Also maybe add something like
# explorer : A clone of the Windows interface, needed for certain applications and testing of the common controls.
--- Tom Wickline twickline2@triad.rr.com wrote:
I would like to thank everyone who has helped so far on this. If you see something out of pace please comment on it. If everything looks good ill send a patch to alexandre in a couple days after everyone has had time to look this over.
Tom
--------------------------- 2003/02/03
-- = files that are listed in this Doc but are not installed on my system.
- = files are in this Doc and on my system
@ = files that are on my system but not in the Doc # = files that are not in the Doc or on my System ( wineboot ) will be in future releases ?
-- dosmod : Deleted as of Jan 2001.
-- fnt2bdf : Discussed on Wine-Devel ( practically obsolete )
@ notepad : The windows Notepad replacement
@ progman : A program Manager for WINE.
@ regedit : A command-line tool to edit your registry or for important a windows registry to Wine.
@ regsvr32 : A program to register/unregister .DLL's and .OCX files. Only works on those dlls that can self-register.
@ uninstaller: A program to uninstall installed Windows programs. Like the Add/Remove Program in the windows control panel.
@ wcmd : Wine's command line interpreter a cmd.exe replacement.
@ widl : Wine IDL compiler compiles (MS-RPC and DCOM) Interface Definition Language files (into something useful for compiling Wine and Winelib apps, similar to wmc and wrc). Should also be able to generate typelibs (someday).
- wine : The main Wine executable. This program will load a Windows
binary and run it, relying upon the Wine shared object libraries.
# wineboot : This program is executed on startup of the first wine process of a particular user. wineboot won't automatically run when needed. Currently you have to manually run it after you install something. A list of what it currently does.
* wininit.ini processing * registry RenameFiles entries * RunServices* / RunOnce* / Run registry keys
-- winebootup : Now wineboot......
- winebuild : Winebuild is a tool used for building Winelib applications
(and by Wine itself) to allow a developer to compile a .spec file into a .spec.c file.
- wineclipserv : The Wine Clipboard Server is a standalone XLib
application whose purpose is to manage the X selection when Wine exits.
@ wineconsole : The purpose of wineconsole is to render the output of CUI programs it does so either thru a window (called the USER32 backend) or by using an existing unix shell (called the curses backend) the first backend is triggered when the app programmatically opens a console (AllocConsole) the second one is triggered on startup by using wineconsole myapp.exe instead of wine myapp.exe on the command line
- winedbg : A application making use of the debugging API to allow
debugging of Wine or Winelib applications as well as Wine itself (kernel and all DLLs).
@ winedump : Dumps the imports and exports of NE and PE (Portable Executable) files. DLL (included in wine tree).
@ winefile : A clone of the win3x filemanager.
@ winegcc/wineg++: Wrappers for gcc/g++ respectively, to make them behave as MinGW's gcc. Used for porting apps over to winelib.
- winelauncher : A wine wrapper shell script that intelligently handles
wine invocation by informing the user about what's going on, among other things. To be found in tools/ directory. Use of this wrapper script instead of directly using wine is strongly encouraged, as it not only improves the user interface, but also adds important functionality to wine, such as session bootup/startup actions. If you intend to use this script, then you might want to rename the wine executable to e.g. wine.bin and winelauncher to wine. the WINECONFDIR/config file.
@ winemaker : Winemaker is a perl script which is designed to help you bootstrap the conversion of your Windows projects to Winelib. In order to do thisit will go analyze your code, fixing the issues listed above and generate autoconf-based Makefiles.
@ winemine : A clone of "Windows Minesweeper" a demo WineLib app.
@ winepath : A tool for converting between Windows paths and Unix paths (useful for shell scripts ans such).
- wineserver : The Wine server is the process that manages resources,
coordinates threads, and provides synchronization and interprocess communication primitives to Wine processes.
-- winesetup : This is a Tcl/Tk based front end that provides a user friendly tool to edit and configure the WINECONFDIR/config file.
- wineshelllink : This shell script can be called by Wine in order to
propagate Desktop icon and menu creation requests out to a GNOME or KDE (or other Window Managers).
@ winewrap : Takes care of linking winelib applications. Linking with winelib is a complex process, winewrap makes it simple.
@ winhelp : When Windows (at least 3.0, but it may well have appeared in 2.0) was launched, a help system was designed. Help information is stored in .hlp files, and was viewed with winhelp.exe (16 bit application). When Windows 95 was launched, the same help system still existed (even it grew in complexity), and help was viewed by a 32 bit application (winhlp32.exe). Those help files (.hlp) are in fact generated by a specific build system, starting from RTF files, with some very styles to define the specific portions (pages, links...). When an application requires a specific help page to be displayed, it calls an API (WinHelp), specifying the name of the help file, and a information about what needs to be displayed (hence the context sensitive help). When the Internet wave was clear to the MS folks, they moved the help system architecture to HTML files (replacing the RTF sources). That are the .CHM files (basically, compressed HTML files and their embedded information - images, metafiles...), which are normally displayed by an OCX (which basically decompress the right files and ask IWebBrowser to display them).hh.exe (which is now the .CHM viewer) is just a wrapper to that OCX.
- wmc : Wine Message Compiler it allows Windows message files to be
compiled into a format usable by Wine.
- wrc : Wine Resource Compiler. It allows Winelib programmers (and Wine
itself) to compile Windows style resource files into a form usable by Wine.
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