Difference between revisions of "WesnothBinariesLinux"
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These are builds of The Battle For Wesnoth for several SUSE Linux distributions, made for both i386 and x86_64 architecture. On SUSE Linux 10.1 and above, as well as on SLED, just use the zen-updater and add these directories to your available services (as ZYPP). On 10.0 and older, you can use YaST to add the installation sources. Furthermore, these packages are splitted into "wesnoth" (the game binary) and the data sets "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full". If you want to be able to play the game, "wesnoth-data-base" is all you need, but you will be missing the full experience, because wesnoth-data-full includes larger images and music. Downloading "wesnoth-data-base" only is meant for slow-bandwidth downloaders. However if you select "wesnoth" in zen-updater or yast, it will automatically select "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full" to deliver the full experience. If you have problems with these packages, or other questions, please contact [http://en.opensuse.org/User:Hhetter123 Holger Hetterich]. | These are builds of The Battle For Wesnoth for several SUSE Linux distributions, made for both i386 and x86_64 architecture. On SUSE Linux 10.1 and above, as well as on SLED, just use the zen-updater and add these directories to your available services (as ZYPP). On 10.0 and older, you can use YaST to add the installation sources. Furthermore, these packages are splitted into "wesnoth" (the game binary) and the data sets "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full". If you want to be able to play the game, "wesnoth-data-base" is all you need, but you will be missing the full experience, because wesnoth-data-full includes larger images and music. Downloading "wesnoth-data-base" only is meant for slow-bandwidth downloaders. However if you select "wesnoth" in zen-updater or yast, it will automatically select "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full" to deliver the full experience. If you have problems with these packages, or other questions, please contact [http://en.opensuse.org/User:Hhetter123 Holger Hetterich]. |
Revision as of 11:04, 6 October 2007
Contents
GNU/Linux
Not all Distributions are always at the state of the current release. If you want to be sure to have the current version, please get the sources and compile it yourself.
Arch Linux
- For the official pkg from [extra]:
pacman -S wesnoth
- dibblethewrecker also provides regular SVN snapshots. Please see [ http://dtw.jiwe.org/content.php?article.9 here] for details of how to access the repo. As development of wesnoth continues this repo is likely to follow the unstable branch.
Ark Linux
- Ark Linux includes an official wesnoth package, currently at version 1.3.4 Simply use the package installation tool to install the wesnoth package, or run
apt-get update; apt-get install wesnoth
(orapt-get -t dockyard-devel install wesnoth
if you wish to run the current development version of wesnoth with all other packages from the stable tree) - Users of other similar distributions can download the packages at the Ark Linux file server. They are likely to run on any rpm based distribution that uses a recent version of gcc (>= 4.0) and glibc (>= 2.4).
Debian
apt-get install wesnoth
oraptitude install wesnoth
- Official packages
- Wesnoth 1.0 backport for Sarge
===> about this backport, maybe an issue with an unresolvable dependancy, the "ttf-dejavu" package which is required but does not belong to sarge main archive. If someone could confirm ? [ 4 october 2005 ]This package is required but it is in backports for sarge "deb http://www.backports.org/debian/ sarge-backports main" and works without any problems [24.05.2006].
====> 8 October: adding
deb http://ftp.tr.debian.org/debian/ unstable main deb-src http://ftp.tr.debian.org/debian/ unstable main
to /etc/apt/sources.list,
Package: wesnoth Pin: version 1.0-1sarge* Pin-Priority: 1001 Package: wesnoth-data Pin: version 1.0-1sarge* Pin-Priority: 1001 Package: * Pin: release a=stable Pin-Priority: 700 Package: * Pin: release a=testing Pin-Priority: 650 Package: * Pin: release a=unstable Pin-Priority: 600
to /etc/apt/preferences and then installing ttf-dejavu with
apt-get install -t unstable ttf-dejavu
worked for me ;-)
Compiling
If you want to install the latest Development version you may have to compile it yourself. See Compiling Wesnoth.
To install the dependencies :
aptitude install libsdl1.2-dev libsdl-image1.2-dev libsdl-mixer1.2-dev libsdl-net1.2-dev libfreetype6-dev
Remains one package : libintl which isn't in the Debian packages database, but I think you can install it by
aptitude install gettext
If someone may confirm that ... (Confirmed under Ubuntu 6.06 LTS but make sure that g++ and make are installed too.)
To compile it : If you have already installed and older version of wesnoth, uninstall it by :
aptitude purge wesnoth
Note that will remove all your wesnoth configuration. Then, download the source by wget, or your internet navigator. Save it in the /usr/src directory. Now, it's very easy :
cd /usr/src tar -xvzf wesnoth-1.x.x.tar.gz cd wesnoth-1.x.x ./configure make make install
You may have more information about this part in the Compiling Wesnoth page.
Ubuntu
Feisty
There is a version 1.2.6 available at the GetDeb.net for both 32bit and 64bit Feistys.
Battle for Wesnoth 1.2.3-1 is included in the Ubuntu 7.04 (Feisty's) universe collection. It works very well. You can install via System->Administration->Synaptic, via Applications->Add/Remove or aptitude/apt-get.
See the Ubuntu Starter Guide's section on adding the universe repositories.
Edgy
There is a version 1.2.4 available at the GetDeb.net for 32bit Edgy.
Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft includes binaries for Wesnoth 1.1.8 in its universe repository, so if you're happy with this version, just upgrade to Edgy Eft. But be aware that this version is completely outdated and there is no official mp-server running for it. Better try to update to a more recent version, like one from the 1.2.x stable series.
Dapper
There is a version 1.2.3 available at the GetDeb.net for 32bit Dapper.
Battle for Wesnoth 1.0.1-1 is included in Ubuntu Dapper's universe collection. This is the (really old) stable release of the 1.0.x series. As this is not the latest version, Breezy users will need to do one of the following to obtain the latest version:
- Upgrade to the Dapper Drake, or
- Use the Breezy-Backports repository,
- Use an unofficial repository, or
- Build from the source per Debian above, or
- Use the generic binary for GNU/Linux found on the Download page.
Of these options, the final one is most likely the easiest at this time, while building from source is the most reliable.
Other
Do not attempt to install the debian package and associated dependencies using dpkg as you will break your environment! (Though we had no comment of anything in the system being broken after installing Wesnoth from a Debian rep, in fact the Debian binaries are exactly what is used for Ubuntu, too)
After considering the warning above, if you would still like to use more updated Wesnoth packages in Debian Etch on your installation of Ubuntu Edgy (notice that the following instruction itself might be flawed, in addition to introducing Debian packages to your installation):
- Add a Debian etch mirror to your /etc/apt/sources.list, e.g.
deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian/ etch main
- Add to /etc/apt/preferences, or create it with the following content
Package: * Pin: release o=Ubuntu Pin-Priority: 995
Package: wesnoth Pin: release o=Debian Pin-Priority: 996
Package: wesnoth-data Pin: release o=Debian Pin-Priority: 996
(You need to repeat this for each of wesnoth-music, wesnoth-server, wesnoth-httt, etc., just search for wesnoth in your normal package manager to get an idea which ones are needed, every campaign has its own package)
- Upgrade packages with apt-get or aptitude. Make sure that only wesnoth packages are upgraded from Debian repository.
Compiling
If you choose to build the source you should add the datadir flag to configure to ensure your installation puts the data in the same place as the official installation path:
cd /usr/src tar -xvzf wesnoth-1.x.x.tar.gz cd wesnoth-1.x.x ./configure --datadir=/usr/share/games ... make sudo make install
Fedora
Battle for Wesnoth is included in Fedora. The current version of Battle for Wesnoth is available for ppc, i386, and x86_64 architectures. If you have problems with these packages, or other questions, please contact the Fedora maintainer Brian Pepple.
To install simply run:
yum install wesnoth wesnoth-tools wesnoth-server
Gentoo
For the stable release just type:
emerge wesnoth
For the development release you will have to fetch an overlay, eg from this site:
http://www.dorf.wh.uni-dortmund.de/priv/markus/wesnoth-dev.tbz
extract it to your local overlay-directory and then type
emerge wesnoth-dev
The ebuild will be updated whenever the person creating the ebuild finds the time to do so.
Or if you're too impatient to wait and willing to take the risk of things blowing up, download
and extract the overlay, make a copy of the highest available ebuild version, but change the version number to
that of Wesnoth version you want (for instance, wesnoth-dev-1.3.2.ebuild might become
wesnoth-dev-1.3.8.ebuild ), run
ebuild [new ebuild file] digest
and then try to emerge. It may or may not work, depending on exactly how extensive the changes in the Wesnoth
source are--going from 1.3.2 to 1.3.8 this way worked for me.
For building from svn tree download the portage overlay from:
http://www.dorf.wh.uni-dortmund.de/priv/markus/wesnoth-svn.tbz
extract it to your local overlay-directory and then type
emerge wesnoth-svn
wesnoth-dev are the official development releases while wesnoth-svn will build straight from SVN-source tree to keep you up to date with the lastest changes and all the errors ;-) updating wesnoth-svn will not work ! you have to reemerge it each time you want to update !
KateOS
Packages of Battle for Wesnoth for KateOS can be downloaded from: sfery.org
You can also add this link: http://sfery.org/kateos/community-unstable to repo list and install BfW by updateos -i wesnoth
or by KatePKG graphical tool.
This is recommended way - all the necessary dependent packages will be downloaded and installed automatically.
Only version 1.3.6 of BfW is available.
Currently Battle for Wesnoth v1.3.6 is available in offcial KateOS repo (testing for now) [1]
klik
- The most easy way to testdrive BfW is provided via klik. klik enables clients to create distribution-independent binaries which require no "installation" (the base system remains untouched); its created "AppDir" bundles run even from USB stick or CD RW. klik support is pre-enabled on Knoppix and Kanotix Live CDs. Other distros need to install a small klik client (less than 20 kByte download, less than 20 seconds effort). See the klik FAQ for details. A BfW-specific klik website has links to help with the package. Once the klik client is installed, look at this:
- Wesnoth-1.0 stable Version: to "klik" it, type klik://wesnoth into your Browser
- Wesnoth-1.1.1 Development-Version: to "klik" it, type klik://wesnoth-latest into your Browser
Mandrake (cooker)
urpmi wesnoth
- Binary: ftp://ftp.free.fr/pub/Distributions_Linux/Mandrakelinux/devel/cooker/i586/media/contrib/
- Source: ftp://ftp.free.fr/pub/Distributions_Linux/Mandrakelinux/devel/cooker/contrib/SRPMS/
Slackware 10.2
sorry but the 10.1 isn't out. Don't worry the 10.2 is here \o/ enjoy
- Wesnoth 1.0.2: http://asteroid.celeonet.fr/wesnoth/
SuSE / OpenSUSE
These are builds of The Battle For Wesnoth for several SUSE Linux distributions, made for both i386 and x86_64 architecture. On SUSE Linux 10.1 and above, as well as on SLED, just use the zen-updater and add these directories to your available services (as ZYPP). On 10.0 and older, you can use YaST to add the installation sources. Furthermore, these packages are splitted into "wesnoth" (the game binary) and the data sets "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full". If you want to be able to play the game, "wesnoth-data-base" is all you need, but you will be missing the full experience, because wesnoth-data-full includes larger images and music. Downloading "wesnoth-data-base" only is meant for slow-bandwidth downloaders. However if you select "wesnoth" in zen-updater or yast, it will automatically select "wesnoth-data-base" and "wesnoth-data-full" to deliver the full experience. If you have problems with these packages, or other questions, please contact Holger Hetterich.
- OpenSUSE 10.3 One-Click-Install
- SUSE Linux 10.0 http://software.opensuse.org/download/games:/strategy:/turn-based/SUSE_Linux_10.0/
- SUSE Linux 10.1 http://software.opensuse.org/download/games:/strategy:/turn-based/SUSE_Linux_10.1/
- OpenSUSE Linux 10.2 http://software.opensuse.org/download/games:/strategy:/turn-based/openSUSE_10.2/
- OpenSUSE Factory http://software.opensuse.org/download/games:/strategy:/turn-based/SUSE_Factory/
- SLED 10 (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) requires an additional installation source including common required packages SLED is missing. First add http://software.opensuse.org/download/SUSE:/SLE-10:/SDK:/Extra/SLE_10/ , then add http://software.opensuse.org/download/games:/strategy:/turn-based/SLED10_SDK_Extras/ to your installation sources.
Xandros Linux
- This disto for wesnoth-1.1.1 works well with Xandros 3
- A distribution-independent binary (made with OBLISK) for any somewhat modern GNU/Linux on i386 is available:
- Here is a disto for version .7 that works with Xandros
- Xandros 3 has the distro for wesnoth .9 available through Xandros Networks
Yoper Linux
All versions built for Yoper 2.2.0-6, although they should install on 2.1. Please let kernowyon know via the Yoper forums if you get any problems Latest 1.0.2 version
1.0.1 version
Earlier version
Binaries for all distributions
- A distribution-independent binary (made with OBLISK) for any somewhat modern GNU/Linux on i386 is available:
- wesnoth-1.1.1-x86-Opkg.tar.gz
- wesnoth-1.0.1-x86-Opkg.tar.gz
- This is NOT a static binary distribution, it resolves dependencies at runtime.
- Wesnoth 0.8.8 static binary (by Yann): http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/wesnoth/wesnoth-i386-static?download (needs the source tarball for the data - run it with the path to the unpacked data as argument)