
component of wine. The following character can be either +
or - to switch the specified channel on or off respectively. If
there is no class part before it, a leading + can be
omitted. Note that spaces are not allowed anywhere in the string.
Examples:
- WINEDEBUG=warn+all
- will turn on all warning messages (recommended for
debugging).
- WINEDEBUG=warn+dll,+heap
- will turn on DLL warning messages and all heap messages.
- WINEDEBUG=fixme-all,warn+cursor,+relay
- will turn off all FIXME messages, turn on cursor warning
messages, and turn on all relay messages (API calls).
- WINEDEBUG=relay
- will turn on all relay messages. For more control on including
or excluding functions and dlls from the relay trace look into the
[Debug] section of the wine configuration file.
For more information on debugging messages, see the Running
Wine chapter of the Wine User Guide.
- WINEDLLPATH
- Specifies the path(s) in which to search for builtin dlls and
Winelib applications. This is a list of directories separated by
":". In addition to any directory specified in WINEDLLPATH,
Wine will also look in /usr/lib/wine.
- WINEDLLOVERRIDES
- Defines the override type and load order of dlls used in the
loading process for any dll. The default is set in the
configuration file. There are currently two types of libraries that
can be loaded into a process' address space: Native windows dlls (
native ), wine internal dlls ( builtin ). The
type may be abbreviated with the first letter of the type ( n,
b ). Each sequence of orders must be separated by commas.
-
Each dll may have its own specific load order. The load order
determines which version of the dll is attempted to be loaded into
the address space. If the first fails, then the next is tried and
so on. Multiple libraries with the same load order can be separated
with commas. It is also possible to use specify different
loadorders for different libraries by separating the entries by
";".
The load order for a 16-bit dll is always defined by the load
order of the 32-bit dll that contains it (which can be identified
by looking at the symbolic link of the 16-bit .dll.so file). For
instance if ole32.dll is configured as builtin, storage.dll will be
loaded as builtin too, since the 32-bit ole32.dll contains the
16-bit storage.dll.
Examples:
- WINEDLLOVERRIDES="comdlg32,shell32=n,b"
-
Try to load comdlg32 and shell32 as native windows dll first and
try the builtin version if the native load fails.
- WINEDLLOVERRIDES="comdlg32,shell32=n;c:rsrsfoorsrsbarrsrsbaz=b"
-
Try to load the libraries comdlg32 and shell32 as native windows
dlls. Furthermore, if an application request to load
c:rsfoorsbarrsbaz.dll load the builtin library baz.
- WINEDLLOVERRIDES="comdlg32=b,n;shell32=b;comctl32=n"
-
Try to load comdlg32 as builtin first and try the native version if
the builtin load fails; load shell32 always as builtin and comctl32
always as native.
- DISPLAY
- Specifies the X11 display to use.
FILES
- /usr/bin/wine
- The wine program loader.
- /usr/bin/wineconsole
- The wine program loader for CUI (console) applications.
- /usr/bin/wineserver
- The wine server
- /usr/bin/winedbg
- The wine debugger
- /usr/lib/wine
- Directory containing wine's shared libraries
- $WINEPREFIX/dosdevices
- Directory containing the DOS device mappings. Each file in that
directory is a symlink to the Unix device file implementing a given
device. For instance, if COM1 is mapped to /dev/ttyS0 you'd have a
symlink of the form $WINEPREFIX/dosdevices/com1 ->
/dev/ttyS0.
DOS drives are also specified with symlinks; for instance if drive
D: corresponds to the CDROM mounted at /mnt/cdrom, you'd have a
symlink $WINEPREFIX/dosdevices/d: -> /mnt/cdrom. The Unix device
corresponding to a DOS drive can be specified the same way, except
with '::' instead of ':'. So for the previous example, if the CDROM
device is mounted from /dev/hdc, the corresponding symlink would be
$WINEPREFIX/dosdevices/d:: -> /dev/hdc.
AUTHORS
wine is available thanks to the work of many
developers. For a listing of the authors, please see the file
AUTHORS in the top-level directory of the source
distribution.
COPYRIGHT
wine can be distributed under the terms of
the LGPL license. A copy of the license is in the file
COPYING.LIB in the top-level directory of the source
distribution.
BUGS
A status report on many applications is available from
Please
add entries to this list for applications you currently run.
Bug reports may be posted to Wine Bugzilla If you want
to post a bug report, please read the file
documentation/bugs.sgml in the wine source to see
what information is necessary
Problems and suggestions with this manpage please also report to
AVAILABILITY
The most recent public version of wine
can be downloaded from
The latest snapshot of the code may be obtained via GIT. For
information on how to do this, please see
WineHQ, the wine development headquarters, is at
This website contains a great deal of information about
wine.
For further information about wine development, you might
want to subscribe to the wine mailing lists at
SEE ALSO
wineserver(1),
winedbg(1)