On 02/27/2012 02:59 PM, Dag Wieers wrote:
On Mon, 27 Feb 2012, Todd And Margo Chester wrote:

On 02/27/2012 02:23 PM, Dag Wieers wrote:

The 32bit packages are not in the 64bit repository, that's still an
issue. You can manually download the packages, or add the 32bit
repository and cherry-pick the wine-packages using includepkgs = wine*

Would there be an utility in removing the 64 bit wine packages
and only installing the 32 bit ones?

I don't think it exists. I am surprised you have a 64bit wine installed.
I was under the impression that a pure 64bit wine was unable to run
32bit applications. I will investigate...


Hi Dag,

   Does this help?

-T

$ rpm -qi wine
Name        : wine                         Relocations: (not relocatable)
Version     : 1.2.3                             Vendor: Fedora Project
Release : 1.el6 Build Date: Mon 11 Apr 2011 01:33:25 AM PDT Install Date: Mon 05 Dec 2011 01:05:45 PM PST Build Host: x86-07.phx2.fedoraproject.org Group : Applications/Emulators Source RPM: wine-1.2.3-1.el6.src.rpm
Size        : 0                                License: LGPLv2+
Signature : RSA/8, Mon 11 Apr 2011 03:37:25 AM PDT, Key ID 3b49df2a0608b895
Packager    : Fedora Project
URL         : http://www.winehq.org/
Summary     : A Windows 16/32/64 bit emulator
Description :
While Wine is usually thought of as a Windows(TM) emulator, the Wine
developers would prefer that users thought of Wine as a Windows
compatibility layer for UNIX. This package includes a program loader,
which allows unmodified Windows 3.x/9x/NT binaries to run on x86 and x86_64
Unixes. Wine does not require MS Windows, but it can use native system
.dll files if they are available.

In Fedora wine is a meta-package which will install everything needed for wine
to work smoothly. Smaller setups can be achieved by installing some of the
wine-* sub packages.

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