Open GuythatUhmCreatesRandomStuff opened 7 months ago
Why do you need it?
Why do you need it?
Why do you need it?
- To experiment.
- Just messing around in studio.
To use box64 you can compile it if you use it in your projects, or install Wine64 if you want to run any Windows or Linux application Compilation instructions can be found here Instructions for installing Wine for Box64 can be found here
Why do you need it?
- To experiment.
- Just messing around in studio.
To use box64 you can compile it if you use it in your projects, or install Wine64 if you want to run any Windows application Compilation instructions can be found here Instructions for installing Wine for Box64 can be found here
I have the glibc-box64 package on termux, do i have to use a proot ans then install the deb file? That deb file is buggy and cannot run any wine version beyond version 8 and the glibc can run the latest version but it is recommended to use 9.6
I have the glibc-box64 package on termux, do i have to use a proot ans then install the deb file? That deb file is buggy and cannot run any wine version beyond version 8 and the glibc can run the latest version but it is recommended to use 9.6
It seems you are trying to run x86_64 Linux or Windows programs on your Android device using Box64. However, there are a few challenges:
Box64 requires a Linux system to run, but Android is not a standard Linux distribution. It uses a modified Linux kernel and a different userspace (Bionic libc instead of glibc) According to this source. This makes it difficult to run standard Linux or Windows programs on Android.
You mentioned having the glibc-box64 package on Termux. While it's possible to build Box64 against glibc in native Termux by installing glibc and other dependencies
The deb file you have seems to be buggy and incompatible with newer Wine versions beyond 8. Using the glibc version is recommended, but you mentioned 9.6 is recommended. It's unclear if you can use the glibc version directly or if you need to use a proot environment.
In summary, while it's technically possible to run Box64 on Android using Termux and glibc, it requires a lot of manual work to build dependencies and may not be reliable. The standard way to use Box64 is on a native Linux system, not Android
If your goal is to run x86_64 Linux or Windows programs on Android, you may have better luck exploring alternative solutions like Android x86 or looking into Android's native support for running Linux or Windows apps in a container (Linux on Dex). But running standard Linux or Windows programs directly on Android is challenging due to the differences in the kernel and userspace
It seems you are trying to run x86_64 Linux or Windows programs on your Android device using Box64. However, there are a few challenges
However, there's some box64 alternatives i found for termux, First, you need to install the desktop to run a DE in your termux. Then you need to install the box64 alternatives, there's MoBox and Box64Droid. After you've installed them, you can run Linux or Windows programs.
It seems you are trying to run x86_64 Linux or Windows programs on your Android device using Box64. However, there are a few challenges
However, there's some box64 alternatives i found for termux, First, you need to install the desktop to run a DE in your termux. Then you need to install the box64 alternatives, there's MoBox and Box64Droid. After you've installed them, you can run Linux or Windows programs.
They don't work and support for hardware acceleration is really bad for Mali GPUs so i need a way to compile the app as an x86_64 app and run it using bash x64 or box64 directly.
Title says it all.