Building EDuke32 on Linux: Difference between revisions

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Submitted By: Casey Mynott (bigjeep95) Jan 6, 2007 11:30pm (British Columbia, Canada)
Submitted By: Casey Mynott (bigjeep95) Jan 6, 2007 11:30pm (British Columbia, Canada)


This information covers:


-Installation on Fedora Core 6 with the latest EDuke32 files
-Adding sound
-Adding the HRP (High Resolution Packages) <-- these are amazing and brings Duke Nukem 3d into the year 2000!


Note: You need an acutal copy of Duke Nukem 3D. The shareware vesion can be found here.[http://www.3drealms.com/duke3d/]
Notes:  
 
1. You need an acutal copy of Duke Nukem 3D. The shareware vesion can be found here.[http://www.3drealms.com/duke3d/]
 
2. I have HUGH problems using my ATI graphics card. After I switched to an older 64mb nvidia card and used the LIVNA drivers life was great. So, use an NVIDIA graphics card. Maybe one say ATI and Linux will be friends but that day is not here.




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'''Step 7 - Run the game!'''
'''Step 7 - Run the game!'''
If you have done everything correctly then the game should run great.

Revision as of 15:24, 7 January 2007

All Linux distriucbition do pretty much the same things but do them a bit differently. Below are some instructions for getting EDuke32 running on Fedora Core 6.



Building EDuke32 on Fedora Core 6

Submitted By: Casey Mynott (bigjeep95) Jan 6, 2007 11:30pm (British Columbia, Canada)

This information covers:

-Installation on Fedora Core 6 with the latest EDuke32 files -Adding sound -Adding the HRP (High Resolution Packages) <-- these are amazing and brings Duke Nukem 3d into the year 2000!

Notes:

1. You need an acutal copy of Duke Nukem 3D. The shareware vesion can be found here.[1]

2. I have HUGH problems using my ATI graphics card. After I switched to an older 64mb nvidia card and used the LIVNA drivers life was great. So, use an NVIDIA graphics card. Maybe one say ATI and Linux will be friends but that day is not here.


Step #1 - You need to aquire the source packages for EDuke32. You need both the eduke32 source and txbuild source files. Download them to your desktop from here. [2]


Step #2 - Create two folders on your desktop.

I chose to create "duke3d" and "build" folders. Why these names? Well, when you build the required EDuke32 files from the "duke3d" folder it looks to the "build" folder for required information.


Step #3 - Prepare Fedora Core 6 for the build process

Fedora needs some packages intalled before you can properly build the required files. So, what files do you need? Under Yum Extender GUI or in a terminal window you need to install the some files. Here's the list:

SDL

nasm

libstdc++


Step #4 - Building the EDuke32 files.

In a terminal window move to the duke3d folder you created ealier. In that folder all you should have to type is "make".


Step #5 - Confirm the files that were created.

Six files should have been created:

mapster32.map

mapster32.sym

mapster32 (executable)

eduke32.map

eduke32.sym

eduke32 (exectuable)


Step 6 - Combine all the files.

You need to have the origional Duke Nukem files and the newly created EDuke32 files in the same place. So, you could create a new folder on your desktop (example eduke32_linux) and copy the original game files and the newly created EDuke32 files their.


Step 7 - Run the game!

If you have done everything correctly then the game should run great.