Another options is to send copies of your software to Wine developers and hope they'll take an interest in getting it working. By far the easiest way is to file a bug at Bugzilla, along with a small testcase to add to the Wine test suite. Fortunately, there are many options available to you other than reporting bugs and hoping someone will fix them. If you are the developer or publisher of the application, you obviously have a very big incentive to help get your application working under Wine. Each application should have a supermaintainer, and, if different versions of the application are substantially different (such as in Adobe Creative Suite), each subversion should have a maintainer. ![]() If you are familiar with Wine, own a legal copy of the application, and have a desire to test it, help get or keep it working, and help other users, please apply by clicking the link in the application's page. If the application is in the database, but lacks a maintainer, you should consider volunteering. If the application that you want working is not listed in the AppDB there is an easy to use form available for you to add it. Also, be sure to vote for your favorite application so developers know where to concentrate their efforts. If you want to help get an application working in Wine, the first thing you should do is register yourself in the AppDB and fill out a test report, so others know what works/doesn't work. ![]() How to help get applications working in Wine For help with installing from a package or from source, please consult the Getting Wine chapter of the User's guide. In addition, full source code is available for both the current Wine development tree and every Wine release here. Links to binary packages for Wine for some of the major distros can be found at the WineHQ downloads page. It is best to uninstall your distribution's included package versions and update to the latest Wine version available here. Many Linux distributions come with an included Wine package, but due to Wine's rapid development rate these are usually old and often broken versions. If you haven't yet installed Wine, you should be fine. ![]() Translations of this page: Français Installing Wineīefore you install Wine, make sure that there is no previous Wine installation on your system, either from a package or from source.
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