Hi there,
Installed debian/jessie amd64. Installed wine, got the 64-bit version. However, I installed wine to run old win32 programs which are not available any more. For example, i organize my homepage with a program which once had a Linux version, but now all links are dead. Wine told me, go multiarch, install wine32. I tried to do so. After simulating a while with apt-get I found that I would replace large parts of my library tree with i386 versions. Tons of stuff.
I tried to find ia-32 libraries. Apt-get suggested lib32 versions of curses and z. Of course that did not help. And the library tree is not ready for multiarch yet.
Consequence: wine is not fit for 64-bit systems any more? All relevant programs are win32.
Is there any solution or should I fall back to the parallel installation of winxxxx? I hoped that I would not have to use winxxxx again, because of its desorganization, monoculture and failure.
dromon
Wine32, multiarch would destabilize the whole system
Re: Wine32, multiarch would destabilize the whole system
We have many Debian users, most of them are on 64 bit, and no one else has reported this problem. Did you follow the instructions on https://www.winehq.org/download/debian?
Re: Wine32, multiarch would destabilize the whole system
I got wine and winetricks through apt-get.
While trying different things, I permanently got the following message:
it looks like multiarch needs to be enabled. as root, please
execute "dpkg --add-architecture i386 && apt-get update &&
apt-get install wine32
So I informed myself, what multiarch is, what dpkg actually would do and I searched whether other users ran into the same problem. Then I tried what was suggested and many different tips. The situation appears to be as follows:
* Ubuntu 14.04 users (and forks) had no problem. I assume the distributors did something on their own, maybe bundled libraries or wrote a wrapper.
* Debian users indeed tried to _overwrite_ their library tree and were partially successful, however they often ran into trouble to get certain libaries deep below libc6.
* Lately, maybe 2014/2015, Debian users reported at other places that they were not able to get wine running.
* My Debian refused to install the i386 libraries. This includes libwine itself. If I would try to do so it would remove half of my applications, I think even wine64, because they of course depend on the proper amd64 libraries.
Multiarch for Debian requires to flag libraries in a special way and to install them in special library trees. Not even libwine itself meets this requirement. Like everything else it would just overwrite libwine:amd64 by libwine:i386. It would even come to overwriting the OpenGL 3D lib on which the graphics card depends und later libc6 which is a central hub in the whole system.
I cannot use i386 libs anyway. I have 8GB RAM which needs the 33rd bit for addressing. Windows itself addresses this problem by pretending a 32-bit environment to 32-bit programs (btw, all programs compatible with XP are 32-bit programs). So I assumed that wine64 had implemented this mechanism too which would be the very first thing to do, otherwise a wine64 would be nearly useless.
But, my wine64 rejects any 32-bit executable.
The suggestion to use dpkg --add-architecture i386 should _never_ be given to users who do not exactly know what they are doing. Dpkg does not change anything in the system. It does not install a magical second library tree. It only enables the packet manager to look for i386 packages which are of course meant for real i386 systems, not for systems which require a 64-bit address space. Debian or the kernel developers apparently created the capability of pretending 32-bit environments to 64-bit environments. But, on my system there is no program using this mechanism yet. This includes Wine.
So what is needed is either a wine64 that runs 32-bit exutables as Windows itself does. Or a wine32:amd64. To tell people to use dpkg --add-architecture i386 is no advice that I would give to anyone.
I am fully aware that I report a serious issue here. I have been a developer and project manager for more than 20 years now, however I used Linuxes only sporadically before, so there are of course things I do not know of. But the very first thing I had to do was to update a kernel module that had not been maintained for 10 years and to build it. I do not simply have an installation problem.
dromon
While trying different things, I permanently got the following message:
it looks like multiarch needs to be enabled. as root, please
execute "dpkg --add-architecture i386 && apt-get update &&
apt-get install wine32
So I informed myself, what multiarch is, what dpkg actually would do and I searched whether other users ran into the same problem. Then I tried what was suggested and many different tips. The situation appears to be as follows:
* Ubuntu 14.04 users (and forks) had no problem. I assume the distributors did something on their own, maybe bundled libraries or wrote a wrapper.
* Debian users indeed tried to _overwrite_ their library tree and were partially successful, however they often ran into trouble to get certain libaries deep below libc6.
* Lately, maybe 2014/2015, Debian users reported at other places that they were not able to get wine running.
* My Debian refused to install the i386 libraries. This includes libwine itself. If I would try to do so it would remove half of my applications, I think even wine64, because they of course depend on the proper amd64 libraries.
Multiarch for Debian requires to flag libraries in a special way and to install them in special library trees. Not even libwine itself meets this requirement. Like everything else it would just overwrite libwine:amd64 by libwine:i386. It would even come to overwriting the OpenGL 3D lib on which the graphics card depends und later libc6 which is a central hub in the whole system.
I cannot use i386 libs anyway. I have 8GB RAM which needs the 33rd bit for addressing. Windows itself addresses this problem by pretending a 32-bit environment to 32-bit programs (btw, all programs compatible with XP are 32-bit programs). So I assumed that wine64 had implemented this mechanism too which would be the very first thing to do, otherwise a wine64 would be nearly useless.
But, my wine64 rejects any 32-bit executable.
The suggestion to use dpkg --add-architecture i386 should _never_ be given to users who do not exactly know what they are doing. Dpkg does not change anything in the system. It does not install a magical second library tree. It only enables the packet manager to look for i386 packages which are of course meant for real i386 systems, not for systems which require a 64-bit address space. Debian or the kernel developers apparently created the capability of pretending 32-bit environments to 64-bit environments. But, on my system there is no program using this mechanism yet. This includes Wine.
So what is needed is either a wine64 that runs 32-bit exutables as Windows itself does. Or a wine32:amd64. To tell people to use dpkg --add-architecture i386 is no advice that I would give to anyone.
I am fully aware that I report a serious issue here. I have been a developer and project manager for more than 20 years now, however I used Linuxes only sporadically before, so there are of course things I do not know of. But the very first thing I had to do was to update a kernel module that had not been maintained for 10 years and to build it. I do not simply have an installation problem.
dromon
Re: Wine32, multiarch would destabilize the whole system
Wine does implement this mechanism; it's called Wow64. It requires Wine's 32 bit dependencies to be installed on the host system in order to work.dromon wrote: Windows itself addresses this problem by pretending a 32-bit environment to 32-bit programs (btw, all programs compatible with XP are 32-bit programs). So I assumed that wine64 had implemented this mechanism too which would be the very first thing to do, otherwise a wine64 would be nearly useless.
Report the problem to the Debian package maintainers.