Always open the device in the default 22050x8x2 format, and let it
[wine] / documentation / running.sgml
1   <chapter id="running">
2     <title>Running Wine</title>
3
4     <para>
5       Written by &name-john-sheets; <email>&email-john-sheets;</email>
6     </para>
7
8     <sect1 id="running-wine">
9       <title>How to run Wine</title>
10       <para>
11         Wine is a very complicated piece of software with many ways to
12         adjust how it runs.  With very few exceptions, you can
13         activate the same set of features through the <link
14         linkend="configuring">configuration file </link> as you can
15         with command-line parameters.  In this chapter, we'll briefly
16         discuss these parameters, and match them up with their
17         corresponding configuration variables.
18       </para>
19
20       <para>
21         You can invoke the <command>wine --help</command> command to
22         get a listing of all Wine's command-line parameters:
23       </para>
24       <para>
25         <screen>
26 Usage: ./wine [options] program_name [arguments]
27
28 Options:
29    --debugmsg name  Turn debugging-messages on or off
30    --dll name       Enable or disable built-in DLLs
31    --help,-h        Show this help message
32    --version,-v     Display the Wine version
33         </screen>
34       </para>
35
36       <para>
37         You can specify as many options as you want, if any.
38         Typically, you will want to have your configuration file set
39         up with a sensible set of defaults; in this case, you can run
40         <command>wine</command> without explicitly listing any
41         options.  In rare cases, you might want to override certain
42         parameters on the command line.
43       </para>
44       <para>
45         After the options, you should put the name of the file you
46         want <command>wine</command> to execute.  If the executable is
47         in the <parameter>Path</parameter> parameter in the
48         configuration file, you can simply give the executable file
49         name.  However, if the executable is not in
50         <parameter>Path</parameter>, you must give the full path to
51         the executable (in Windows format, not UNIX format!).  For
52         example, given a <parameter>Path</parameter> of the following:
53       </para>
54       <screen>
55 [wine]
56 "Path"="c:\\windows;c:\\windows\\system;e:\\;e:\\test;f:\\"
57       </screen>
58       <para>
59         You could run the file
60         <filename>c:\windows\system\foo.exe</filename> with:
61       </para>
62       <screen>
63 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine foo.exe</userinput>
64       </screen>
65       <para>
66         However, you would have to run the file
67         <filename>c:\myapps\foo.exe</filename> with this command:
68       </para>
69       <screen>
70 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine c:\\myapps\\foo.exe</userinput>
71       </screen>
72       <para>
73       (note the backslash-escaped "\" !)
74       </para>
75
76       <para>
77         If you want to run a console program (aka a CUI executable), use
78         <command>wineconsole</command> instead of <command>wine</command>
79         to start it. It will display the program in a separate Window
80         (this requires X11 to be run). If you don't, you'll still be able
81         to run your program directly in the Unix console where you started it,
82         but with very limited capacities (so your program might work,
83         but your mileage may vary). This shall be improved in the future.
84       </para>
85     </sect1>
86
87     <sect1 id="command-line-options">
88       <title>Command-Line Options</title>
89
90       <sect2 id="config-parameter">
91         <title>--debugmsg [channels]</title>
92         <para>
93           Wine isn't perfect, and many Windows applications still
94           don't run without bugs under Wine (but then, a lot of programs
95           don't run without bugs under native Windows either!).  To
96           make it easier for people to track down the causes behind
97           each bug, Wine provides a number of <firstterm>debug
98           channels</firstterm> that you can tap into.
99         </para>
100         <para>
101           Each debug channel, when activated, will trigger logging
102           messages to be displayed to the console where you invoked
103           <command>wine</command>.  From there you can redirect the
104           messages to a file and examine it at your leisure.  But be
105           forewarned!  Some debug channels can generate incredible
106           volumes of log messages.  Among the most prolific offenders
107           are <parameter>relay</parameter> which spits out a log
108           message every time a win32 function is called,
109           <parameter>win</parameter> which tracks windows message
110           passing, and of course <parameter>all</parameter> which is
111           an alias for every single debug channel that exists.  For a
112           complex application, your debug logs can easily top 1 MB and
113           higher.  A <parameter>relay</parameter> trace can often
114           generate more than 10 MB of log messages, depending on how
115           long you run the application.  (As described in the
116           <link linkend = "config-debug-etc">Debug</link>
117           section of configuring wine you can 
118           modify what the <parameter>relay</parameter> trace reports).
119           Logging does slow down Wine
120           quite a bit, so don't use <parameter>--debugmsg</parameter>
121           unless you really do want log files.
122         </para>
123         <para>
124           Within each debug channel, you can further specify a
125           <firstterm>message class</firstterm>, to filter out the
126           different severities of errors.  The four message classes
127           are:
128           <simplelist type="inline">
129             <member><parameter>trace</parameter></member>
130             <member><parameter>fixme</parameter></member>
131             <member><parameter>warn</parameter></member>
132             <member><parameter>err</parameter></member>
133           </simplelist>.
134         </para>
135         <para>
136           To turn on a debug channel, use the form
137           <parameter>class+channel</parameter>.  To turn it off, use
138           <parameter>class-channel</parameter>.  To list more than one
139           channel in the same <parameter>--debugmsg</parameter>
140           option, separate them with commas.  For example, to request
141           <parameter>warn</parameter> class messages in the
142           <parameter>heap</parameter> debug channel, you could invoke
143           <command>wine</command> like this:
144         </para>
145         <screen>
146 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine --debugmsg warn+heap <replaceable>program_name</replaceable></userinput>
147         </screen>
148         <para>
149           If you leave off the message class, <command>wine</command>
150           will display messages from all four classes for that channel:
151         </para>
152         <screen>
153 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine --debugmsg +heap <replaceable>program_name</replaceable></userinput>
154         </screen>
155         <para>
156           If you wanted to see log messages for everything except the
157           relay channel, you might do something like this:
158         </para>
159         <screen>
160 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine --debugmsg +all,-relay <replaceable>program_name</replaceable></userinput>
161         </screen>
162         <para>
163           Here is a master list of all the debug channels and classes
164           in Wine.  More channels will be added to (or subtracted
165           from) later versions.
166         </para>
167
168                 <table frame="none"><title>Debug Channels</title>
169                 <tgroup cols=5 align="left">
170                 <tbody>
171 <row><entry>
172 all</><entry>accel</><entry>advapi</><entry>animate</><entry>aspi</>
173 </row><row><entry>
174 atom</><entry>avifile</><entry> bitblt</><entry> bitmap</><entry> caret</>
175 </row><row><entry>
176 cdrom</><entry>class</><entry> clipboard</><entry> clipping</><entry>combo</>
177 </row><row><entry>
178 comboex</><entry> comm</><entry>commctrl</><entry>commdlg</><entry> console</>
179 </row><row><entry>
180 crtdll</><entry>cursor</><entry>datetime</><entry>dc</><entry> ddeml</>
181 </row><row><entry>
182 ddraw</><entry> debug</><entry> debugstr</><entry>delayhlp</><entry>dialog</>
183 </row><row><entry>
184 dinput</><entry>dll</><entry> dosfs</><entry>dosmem</><entry>dplay</>
185 </row><row><entry>
186 driver</><entry>dsound</><entry>edit</><entry>elfdll</><entry>enhmetafile</>
187 </row><row><entry>
188 event</><entry>exec</><entry>file</><entry>fixup</><entry>font</>
189 </row><row><entry>
190 gdi</><entry> global</><entry>graphics</><entry> header</><entry>heap</>
191 </row><row><entry>
192 hook</><entry>hotkey</><entry>icmp</><entry>icon</><entry>imagehlp</>
193 </row><row><entry>
194 imagelist</><entry> imm</><entry>int</><entry>int10</><entry>int16</>
195 </row><row><entry>
196 int17</><entry>int19</><entry>int21</><entry>int31</><entry> io</>
197 </row><row><entry>
198 ipaddress</><entry>joystick</><entry>key</><entry>keyboard</><entry>loaddll</>
199 </row><row><entry>
200 ldt</><entry>listbox</><entry>listview</><entry>local</><entry>mci</>
201 </row><row><entry>
202 mcianim</><entry>mciavi</><entry>mcicda</><entry>mcimidi</><entry>mciwave</>
203 </row><row><entry>
204 mdi</><entry>menu</><entry>message</><entry>metafile</><entry>midi</>
205 </row><row><entry>
206 mmaux</><entry>mmio</><entry>mmsys</><entry>mmtime</><entry>module</>
207 </row><row><entry>
208 monthcal</><entry>mpr</><entry>msacm</><entry>msg</><entry>msvideo</>
209 </row><row><entry>
210 nativefont</><entry>nonclient</><entry>ntdll</><entry>odbc</><entry>ole</>
211 </row><row><entry>
212 opengl</><entry>pager</><entry>palette</><entry>pidl</><entry>print</>
213 </row><row><entry>
214 process</><entry>profile</><entry>progress</><entry>prop</><entry>propsheet</>
215 </row><row><entry>
216 psapi</><entry>psdrv</><entry>ras</><entry>rebar</><entry>reg</>
217 </row><row><entry>
218 region</><entry>relay</><entry>resource</><entry>richedit</><entry>scroll</>
219 </row><row><entry>
220 segment</><entry>seh</><entry>selector</><entry>sendmsg</><entry>server</>
221 </row><row><entry>
222 setupapi</><entry>setupx</><entry>shell</><entry>snoop</><entry>sound</>
223 </row><row><entry>
224 static</><entry>statusbar</><entry>storage</><entry>stress</><entry>string</>
225 </row><row><entry>
226 syscolor</><entry>system</><entry>tab</><entry>tape</><entry>tapi</>
227 </row><row><entry>
228 task</><entry>text</><entry>thread</><entry>thunk</><entry>timer</>
229 </row><row><entry>
230 toolbar</><entry>toolhelp</><entry>tooltips</><entry>trackbar</><entry>treeview</>
231 </row><row><entry>
232 ttydrv</><entry>tweak</><entry>typelib</><entry>updown</><entry>ver</>
233 </row><row><entry>
234 virtual</><entry>vxd</><entry>wave</><entry>win</><entry>win16drv</>
235 </row><row><entry>
236 win32</><entry>winedbg</><entry>wing</><entry>wininet</><entry>winsock</>
237 </row><row><entry>
238 winspool</><entry>wnet</><entry>x11</>
239 </row>
240                 </tbody>
241                 </tgroup>
242                 </table>
243
244         <para>
245           For more details about debug channels, check out the
246           <ulink url="http://wine.codeweavers.com/docs/wine-devel/">
247             The Wine Developer's Guide</ulink>.
248         </para>
249       </sect2>
250
251       <sect2>
252         <title>--dll</title>
253         <para>
254           Specifies whether to load the builtin or the native (if
255           available) version of a DLL.
256           Example:
257           <screen>
258 <prompt>$</prompt> <userinput>wine --dll setupx=n foo.exe</userinput>
259           </screen>
260           See the <link linkend="dll-config">DLL chapter</link> for more details.
261         </para>
262       </sect2>
263
264       <sect2>
265         <title>--help</title>
266         <para>
267           Shows a small command line help page.
268         </para>
269       </sect2>
270
271       <sect2>
272         <title>--version</title>
273         <para>
274           Shows the Wine version string. Useful to verify your installation.
275         </para>
276       </sect2>
277     </sect1>
278
279     <sect1 id="environment-variables">
280       <title>Setting Windows/DOS environment variables</title>
281       <para>
282         Your program might require some environment variable to be set
283         properly in order to run successfully.
284         In this case you need to set this environment variable in the
285         Linux shell, since Wine will pass on the entire shell environment
286         variable settings to the Windows environment variable space.
287         Example for the bash shell (other shells may have a different syntax
288         !):
289         <screen>
290           export MYENVIRONMENTVAR=myenvironmentvarsetting
291         </screen>
292         This will make sure your Windows program can access the
293         MYENVIRONMENTVAR environment variable once you start your program
294         using Wine.
295         If you want to have MYENVIRONMENTVAR set permanently, then you can
296         place the setting into /etc/profile, or also ~/.bashrc in the case of
297         bash.
298       </para>
299       <para>
300         Note however that there is an exception to the rule:
301         If you want to change the PATH environment variable, then of
302         course you can't modify it that way, since this will alter the
303         Unix PATH environment setting. Instead, you should set the
304         WINEPATH environment variable. An alternative way to
305         indicate the content of the DOS PATH environment variable would
306         be to change the "path" setting in the wine config file's <link
307         linkend="config-wine">[wine]</link> section.
308       </para>
309         
310     </sect1>
311
312   </chapter>
313
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