WineHQ
WineHQ


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, Win-
       dows 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  win-
       dows (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:\\WINDOWS\\SOL.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:\\TEMP\\README.TXT).  Note
       that you need to '\' escape special characters (and spaces) when invok-
       ing Wine via a shell, e.g.

       wine C:\\Program\ Files\\MyPrg\\test.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/local/bin/wineserver, and if
              this doesn't exist it will then look for  a  file  named  "wine-
              server" 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/local/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 mes-
              sages 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 debug-
                     ging).

              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    HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Soft-
                     ware\Wine\Debug registry key.

              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/local/lib/wine.

       WINEDLLOVERRIDES
              Defines the override type and load order of  dlls  used  in  the
              loading  process  for  any dll. 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).   The  library  may  also be disabled (''). 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 identi-
              fied by looking at the  symbolic  link  of  the  16-bit  .dll.so
              file). For instance if ole32.dll is configured as builtin, stor-
              age.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:\\foo\\bar\\baz=b"
                     Try  to load the libraries comdlg32 and shell32 as native
                     windows dlls. Furthermore, if an application  request  to
                     load c:\foo\bar\baz.dll load the builtin library baz.

              WINEDLLOVERRIDES="comdlg32=b,n;shell32=b;comctl32=n;oleaut32="
                     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. Oleaut32 will be
                     disabled.

       WINEARCH
              Specifies the Windows architecture to support.  It  can  be  set
              either  to win32 (support only 32-bit applications), or to win64
              (support both 64-bit  applications  and  32-bit  ones  in  WoW64
              mode).
              The architecture supported by a given Wine prefix is set at pre-
              fix creation time and cannot be changed afterwards. When running
              with  an  existing prefix, Wine will refuse to start if WINEARCH
              doesn't match the prefix architecture.

       DISPLAY
              Specifies the X11 display to use.

       OSS sound driver configuration variables

       AUDIODEV
              Set the device for audio input / output. Default /dev/dsp.

       MIXERDEV
              Set the device for mixer controls. Default /dev/mixer.

       MIDIDEV
              Set the MIDI (sequencer) device. Default /dev/sequencer.


FILES

       /usr/local/bin/wine
              The wine program loader.

       /usr/local/bin/wineconsole
              The wine program loader for CUI (console) applications.

       /usr/local/bin/wineserver
              The wine server

       /usr/local/bin/winedbg
              The wine debugger

       /usr/local/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  exam-
              ple,  if  the  CDROM device is mounted from /dev/hdc, the corre-
              sponding  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
       http://appdb.winehq.org.  Please add entries to this list for  applica-
       tions you currently run, if there is no entry for this application.

       Bug  reports  may  be posted to Wine Bugzilla http://bugs.winehq.org If
       you want to post a bug report, please  see  http://wiki.winehq.org/Bugs
       in the wine source to see what information is necessary

       Problems  and  suggestions  with  this  manpage  please  also report to
       http://bugs.winehq.org


AVAILABILITY

       The  most  recent  public  version  of  wine  can  be  downloaded  from
       http://www.winehq.org/download

       The  latest snapshot of the code may be obtained via GIT.  For informa-
       tion on how to do this, please see http://www.winehq.org/site/git

       WineHQ, the wine development headquarters, is at http://www.winehq.org.
       This website contains a great deal of information about wine.

       For  further information about wine development, you might want to sub-
       scribe to the wine mailing lists at http://www.winehq.org/forums



SEE ALSO

       wineserver(1), winedbg(1)



Wine 1.5.31                      October 2005                          WINE(1)

Man(1) output converted with man2html