https://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43995
--- Comment #17 from mi.bar.2001@gmail.com --- (In reply to debianxfce from comment #16)
(In reply to mi.bar.2001 from comment #15)
(In reply to debianxfce from comment #14)
(In reply to mi.bar.2001 from comment #13)
I meant restarting both the mission and the game
Distribution kernels are slow and the 4.9 kernel very old. Make a non debug 1000Hz timer kernel from the 4.14.8 kernel at kernel.org. You have some threading problem and speeding up might help.
Okay, thank You for help. I think I'll just stick with what I have, I'm a Linux newb and I don't want to break my system while installing a new kernel. Thanks a lot! (Also, should I set the bug as resolved?)
Update your system to Debian testing. Debian stable is not stable, you break it with testing and unstable packages. Debian stable have years old buggy software. Distribution kernels are slow because of debugging code and 250 Hz timer.
With Synaptic install gdebi. With Gdebi you can install downloaded .deb packages easily. Give the root password when asked. Install sudo, build-essential, kernel-package, qt5-default, qt5-qmake, qtbase5-dev, qtbase5-dev-tools and pkg-config packages too. Add yourself to sudoers: su adduser username sudo Logout and login to make sudo to work.
The kernel configuration file of Debian Official kernel are available in /boot, named after the kernel release. Copy the .config file to the linux directory. Connect all your devices and run the command: make localmodconfig. You can use the command make defconfig too for creating initial .config file.
Use the command: make xconfig and check that you have enabled: Reroute Broken IRQ, Amd IOMMU, Virtualization KVM and 1000Hz CPU timer. I also disabled Swap, Kernel Debug, CPU Freq scaling , Cpu handling in Acpi, Used Bios to control CPU and devices. In the drivers/graphics/amdgpu enable cik support for a gcn 1.1 gpu and si support for a gcn 1.0 gpu.
Configuring wifi: https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Wifi
To prevent random kernel lock ups wit Ryzen cpus, enable RCU_NOCB_CPU and boot the kernel with the rcu_nocbs=0-X command line parameter. X is the cpu thread count -1.
Create debian kernel package: export CONCURRENCY_LEVEL=2 or use -j 2 with make-kpkg (number of threads in your cpu) fakeroot make-kpkg --initrd kernel_image
Add kernel_headers to the fakeroot command if you need headers.
Install the kernel package with Gdebi. Reboot.
I've upgraded my system: michal@PCMB:~$ inxi -bM System: Host: PCMB Kernel: 4.13.0-1-amd64 x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: LXDE (Openbox 3.6.1) Distro: Debian GNU/Linux buster/sid Machine: Device: desktop Mobo: MSI model: H110M PRO-VD (MS-7996) v: 1.0 serial: N/A UEFI: American Megatrends v: 2.C0 date: 04/20/2017 CPU: Quad core Intel Core i5-7400 (-MCP-) speed/max: 3000/3500 MHz Graphics: Card: NVIDIA GM107 [GeForce GTX 750 Ti] Display Server: x11 (X.Org 1.19.5 ) drivers: nvidia (unloaded: modesetting,fbdev,vesa,nouveau) Resolution: 1440x900@59.89hz OpenGL: renderer: GeForce GTX 750 Ti/PCIe/SSE2 version: 4.5.0 NVIDIA 384.98 Network: Card-1: Realtek RTL8111/8168/8411 PCIE Gigabit Ethernet Controller driver: r8169 Card-2: Atheros AR9271 802.11n driver: ath9k_htc Drives: HDD Total Size: 1250.3GB (9.8% used) Info: Processes: 150 Uptime: 13 min Memory: 795.7/7949.4MB Client: Shell (bash) inxi: 2.3.45