Hi everyone! I'm using Ubuntu Dapper and today i build an individual kernel based on the vanilla sources for 2.6.16 with the CK Patchset. Everything works fine, except wine. Everytime i start an application with wine or just winecfg it needs a long time to come up. Winecfg e.g. needs about 2 minutes (with the default Ubuntu kernel abount 10s). During that wait time i can hear some knittering out of my speakers. This is the same with the default kernel but now it is slower - like the rest. ;( When an Application is up it works good. But why does it take so long?? Are there any specific kernel options i have to activate or deactivate? Any suggestions? And please excuse by fair english ;) Greetz, J?rg
J?rg wrote:>I'm using Ubuntu Dapper and today i build an individual kernel based on >the vanilla sources for 2.6.16 with the CK Patchset. >Everything works fine, except wine. Everytime i start an application >with wine or just winecfg it needs a long time to come up. >Winecfg e.g. needs about 2 minutes (with the default Ubuntu kernel >abount 10s). During that wait time i can hear some knittering >out of my speakers. This is the same with the default kernel but now it >is slower - like the rest. ;(What if you build your own kernel based on vanilla 2.6 *without* the CK patchset? If that doesn't show the problem, then maybe you've found a new test case for Con to look at, and you should email him. BTW, is this the procedure you're following: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=84174 (updated to use http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/ck/patches/2.6/2.6.16/2.6.16-ck12/ )? Odd question: do you have a lot of printers on your LAN?
I'll try to make a long story short. Suse 10.0 Wine 0.9.20 - from RPM Have in the past run Winetools - am no longer (I got smart) I have some funny things happening with my wine installation, for instance, I can no longer add Programs with winecfg, plus, only default settings lets me select Virtual Desktop. I uninstalled Winetools and Wine using the appropriate rpm command (I found it on winehq) and deleted the appropriate .wine directories, but feel that something in still wrong, like some remnant of wine was left in a directory somewhere. I'd like to use that RPM command to remove Wine again, but this time, I'd like to check everywhere to make sure nothing is left before I re-install - can someone tell me all the places that wine puts things? Also, obviously, I'm a bit new to linux and am not familiar with compiling (I strictly use RPMs) - would compiling wine give me different performance than installing RPMs? I've tried to compile before, and I keep getting dependencies errors - I've never actually been able to compile ANYTHING - it's like I didn't install a whole section of software from my Suse CDs - any advice (even a simple link to a website that can help me) would be much appreciated - I hate not knowing things. Thanks Derek "Never bet a Sicilian when death is on the line, Ha Ha Ha, Ha Ha Ha, Ha ..."