Install wine oracle linux
Любая полезная информация, которая может когда-нибудь пригодиться.
вторник, 10 апреля 2012 г.
Установка Oracle Instant Client 11g в Wine
- установленный Wine (версия не ниже 1.2);
- ZIP-архив с Oracle Instant Client — instantclient-basic-nt-11.2.0.2.0.zip;
- ZIP-архив с утилитой sqlplus — instantclient-sqlplus-nt-11.2.0.2.0.zip.
Запускаем в любом эмуляторе терминала консоль Wine:
c:& mkdir oracle\instantclient\11.2.0.2\network
Распаковываем содержимое архивов instantclient-basic-nt-11.2.0.2.0.zip и instantclient-sqlplus-nt-11.2.0.2.0.zip в каталог $/drive_c/oracle/instantclient/11.2.0.2).
Запускаем regedit и по пути HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Environment создаем строковые параметры со следующими значениями:
NLS_LANG AMERICAN_RUSSIA.CL8MSWIN1251 ORACLE_HOME C:\oracle\instantclient\11.2.0.2 TNS_ADMIN C:\oracle\instantclient\11.2.0.2\network
Проверяем работоспособность sqlplus (выполнять из консоли Wine):
cd /d c:\oracle\instantclient\11.2.0.2 & sqlplus /nolog
Install wine oracle linux
13 фев. 2017 в 15:09
I’m learning to run SQL servers, so I’ve converted my laptop entirely to an Oracle Linux box — no more Windows — but I’m very novice in Linux. I still want to run steam (obviously) so I’m trying to install Wine. Oracle Linux doesn’t provide an easy «add» button for packages. I’ve been searching, but haven’t been able to find the .rpm to install the full package. Any help?
13 фев. 2017 в 15:22
First of all, Oracle Linux is based off Red Hat Enterprise Linux, you should be able to find information about third party repositories or if EPEL (Extras Packages for Enterprise Linux) from RPMfusion is supported under Oracle Linux.
Second, the native client should run fine on it, provides you have the dependencies covered, such as installing from EPEL.
I would hold on to installing Wine just yet, and first get more familiar with Linux in general and the environment. While Steam itself runs «fine» on it, some games (especially newer games) most certainly will not. Heck, even some 2D scrolling games struggle to render at even very low FPS (due to some features missing from Wine’s DirectDraw implementation, used by these games).
13 фев. 2017 в 15:35
I’m learning to run SQL servers, so I’ve converted my laptop entirely to an Oracle Linux box — no more Windows — but I’m very novice in Linux. I still want to run steam (obviously) so I’m trying to install Wine. Oracle Linux doesn’t provide an easy «add» button for packages. I’ve been searching, but haven’t been able to find the .rpm to install the full package. Any help?
I am not entirely sure why you want to install Wine to run Windows version of Steam. Unless you also want to also play those games which are not available natively for Linux from native Steam for Linux client.
You should just install the native Linux version of Steam for starters. Isn’t Oracle Linux based on RHEL/CentOS? It might be compatible with Negativo17.org’s Steam repository. By adding the yum repository information you can install Steam by running:
13 фев. 2017 в 17:06
The game I play most is Age of Empires II, by Microsoft. So that doesn’t work at all on anything else except Windows, or Wine. I have a tower I run everything else from, but every once in a while I need to just break out a game when I’m away from home!
13 фев. 2017 в 17:19
The game I play most is Age of Empires II, by Microsoft. So that doesn’t work at all on anything else except Windows, or Wine. I have a tower I run everything else from, but every once in a while I need to just break out a game when I’m away from home!
It ought to run as long as you can get Wine from somewhere and properly configure it. You should check EPEL: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL
Then you should be able to do:
To check that you’ve got it there and then:
13 фев. 2017 в 17:31
The game I play most is Age of Empires II, by Microsoft. So that doesn’t work at all on anything else except Windows, or Wine. I have a tower I run everything else from, but every once in a while I need to just break out a game when I’m away from home!
In that case, you may try and test your luck. Depending on the specs of your laptop and the version of AoE (HD, or traditional), generally speaking it sould run «fine» in Wine, even with HD 3000 graphics (Sandy Bridge) Intel integrated graphics. I’m not familiar with the HD version, and it may require a more advanced DirectX (9, maybe? Vs DX5 of the original release), in any case you can find how well it is supported on the Wine’s AppDB [www.winehq.org]
13 фев. 2017 в 20:47
17 фев. 2017 в 14:32
Heheh, Maleko is the Man ™ for Linux and PC gaming concerns — it never fails any time I come back to this list to see what I missed, I find a post or three like this.
The fact I don’t see a Valve official orange color next to his avatar icon is a reason I’ve backed off on thinking Valve is serious about supporting Linux directly with future AAA titles. I hope I’m wrong, but we’ll see. I already bought an HTC Vive VR paperweight based on their Linux support reputation thus far, and that has panned out to naught to this point. Or so close to naught, to be outright pedantic to argue in favor of.
17 фев. 2017 в 14:41
To be fair, VR is abjectly failing in it’s own right, completely independent of the Linux fail vs. win PC gaming going down simultaneous and unrelated to the hard VR fail.
17 фев. 2017 в 14:50
The last two posts might be largely a non-sequitur to the OP topic, but not really IMO.
Considering how hard not supporting direct emulation/re-implementation layers like Wine by Valve has failed to deliver. Maybe Valve should rethink that. That is, if they still even slightly care about increasing Linux PC gaming adoption past 1.8%, or whatever highpoint it stalled and reversed at.
18 фев. 2017 в 0:20
The last two posts might be largely a non-sequitur to the OP topic, but not really IMO.
Considering how hard not supporting direct emulation/re-implementation layers like Wine by Valve has failed to deliver. Maybe Valve should rethink that. That is, if they still even slightly care about increasing Linux PC gaming adoption past 1.8%, or whatever highpoint it stalled and reversed at.
I’ve been arguing that case here for years. Supporting a project such as WINE would be beneficial to the wider community. The problem with that is it’s beneficial to the wider community, Valve wouldn’t like improving WINE because it would enable non-Steam games to run.
The second problem is Valve don’t care about Linux. They care about their own platform, which they don’t really seem to care about these days.
19 фев. 2017 в 14:25
playonlinux is basically wine with easy to install applications for it including a compatible steam.
20 фев. 2017 в 14:20
The last two posts might be largely a non-sequitur to the OP topic, but not really IMO.
Considering how hard not supporting direct emulation/re-implementation layers like Wine by Valve has failed to deliver. Maybe Valve should rethink that. That is, if they still even slightly care about increasing Linux PC gaming adoption past 1.8%, or whatever highpoint it stalled and reversed at.
I’ve been arguing that case here for years. Supporting a project such as WINE would be beneficial to the wider community. The problem with that is it’s beneficial to the wider community, Valve wouldn’t like improving WINE because it would enable non-Steam games to run.
The second problem is Valve don’t care about Linux. They care about their own platform, which they don’t really seem to care about these days.
I appreciate your conspiracy theories, but I disagree. Not that I’m right, I just have a different outlook that may well be as wrong or more wrong than your opinion.
I think Valve just underestimated the uphill battle and over estimated the «steam» to support native Linux adoption on a wide enough scale to matter in the commercial terms they are looking for as a big time winner in the commercial world that want’s to see billions not millions in profit margins.
I think they actually thought native Linux adoption would be easier if they just got a large portion of devs and gamers on board and «let them do the hard work».
The problem is that didn’t happen in anywhere near the volume they would find interesting enough to call a «viable alternative» to Window’s billions being reaped upon them now.
So in light of that, I think if they spent more money officially supporting Wine types of Linux re-implementations of the undeniable king of Windows gaming APIs, they’d get farther along in making Linux a viable alternative to Windows.
The problem of course there is if MS actually saw Wine succeeding beyond less than 2% — or even suspected it was maybe a real possibility it would, they would sink billions of dollars into legal motions to squash it, to maintain their monolithic empire of PC gaming domination for all time (which is indeed the most likely thing to happen — Windows stays the undeniable dictator of PC gaming until I die).
20 фев. 2017 в 14:39
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Thursday, December 29, 2011
Oracle Linux and wine
For all people who like to run windows applications on your Linux workstation. Most of you would do a simple apt-get or yum command however if you are running a Enterprise Linux version like the Oracle Linux you might need to do some more things to get things working. if you execute a «yum install wine» on your Oracle Linux distribution you will not end up with a successful install of wine.
To be able to install wine on Enterprise linux you will have to make use of EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux). You can find more information on EPEL on the fedore website.
«Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (or EPEL) is a Fedora Special Interest Group that creates, maintains, and manages a high quality set of additional packages for Enterprise Linux, including, but not limited to, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), CentOS and Scientific Linux (SL).
EPEL packages are usually based on their Fedora counterparts and will never conflict with or replace packages in the base Enterprise Linux distributions. EPEL uses much of the same infrastructure as Fedora, including buildsystem, bugzilla instance, updates manager, mirror manager and more.«
You will have to install the EPEL rpm, update the yum repository list and then install wine. Below is a example of the steps needed. This might change depending on the version of Oracle Linux and your processor architecture however based upon the below you will have enough to get you started;
rpm -Uvh http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/6/i386/epel-release-6-5.noarch.rpm yum repolist yum install wine