(this software is considered unfinished, use at own risk)
- Boost
- Cog for code generation (
pip install cogapp
) - TCLAP (either system-wide or included in
include
) - Ronn for man page
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make -j4
$ sudo make install
$ cellar create foobar2000
$ cellar -b foobar2000 winetricks vcrun2012
# without the -b argument, cellar assumes you want to deal with ~/.wine
# you can manage which bottle that points to with this command
$ cellar activate foobar2000
# arguments passed to "cellar launch" are passed to wine
$ cellar launch /mnt/windows/foobar2000/foobar2000.exe
- Corking: Saves a bottle's configuration, including any pressed installers (see below) or installed winetricks, to a directory, then removes the WINE bottle from disk. You can then easily rebuild that WINE bottle later by uncorking it, which will automatically rebuild the WINE bottle with your active (or specified) version of WINE, as well as install any saved winetricks or run any pressed installers.
- Pressed Installers: Saves a copy of an installer to
~/.local/share/cellar
, writes it down in the bottle configuration, then runs it within your WINE bottle. If you choose to cork this bottle later, this installer will automatically be run after uncorking. If the installer comes with "unattended install" arguments, it's recommended you press those in too. - Easy WINE and bottle management: Need a specific bottle for a specific program?
cellar -b bottlename <command>
. Does the bottle need to run a specific instance of WINE?cellar config wine-path /opt/wine-specific/bin/wine
. Confused about which bottle is "active"?cellar active
will tell you. Different programs may need drastically different WINE configurations, but that doesn't mean you need the drastic headaches.
Cellar is available under the MIT license.