- Ubuntu Documentation
- Installing Wine
- Ubuntu versions of Wine (Recommended)
- Newer versions of Wine (Not Recommended)
- Initial Setup
- Installing Windows Applications With Wine
- To start/run Windows programs using Wine
- Uninstalling Wine Applications
- Configuring Wine
- Adding CD and DVD drives to Wine
- Adding applications to the menu
- Changing application specific settings
- Using Windows Themes/Skins In Wine
- Color Scheme
- Using Theme/Skins
- Fullscreen issues with overlapping Panel
- Instructions for using wine over remote X11 sessions
- Instructions for specific Windows programs
- Creating file associations
- Troubleshooting
- Error: Cannot change screen BPP from 32 to XX
- ‘dhtmled.ocx’ is missing or invalid
- Screen flickers to black when starting an application
- Related Wiki Pages
- 5 Tools to Help You Run Windows Programs in Linux
- Get the best of both worlds with these Windows emulators
- Plain Classic WINE
- Install WINE
- Install on Fedora
- Install on openSUSE
- Install on Arch Linux and Manjaro
- Lutris
- Install on Ubuntu and Linux Mint
- Install on Debian
- Install on Fedora
- Install on openSUSE
- Install on Arch Linux and Manjaro
- Play On Linux
- Install Play On Linux
- Available Windows Programs
- Crossover
Ubuntu Documentation
Wine allows you to run many Windows programs on Linux. Its homepage can be found at WineHQ.org. They also have an Ubuntu page with installation and build advice.
If you are running the latest release of Wine which is v1.6, you can get further assistance on the #winehq IRC channel on irc.freenode.net. First,
please consider if you really need to run the specific Windows program because in most cases, its equivalent can be provided by an OpenSource program. Also, consider using Qemu instead of Wine if you need a complete Windows installation.
Installing Wine
Ubuntu versions of Wine (Recommended)
- open the software center
- Type wine and install ‘wine’
Newer versions of Wine (Not Recommended)
The Wine Ubuntu repository provides the newest development versions of Wine. Follow these steps to add the repository to your software sources:
- Open a terminal and run these commands:
sudo apt-key add winehq.key
sudo apt-add-repository 'https://dl.winehq.org/wine-builds/ubuntu/'
Note, however, that these are development packages (ie beta software), and may suffer from regressions and other problems not present in the stable version of Wine included with Ubuntu. You should avoid using them unless the current stable version of Wine does not support or is incompatible with the application you wish to use.
If you are using an older version of Wine and want support from WineHQ, you will need to upgrade to the latest development version first. If you do this, however, please file associated Wine bugs at winehq’s Bugzilla Page rather than in Launchpad.
Initial Setup
Before using Wine, it is necessary to create the fake C: drive where your Windows applications will be installed. To do this, enter the following command into the terminal: You may find the terminal by going to Applications -> Accessories -> Terminal
You also have the option of configuring Wine via the Configure Wine option in the Applications-> Wine menu.
This will create a hidden folder (.wine) in your home directory containing the fake C: drive as well as registry files similar to those used in Windows. Once this directory is created, the Wine Configuration Window will appear. This window will allow you to customize a variety of settings for Wine, including which Windows Version that is emulated, drive mappings, DLL overrides, as well as application specific settings. Click the Ok button to close the window.
Installing Windows Applications With Wine
To install Windows applications using Wine, follow these instructions:
- Download the Windows application from any source (e.g. download.com). Download the .EXE (executable).
- Place it in a convenient directory (e.g. the desktop, or home folder).
Open the terminal, and cd into the directory where the .EXE is located.
Type wine the-name-of-the-application.extension (e.g. wine realplayer_installer.exe).
This will start the .EXE using Wine. If it is an installer, it should then run as it would in Windows. If the application asks for a directory to install the application to, select put it under C:\Program Files.
To start/run Windows programs using Wine
After installing an application using the directions above, those applications can be started and used by entering wine programname.exe (e.g. wine realplayer.exe). When done, close the application as one would normally. You must run the installed executable, which will by default be in the virtual Windows drive created by Wine, at
/.wine/drive_c. Generally programs will install themselves somewhere under Program Files inside the virtual Windows drive, following Windows conventions.
You can also use the Wine file browser, by running winefile in a terminal. Clicking the C:\ button in the toolbar will open a window where you can browse the virtual Windows drive created in .wine. Doubleclicking an executable in the Wine file browser will run it in Wine.
Instead of having to always enter the terminal or use the Wine file browser, you may also create a desktop icon, and start a Wine application using that icon. To do this, right click on the desktop and select «Create a launcher.» If you wish, select an icon from the list of available icons (or browse to an icon you would like to use), fill out other information that is requested (Name, generic name, etc.). For the command, type in wine the-location-of-the-program.exe (e.g. wine /home/john/.wine/realplayer.exe). The most important part of creating a launcher is the command, the generic name is not as important. Just make sure you de-select «Run in terminal.» This completes the process.
In some cases the application requires to be running from a certain location. In this case create launcher with command
Of course you will need to replace USER and Appdir with the proper data.
If you desire to have an icon on the panel, create a launcher on the panel of choice. Do this by right-clicking the panel, selecting «Add to Panel,» and selecting «Custom Application Launcher.» This will ask you for the same information as before.
Alternatively, to make life easier, you can set it so wine will automatically open .exe files files for you — instead of using the Wine File to locate the file each time. To do so, right click on the .exe file, select Properties, and then select the Open With tab. Click the ‘Add’ button, and then click on ‘Use a custom command’. In the line that appears, type in wine, then click Add, and Close. Now all .exe files will be automatically opened by Wine, so you can use Nautilus to browse and open them instead of the Wine File.
Uninstalling Wine Applications
Open up a terminal window and type the command below.
What this will do is open up a program similar to the Windows add/remove programs control panel, allowing you to uninstall applications from a Wine installation. Running uninstall programs directly via Wine should also work normally. Alternatively, you could also simply delete the folder of the application. However, as when done in Windows, this method will be unclean and will not remove the program’s configuration from the Wine registry like using an uninstaller will.
Configuring Wine
On the command line or in Run Application, type winecfg
Adding CD and DVD drives to Wine
Go to the drives tab in winecfg. Hit the Autodetect button.
If you find that this does not work correctly for you, then follow these instructions:
Navigate to the drives tab
Click on Add.
In the path bar, type
Click Show Advanced button below the Browse. button and set the Type to
If you have more than one CD/DVD device you will need to identify each one differently. Use /media/cdrom0 for the first CD/DVD device, /media/cdrom1 for the second one, and so on. If in doubt, type the following command in your terminal.
What this command will do is check your CD/DVD device details after Wine is installed.
Adding applications to the menu
It is good procedure before setting up the menu entry to launch the new Windows program from the command line to make sure the program runs properly. To do this type this command in the terminal.
For example the command would be wine «C:\Program Files\World of Warcraft\WoW.exe» Once you are satisfied that you have the correct details, use the normal menu editing process to add a new entry. When you get to the Command field of the entry editor be sure to copy and paste the line you used to launch the program from the terminal. Finish and save the new entry. Test to make sure the new Windows program loads via the menu.
Changing application specific settings
Type this command into your terminal.
Click on Add Application.
Using Windows Themes/Skins In Wine
Color Scheme
You can change the wine color scheme to closely match the default Ubuntu colors with this Terminal command.
You may also want to create a backup copy in your Home folder with this command via terminal.
Replace the [Control Panel\\Colors] section with
Using Theme/Skins
Wine has basic handling for Windows theme/skin files in the «msstyles» format. There is a large number of these themes on Deviant Art. To use these you must make a folder in Wine’s virtual Windows drive, then tell Wine to use the theme.
Firstly go into Wine’s virtual drive, which is usually «.wine/drive_c» in your Home folder (this is hidden, you may need to select View->Show Hidden Files in the file manager). Inside this folder go into the «windows» folder then make a new folder in there called «Resources». Enter this new folder and make a new folder called «Themes». Inside here you should make a folder for each theme you want, and put the files ending in «.msstyles» directly into them. For example, the full path to a theme file called sample.msstyles might be «/home/username/.wine/drive_c/windows/Resources/Themes/Sample/sample.msstyles».
Next you need to tell Wine to use your theme, so once again run this command in the terminal.
In the configuration window select the tab Desktop Integration and un-check out the Theme: box, which should now have your theme in it’s menu. After selecting the theme click Apply at the bottom to see how it looks (they don’t always display properly), then if you are happy click ok and you’re done!
Fullscreen issues with overlapping Panel
Sometimes the Panel overlaps your fullscreen application you’re running in wine. If you are running Visual Effects, the first solution you should try is to turn those off: Go to System -> Preferences -> Appearance, and click the Visual Effects tab. Select None, and your screen will flash. Try your full-screen application again. You may re-enable Visual Effects afterwards — just don’t forget to turn them back off when you want to run that application again!
If that does not work, then you will have to turn off the panels prior to running the application and restarting it afterwards, until a better workaround can be found. In Ubuntu the commands are gnome-session-remove gnome-panel and gnome-panel & respectively. In Xubuntu I understand they are killall xfce4-panel and xfce4-panel.
Instructions for using wine over remote X11 sessions
If you’re (trying) to use wine over a forwarded X11 session (ie Ubuntu is on one computer; you’re connected to it by ssh or another connection and you already have X11 forwarding set up to display regular Ubuntu applications on your remote computer) and the windows opened by wine are lacking fonts etc, the answer is here
Instructions for specific Windows programs
Some Windows programs have been tested on Ubuntu. They are listed below:
Creating file associations
If you want certain files to open in a windows application by clicking on them, the best way is to create a script. For example I want Adobe Flash project files (*.fla) to open in Adobe’s Flash editor if I double click it.
You can for example create a file using this terminal command.
Now paste the following example script in it, save and close gedit.
Make sure the file is executable with this command.
After you completed this go to an *.fla file right click it, properties, go to the “open with” pane, click add, add this line into your terminal and select the radio button.
Now if everything went ok, you can doubleclick the file and it will be openend in Flash 8.
Troubleshooting
Error: Cannot change screen BPP from 32 to XX
In some cases (mostly games) the application does not start and you get error: Cannot change screen BPP from 32 to 16 (or some other number).
In such case editing xorg.conf and CTRL-ALT-Backspace helps as is described on http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=649283
‘dhtmled.ocx’ is missing or invalid
It seems that in Ubuntu Karmic Wine(v1.0.1) registry isn’t configured correctly to use ActiveX component dhtmled.ocx. On some application this can cause error like this: «Component ‘dhtmled.ocx’ or one of it’s dependencies not correctly registered: a file is missing or invalid». So we must tell Wine where to find this file.
1. Download registry file:
3. Import the downloaded registry settings
file->import registry file->open
Screen flickers to black when starting an application
This is sometimes caused by a problem with the video driver not handling XRandR well. To see if this is actually a problem with XRandR, in a console, run:
If your screen blanks while running that command, then this might be the issue. To work around this issue, Wine can be configured to not use XRandR. To do so:
- Start Wine's Registry Editor.
- Navigate to "HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Wine\X11 Driver". You may need to create X11 Driver.
- Create a new key called "UseXRandR" and set it to "N".
See Wine Bug #15214 and Wine Wiki page UsefulRegistryKeys.
Related Wiki Pages
AdobePhotoshop - A guide for running CS4 under WINE.
Wine (последним исправлял пользователь grantbow 2019-11-27 22:56:38)
The material on this wiki is available under a free license, see Copyright / License for details
You can contribute to this wiki, see Wiki Guide for details
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5 Tools to Help You Run Windows Programs in Linux
Get the best of both worlds with these Windows emulators
Even though open-source software includes free tools, including email clients, office applications, and media players, you might need a software app that works only on Windows. In this case, use one of the tools listed here to run Windows apps on your Linux PC.
These tools are based on or use WINE. Aside from virtual machines, WINE is the only way to run Windows applications on Linux. There are wrappers, utilities, and versions of WINE that make the process easier, though, and choosing the right one can make a difference.
Plain Classic WINE
Doesn't require a Windows license to use Windows applications.
The simple core utility behind these tools.
This is the stable and officially supported version.
It doesn't always run the latest versions of Windows products.
Some games and applications run sluggishly.
Lacks helper scripts.
Doesn't have the latest patches and improvements.
WINE stands for Wine Is Not An Emulator. WINE provides a Windows compatibility layer for Linux that makes installing, running, and configuring many popular Windows applications possible.
Install WINE
To install WINE, run whichever of the following fits your Linux distribution.
On Ubuntu, Debian, or Mint:
Import the WINE developer key:
Add the repository. Replace eoan with your Ubuntu release.
On Debian, use the following example, replacing buster with the Debian release.
Update your repositories, and install WINE Staging:
Install on Fedora
Add the repository from the WINE developers. Replace 30 in the address with your Fedora release.
Then, install the latest WINE Staging release using DNF.
Install on openSUSE
openSUSE has WINE Staging in its repositories. To install it:
Install on Arch Linux and Manjaro
WINE Staging is in the official Arch repository. Install it normally.
Lutris
Easy to play games.
Manage configurations without hassle.
Get the latest versions of WINE.
Manage games in one place.
Takes a little setup on some distributions.
Focused almost exclusively on games.
When it comes to playing Windows games on Linux, there's no better option than Lutris. Lutris is relatively new compared to the other entries on this list, but it's more than earned its spot by making it just as easy to install Windows games on Linux as it is on Windows.
With Lutris, you can play games, like Overwatch, on Linux in only a couple of clicks. There's no need to know the technical details. Someone already did the hard work for you.
Lutris also integrates with other Linux gaming platforms, like Steam, to keep your game library organized. With Lutris, you can access all your games in one place. Lutris keeps separate configurations for each game, so it can manage multiple versions of WINE at once, using the ideal one for each game.
Installing Lutris is fairly simple too.
Install on Ubuntu and Linux Mint
Install the Lutris PPA:
Update Apt, and install Lutris:
Install on Debian
Add the Lutris repository configuration:
Then, import the Lutris signing key:
Finally, update Apt, and install Lutris:
Install on Fedora
Lutris is available in the default Fedora repositories. Install it with DNF.
Install on openSUSE
openSUSE has Lutris in its repositories too. Install it normally.
Install on Arch Linux and Manjaro
Arch also has Lutris in the main repository:
Play On Linux
Good gaming support.
Install multiple versions of WINE simultaneously.
Excellent community support.
Starting games in full-screen mode can sometimes cause crashing.
Error reporting is lacking.
Similarly to Lutris, Play On Linux provides a graphical interface for WINE. Play On Linux came before Lutris, and it offers many of the same features. Play On Linux is bare-bones and doesn't include support for Linux games. It takes a general approach, so you may find better office application support here, even though it's probably not as good as something like Crossover.
Install Play On Linux
On Ubuntu, Debian, and Mint:
sudo apt install playonlinux
On Fedora and CentOS:
sudo dnf install playonlinux
sudo zypper install playonlinux
On Arch and Manjaro:
sudo pacman -S playonlinux
Available Windows Programs
When you first run Play On Linux, a toolbar appears at the top with options to run, close, install, remove, or configure applications. You'll also see an installation option in the left panel.
You can choose from a number of applications, including development tools such as Dreamweaver, an assortment of retro classics such as Sensible World of Soccer, modern games such as Grand Theft Auto versions 3 and 4, the Half Life series, and more.
The graphics section includes Adobe Photoshop and Fireworks, and you'll find browsers in the internet section. The office section is a bit hit and miss. Those apps may not work.
Play On Linux requires you to have the setup files for the programs you are installing, although you can download some of the games from GOG.com.
Software installed via Play On Linux is generally more likely to work than software installed with plain WINE.
You also can install non-listed programs. However, the programs listed have been specifically configured to be installed and run using Play On Linux.
Crossover
Streamlined setup makes it easy for Linux newcomers to use Windows programs.
Reliable 24/7 customer support with the premium plan.
Applications take up more space on the hard disk due to how it handles containers.
Free trial is limited to 14 days.
Crossover is the only item on this list that isn't free. It's a commercial product based on WINE. Installers are available for Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, and Red Hat.
When you first run Crossover, you are presented with a blank screen with an Install Windows Software button at the bottom. When you click the button, a new window appears with the following options:
- Select application
- Select installer
- Select bottle
A bottle in Crossover is like a container that installs and configures each Windows application.
When you choose Select application, you'll see a search bar from which you can search for the program you wish to install by typing a description.
You also can browse the list of applications. A list of categories appears, and as with Play On Linux, you can choose from an array of packages.
When you choose to install an application, a new bottle suitable for that application is created, and you are asked to provide the installer or setup.exe.
Why use Crossover when Play On Linux is free? Some programs work only with Crossover and not Play On Linux. If you need that program, then this is one option.
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