Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Alan W. Irwin

On 2013-05-20 20:24-0700 Alan W. Irwin wrote:


[...]For example:

wine@raven wine64
wine64: error while loading shared libraries: libwine.so.1: cannot
open shared object file: No such file or directory


I fixed this 1.5.30 issue by applying the patch at

http://source.winehq.org/git/wine.git/patch/ce4b6451aabbe83809c7483c748cfa009cc090d6

as suggested by Hugh McMaster

and then redid the WoW64 build recommended by
http://wiki.winehq.org/Wine64

For the 32-bit part of that, I tried the --without-freetype option
to get round the problem that the
two libfreetype6-dev:i386 and libfreetype6-dev:amd64 packages cannot
be installed simultaneously for Debian wheezy.  This allowed the configuration 
to
finish with a long shopping list of missing 32-bit development
packages.  Those appeared not to be fatal 
unlike the missing 32-bit freetype development package

which indeed turned out to be fatal.  Here is
that error message:

wine@raven wineconsole setup.exe
err:wineconsole:WINECON_Fatal Couldn't find a decent font, aborting


So here are my questions and further comments:

1. Is there a way to stick with a pure 64-bit Wine system, or is that
normally pretty useless because downloaded applications such as the
Cygwin installer which apparently is 32-bit, i.e.,

wine@raven file setup.exe
setup.exe: PE32 executable (GUI) Intel 80386 (stripped to external
PDB), for MS Windows, UPX compressed

wont run on it?


I would appreciate an answer to this question, and if the answer is a
standalone wine64 build should work, how do you run the above
setup.exe?



2. If the WoW64 configuration is really the best solution, what are
the consequences of dropping libfreetype from the 32-bit configuration
(but obviously including it in the 64-bit configuration).  IOW, if I
just say --without-freetype for the 32-bit configuration (suggested as
a possibility above by that error message) will the fonts be built and
installed by the 64-bit configuration that includes libfreetype?


I believe I have answered this one above.  Apparently it is still fatal
even though the fonts were (presumably) built and installed for the 64-bit part
of the WoW64 build since that had access to the installed 64-bit libfreetype
development package.



3. I would have liked to continue with pure 32-bit wine since that
was what I have been used to all these years, but it appears
wine-1.5.30 32-bit dependencies are really fearsome compared
to the relative modest 32-bit dependencies for wine-1.5.19 so this 
effectively

makes it impossible to build a standalone 32-bit wine system
on Debian Wheezy (because no fonts will be built if
--without-freetype is used) and might also compromise WoW64 builds
(see question 2 above).  It obviously doesn't affect pure 64-bit Wine
builds, but I couldn't get that to work at all at run time (missing
libwine.so.1 (see above)), but if there are workarounds for that
issue, then it still might be useless (see question 1 above).



So it appears a pure 32-bit build or WoW64
build of (patched) wine-1.5.30 is completely blocked because of the fatal lack 
of 32-bit
libfreetype library on Debian wheezy that can coexist with the 64-bit
version of libfreetype.  This was not an issue for my previous 32-bit
build of wine-1.5.19.  There remains a faint hope that a pure
64-bit build and install of wine-1.5.30 will work since there are no
missing dependencies, and the pure 64-bit build and install finishes without
errors.  But I will need some guidance in that case about how to use
such a pure 64-bit wine at run time to execute, say, the 32-bit
setup.exe.

Hugh McMaster's reply was already a help, but I need more comments
please.

For example, is there a patch that I could apply to get rid
of the fairly new constraint for 32-bit builds that there must be a
32-bit libfreetype development package installed?

Alan
__
Alan W. Irwin

Astronomical research affiliation with Department of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Victoria (astrowww.phys.uvic.ca).

Programming affiliations with the FreeEOS equation-of-state
implementation for stellar interiors (freeeos.sf.net); the Time
Ephemerides project (timeephem.sf.net); PLplot scientific plotting
software package (plplot.sf.net); the libLASi project
(unifont.org/lasi); the Loads of Linux Links project (loll.sf.net);
and the Linux Brochure Project (lbproject.sf.net).
__

Linux-powered Science
__




Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Frédéric Delanoy
On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 10:10 AM, Alan W. Irwin
ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.cawrote:

 Hugh McMaster's reply was already a help, but I need more comments
 please.


Maybe http://wiki.winehq.org/WineOn64bit could help?

Frédéric



Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Alan W. Irwin

On 2013-05-21 11:08+0200 Frédéric Delanoy wrote:


On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 10:10 AM, Alan W. Irwin
ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.cawrote:


Hugh McMaster's reply was already a help, but I need more comments
please.



Maybe http://wiki.winehq.org/WineOn64bit could help?


The idea there to install *.so symlinks manually might be a big help.
For example, Debian wheezy does allow simultaneous install of
libfreetype6:i386 and libfreetype6:amd64. (In fact, my system has
those both installed now.) It is the -dev versions of those packages
which cannot be simultaneously installed on Debian Wheezy. So the
appropriate symlink may be all I need (for quite a few packages where
the i386 library is installed, but not the -dev version with the
symlink).

I will try this symlink idea (which takes me back to my
first Linux install in 1996) later today after I get some sleep.

Thanks, Frédéric!  I think this might work.

Alan
__
Alan W. Irwin

Astronomical research affiliation with Department of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Victoria (astrowww.phys.uvic.ca).

Programming affiliations with the FreeEOS equation-of-state
implementation for stellar interiors (freeeos.sf.net); the Time
Ephemerides project (timeephem.sf.net); PLplot scientific plotting
software package (plplot.sf.net); the libLASi project
(unifont.org/lasi); the Loads of Linux Links project (loll.sf.net);
and the Linux Brochure Project (lbproject.sf.net).
__

Linux-powered Science
__




Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Ričardas Barkauskas

 The idea there to install *.so symlinks manually might be a big help.
 For example, Debian wheezy does allow simultaneous install of
 libfreetype6:i386 and libfreetype6:amd64. (In fact, my system has
 those both installed now.) It is the -dev versions of those packages
 which cannot be simultaneously installed on Debian Wheezy. So the
 appropriate symlink may be all I need (for quite a few packages where
 the i386 library is installed, but not the -dev version with the
 symlink).

 I will try this symlink idea (which takes me back to my
 first Linux install in 1996) later today after I get some sleep.

 Thanks, Frédéric!  I think this might work.

 Alan
 __
 Alan W. Irwin

If you don't care about building anything 64 bit installing
pkg-config:i386 while removing pkg-config:amd64 allows for
libfreetype6-dev:i386 and libfontconfig1-dev:i386 to be installed
without playing with symlinks. (Though maybe 64 bit building stuff still
works after this? )

REalm




Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread André Hentschel
Am 21.05.2013 10:10, schrieb Alan W. Irwin:
 On 2013-05-20 20:24-0700 Alan W. Irwin wrote:
 So here are my questions and further comments:

 1. Is there a way to stick with a pure 64-bit Wine system, or is that
 normally pretty useless because downloaded applications such as the
 Cygwin installer which apparently is 32-bit, i.e.,

 wine@raven file setup.exe
 setup.exe: PE32 executable (GUI) Intel 80386 (stripped to external
 PDB), for MS Windows, UPX compressed

 wont run on it?
 
 I would appreciate an answer to this question, and if the answer is a
 standalone wine64 build should work, how do you run the above
 setup.exe?

To finally answer this: pure wine64 can't run 32-bit applications, you need 
wine32 or a wow64 setup for this.




Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Alan W. Irwin

On 2013-05-21 21:22+0200 André Hentschel wrote:


To finally answer this: pure wine64 can't run 32-bit applications, you need 
wine32 or a wow64 setup for this.


Thanks for that important clarification.  That means I always need
32-bit as standalone or as part of wow64.  So regardless of that
choice I have to figure out the 32-bit library configuration
issues that have been introduced since wine-1.5.19.

To answer another responder (Ričardas Barkauskas), my system is almost
entirely 64-bit with many 64-bit development packages installed so I
can build lots of different 64-bit packages on Linux.  But wine is the
exception since from the above answer to my question, 32-bit wine is
always going to be needed, and that requires installation of 32-bit
libraries (which I only do because of my 32-bit wine needs).

Before, I straightforwardly built wine32 (e.g., for wine-1.5.19) with
minimal issues with linking to a relatively small number of 32-bit
libraries that were required at that time.  However, somewhere between
wine-1.5.19 and wine-1.5.30 (which I have patched as instructed for
the libwine creation issue that came up early in this thread for
1.5.30) much more stringent requirements for 32-bit libraries were
introduced for the 32-bit build, and this is a problem for Debian
wheezy because many Debian wheezy library -dev packages (which create
*.so symlinks to the shared libraries and which typically also provide
static libraries) are not multiarch aware.  The only way to beat this
that I am aware of is convert to a 32-bit system (which I definitely
don't want to do) or create the *.so symlinks to the 32-bit libraries
myself.  I have created a script to do that (in the user's standalone
build tree to avoid contaminating system areas).  After running that
script (attached if anybody else reading this thread in the future
finds it to be useful) I also execute

export LDFLAGS=-L$(pwd)

so those symlinks in the build tree are accessible to the linker.

The 32-bit wine-1.5.30 configure script results are now much better; I
have reduced the number of missing 32-bit libraries from ~30 to 5.
The associated configure messages are

configure: OpenCL 32-bit development files not found, OpenCL won't be
supported.
configure: libdbus 32-bit development files not found, no dynamic
device support.
configure: gstreamer-0.10 base plugins 32-bit development files not
found, gstreamer support disabled

configure: WARNING: libjpeg 32-bit development files not found, JPEG
won't be supported.

configure: WARNING: libpng 32-bit development files not found, PNG
won't be supported.

At least I now have access to the 32-bit version of libfreetype which
allows fonts to be generated.  I did the normal 32-bit build after
that configure step, and it looks like the result passes some minimal
tests such as being able to run winecfg.  However, when I tried
running the Cygwin setup.exe from wineconsole, there were lots of
warning messages about no png.  As a result, I plan to work some more
to get access to the 32-bit version of the png library before
configuring and building the 32-bit version of wine-1.5.30 again.

If that search for a way to get access to the 32-bit png library is a
success, the missing libraries will be reduced to 4. In the past for
32-bit builds I have gotten by without opencl and jpeg (according to
my dated notes) so I am not going to worry about them (unless someone
here advises me they have some importance I am unaware of).

Can somebody advise me about the importance (or not) of the remaining
two missing 32-bit libraries (libdbus and gstreamer)?  For example,
are they worth some extraordinary measures such as downloading the
binary i386 -dev package and extracting the static 32-bit versions
separately from that package?

Alan
__
Alan W. Irwin

Astronomical research affiliation with Department of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Victoria (astrowww.phys.uvic.ca).

Programming affiliations with the FreeEOS equation-of-state
implementation for stellar interiors (freeeos.sf.net); the Time
Ephemerides project (timeephem.sf.net); PLplot scientific plotting
software package (plplot.sf.net); the libLASi project
(unifont.org/lasi); the Loads of Linux Links project (loll.sf.net);
and the Linux Brochure Project (lbproject.sf.net).
__

Linux-powered Science
__

create_i386-linux-gnu_so_links.gz
Description: gzip compressed  bash script to create symlinks in the local directory for 32-bit libraries



Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Austin English
On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 6:17 PM, Alan W. Irwin
ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca wrote:
 On 2013-05-21 21:22+0200 André Hentschel wrote:

 To finally answer this: pure wine64 can't run 32-bit applications, you
 need wine32 or a wow64 setup for this.


 Thanks for that important clarification.  That means I always need
 32-bit as standalone or as part of wow64.  So regardless of that
 choice I have to figure out the 32-bit library configuration
 issues that have been introduced since wine-1.5.19.

 To answer another responder (Ričardas Barkauskas), my system is almost
 entirely 64-bit with many 64-bit development packages installed so I
 can build lots of different 64-bit packages on Linux.  But wine is the
 exception since from the above answer to my question, 32-bit wine is
 always going to be needed, and that requires installation of 32-bit
 libraries (which I only do because of my 32-bit wine needs).

 Before, I straightforwardly built wine32 (e.g., for wine-1.5.19) with
 minimal issues with linking to a relatively small number of 32-bit
 libraries that were required at that time.  However, somewhere between
 wine-1.5.19 and wine-1.5.30 (which I have patched as instructed for
 the libwine creation issue that came up early in this thread for
 1.5.30) much more stringent requirements for 32-bit libraries were
 introduced for the 32-bit build, and this is a problem for Debian
 wheezy because many Debian wheezy library -dev packages (which create
 *.so symlinks to the shared libraries and which typically also provide
 static libraries) are not multiarch aware.  The only way to beat this
 that I am aware of is convert to a 32-bit system (which I definitely
 don't want to do) or create the *.so symlinks to the 32-bit libraries
 myself.  I have created a script to do that (in the user's standalone
 build tree to avoid contaminating system areas).  After running that
 script (attached if anybody else reading this thread in the future
 finds it to be useful) I also execute

 export LDFLAGS=-L$(pwd)

 so those symlinks in the build tree are accessible to the linker.

 The 32-bit wine-1.5.30 configure script results are now much better; I
 have reduced the number of missing 32-bit libraries from ~30 to 5.
 The associated configure messages are

 configure: OpenCL 32-bit development files not found, OpenCL won't be
 supported.
 configure: libdbus 32-bit development files not found, no dynamic
 device support.
 configure: gstreamer-0.10 base plugins 32-bit development files not
 found, gstreamer support disabled

 configure: WARNING: libjpeg 32-bit development files not found, JPEG
 won't be supported.

 configure: WARNING: libpng 32-bit development files not found, PNG
 won't be supported.

 At least I now have access to the 32-bit version of libfreetype which
 allows fonts to be generated.  I did the normal 32-bit build after
 that configure step, and it looks like the result passes some minimal
 tests such as being able to run winecfg.  However, when I tried
 running the Cygwin setup.exe from wineconsole, there were lots of
 warning messages about no png.  As a result, I plan to work some more
 to get access to the 32-bit version of the png library before
 configuring and building the 32-bit version of wine-1.5.30 again.

 If that search for a way to get access to the 32-bit png library is a
 success, the missing libraries will be reduced to 4. In the past for
 32-bit builds I have gotten by without opencl and jpeg (according to
 my dated notes) so I am not going to worry about them (unless someone
 here advises me they have some importance I am unaware of).

 Can somebody advise me about the importance (or not) of the remaining
 two missing 32-bit libraries (libdbus and gstreamer)?  For example,
 are they worth some extraordinary measures such as downloading the
 binary i386 -dev package and extracting the static 32-bit versions
 separately from that package?

For your purposes, libdbus/gstreamer probably aren't important.

You should be aware that cygwin doesn't work terribly well under Wine,
however. There are several open bugs:
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12104
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19800
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19801
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19858
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19859
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21424
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24018

--
-Austin




Re: [wine-devel] Troubles configuring and building wine-1.5.30 on Debian wheezy

2013-05-21 Thread Alan W. Irwin

On 2013-05-21 18:27-0700 Austin English wrote:


On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 6:17 PM, Alan W. Irwin
ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca wrote:

Can somebody advise me about the importance (or not) of the remaining
two missing 32-bit libraries (libdbus and gstreamer)?  For example,
are they worth some extraordinary measures such as downloading the
binary i386 -dev package and extracting the static 32-bit versions
separately from that package?


For your purposes, libdbus/gstreamer probably aren't important.

You should be aware that cygwin doesn't work terribly well under Wine,
however. There are several open bugs:
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12104
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19800
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19801
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19858
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19859
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21424
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24018


Thanks, Austin, for that additional information.  In light of that
information I will just ignore libdbus/gstreamer and concentrate on
configuring access to 32-bit png.

The above list of cygwin-related issues seems pretty serious. I ran
into the setup.exe problem detailed by 24018 myself for wine-1.5.19
and also my latest 32-bit build attempt (without png) of wine-1.5.30.
I don't know how to work around 24018 (if that is even possible) due
to my lack of Cygwin experience so I couldn't evaluate the other
Cygwin issues detailed above.

This is my first experience with Cygwin (I only wanted to use it to
test software builds like was so successful for me with MinGW/MSYS
under wine-1.5.19).  However, in light of the above issues and my lack
of experience with Cygwin, I have decided to give up on Cygwin for now
and just continue with MinGW/MSYS builds and tests of my software
projects under Wine.  Of course, even for that case the wine-1.5.30
build issues that are the subject of this thread are still relevant so
I will continue with trying to figure out the png 32-bit library issue
and ultimately try to see whether I can obtain similar success for my
MinGW/MSYS software builds and tests under wine-1.5.30 like I
currently experience with wine-1.5.19.

Alan
__
Alan W. Irwin

Astronomical research affiliation with Department of Physics and Astronomy,
University of Victoria (astrowww.phys.uvic.ca).

Programming affiliations with the FreeEOS equation-of-state
implementation for stellar interiors (freeeos.sf.net); the Time
Ephemerides project (timeephem.sf.net); PLplot scientific plotting
software package (plplot.sf.net); the libLASi project
(unifont.org/lasi); the Loads of Linux Links project (loll.sf.net);
and the Linux Brochure Project (lbproject.sf.net).
__

Linux-powered Science
__