2 <title>Porting Wine to new Platforms</title>
3 <para>Porting Wine to different (UNIX-based) operating systems...</para>
5 <sect1 id="wine-porting">
12 (Extracted from <filename>wine/documentation/how-to-port</filename>)
16 <title>What is this?</title>
19 This note is a short description of:
24 <para>How to port Wine to your favourite operating system</para>
27 <para>Why you probably shouldn't use <symbol>#ifdef MyOS</symbol></para>
30 <para>What to do instead.</para>
35 This document does not say a thing about how to port Wine to
36 non-386 operating systems, though. You would need a CPU
37 emulator. Let's get Wine into a better shape on 386 first,
43 <title>Why <symbol>#ifdef MyOS</symbol> is probably a mistake.</title>
46 Operating systems change. Maybe yours doesn't have the
47 <filename>foo.h</filename> header, but maybe a future
48 version will have it. If you want to <symbol>#include
49 <foo.h></symbol>, it doesn't matter what operating
50 system you are using; it only matters whether
51 <filename>foo.h</filename> is there.
54 Furthermore, operating systems change names or "fork" into
55 several ones. An <symbol>#ifdef MyOs</symbol> will break
59 If you use the feature of <command>autoconf</command> -- the
60 Gnu auto-configuration utility -- wisely, you will help
61 future porters automatically because your changes will test
62 for <emphasis>features</emphasis>, not names of operating
63 systems. A feature can be many things:
68 <para>existance of a header file</para>
71 <para>existance of a library function</para>
74 <para>existance of libraries</para>
77 <para>bugs in header files, library functions, the compiler, ...</para>
80 <para>(you name it)</para>
84 You will need Gnu Autoconf, which you can get from your
85 friendly Gnu mirror. This program takes Wine's
86 <filename>configure.in</filename> file and produces a
87 <filename>configure</filename> shell script that users use
88 to configure Wine to their system.
91 There <emphasis>are</emphasis> exceptions to the "avoid
92 <symbol>#ifdef MyOS</symbol>" rule. Wine, for example, needs
93 the internals of the signal stack -- that cannot easily be
94 described in terms of features.
97 Let's now turn to specific porting problems and how to solve
103 <title>MyOS doesn't have the <filename>foo.h</filename> header!</title>
106 This first step is to make <command>autoconf</command> check
107 for this header. In <filename>configure.in</filename> you
108 add a segment like this in the section that checks for
109 header files (search for "header files"):
112 AC_CHECK_HEADER(foo.h, AC_DEFINE(HAVE_FOO_H))
115 If your operating system supports a header file with the
116 same contents but a different name, say
117 <filename>bar.h</filename>, add a check for that also.
123 #include <foo.h>
130 #include <foo.h>
131 #elif defined (HAVE_BAR_H)
132 #include <bar.h>
136 If your system doesn't have a corresponding header file even
137 though it has the library functions being used, you might
138 have to add an <symbol>#else</symbol> section to the
139 conditional. Avoid this if you can.
142 You will also need to add <symbol>#undef HAVE_FOO_H</symbol>
143 (etc.) to <filename>include/config.h.in</filename>
146 Finish up with <command>make configure</command> and
147 <command>./configure</command>.
152 <title>MyOS doesn't have the <function>bar</function> function!</title>
155 A typical example of this is the
156 <function>memmove</function> function. To solve this
157 problem you would add <function>memmove</function> to the
158 list of functions that <command>autoconf</command> checks
159 for. In <filename>configure.in</filename> you search for
160 <function>AC_CHECK_FUNCS</function> and add
161 <function>memmove</function>. (You will notice that someone
162 already did this for this particular function.)
165 Secondly, you will also need to add <symbol>#undef
167 <filename>include/config.h.in</filename>
170 The next step depends on the nature of the missing function.
178 It's easy to write a complete implementation of the
179 function. (<function>memmove</function> belongs to
183 You add your implementation in
184 <filename>misc/port.c</filename> surrounded by
185 <symbol>#ifndef HAVE_MEMMOVE</symbol> and
186 <symbol>#endif</symbol>.
189 You might have to add a prototype for your function.
190 If so, <filename>include/miscemu.h</filename> might be the place. Don't
191 forget to protect that definition by <symbol>#ifndef
192 HAVE_MEMMOVE</symbol> and <symbol>#endif</symbol> also!
200 A general implementation is hard, but Wine is only
201 using a special case.
204 An example is the various <function>wait</function>
205 calls used in <function>SIGNAL_child</function> from
206 <filename>loader/signal.c</filename>. Here we have a
207 multi-branch case on features:
212 #elif defined (HAVE_THAT)
214 #elif defined (HAVE_SOMETHING_ELSE)
219 Note that this is very different from testing on
220 operating systems. If a new version of your operating
221 systems comes out and adds a new function, this code
222 will magically start using it.
228 Finish up with <command>make configure</command> and
229 <command>./configure</command>.
235 <sect1 id="os2-wine">
236 <title>Running & Compiling WINE in OS/2</title>
239 Written by &name-robert-pouliot; <email>&email-robert-pouliot;</email>,
243 (Extracted from <filename>wine/documentation/wine_os2</filename>)
247 If you want to help the port of WINE to OS/2, send me a
248 message at <email>krynos@clic.net</email> I currently don't
249 want beta testers. It must work before we can test it.
252 Here is what you need to (try to) compile Wine for OS/2:
257 <para>EMX 0.9c (fix 2)</para>
260 <para>XFree86 3.2 OS/2 (with development libraries)</para>
264 <command>bash</command>, gnu <command>make</command>,
265 <command>grep</command>, <command>tar</command>,
266 <command>bison</command>, <command>flex</command>
270 <para><command>sed</command> (a working copy of)</para>
276 <para><command>diff</command> and <command>patch</command>
277 are recommended</para>
280 <para>Lots of disk space (about 40-50 megs after EMX and XFree installed)</para>
289 <prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>sh</userinput>
290 <prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>tools/make_os2.sh</userinput>
291 <prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>make depend</userinput>
292 <prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>make</userinput>
293 <prompt>$ </prompt><userinput>emxbind wine</userinput>
302 <para><command>configure</command> and <command>make depend</command> work...</para>
305 <para><command>make</command> compiles (with a modified
306 Linux <filename>mman.h</filename>), but doesn't
310 <para>signal handling is horrible... (if any)</para>
313 <para>EMX doesn't support <function>mmap</function> (and
314 related), SysV IPC and <function>stafs()</function></para>
318 XFree86/OS2 3.2 doesn't support
319 <function>XShmQueryExtension()</function> and
320 <function>XShmPixmapFormat()</function> due to the same
327 What needs to be redone:
332 <para>LDT (using <function>DosAllocSeg</function> in
333 <filename>memory/ldt.c</filename>) *</para>
336 <para>Implement <function>mmap()</function> and SysV IPC in EMX *</para>
339 <para>File functions, </para>
342 <para>I/O access (do it!),</para>
345 <para>Communication (modem),</para>
348 <para>Interrupt (if int unknown, call current RealMode one...), </para>
352 Verify that everything is thread safe (how does Win95/NT handle multi-thread?),
357 Move X functions in some files (and make a wrapper, to use PM instead latter),
361 <para>Return right CPU type, </para>
364 <para>Make winsock work</para>
374 <para>OS/2 have DOS interrupts</para>
377 <para>OS/2 have I/O port access</para>
380 <para>OS/2 have multi-thread</para>
383 <para>Merlin have Open32 (to be used later...)</para>
390 <!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
393 sgml-parent-document:("wine-doc.sgml" "set" "book" "part" "chapter" "")