Obtaining and installing dopewars

The dopewars source code and precompiled binaries for Intel and Alpha systems (in RPM format) are available from the main dopewars web page, at http://bellatrix.pcl.ox.ac.uk/~ben/dopewars/. Just follow the link from there to the download section. "rpm" is the RedHat Package Manager, a program for simplifying installation and upgrade of programs, and is part of the RedHat Linux distribution. If you are using a different distribution, it may be still be included, however. If you do not want to use "rpm", or the installation fails, then you can obtain the source code tarball and recompile the code from scratch.

Prerequisites: dopewars relies on the screen library ncurses ("new curses"), but otherwise aims to be usable without modification on a wide variety of Unix variants. It is developed and tested mainly on RedHat Linux systems.

RPM binary installation

The binary RPMs are built for Compaq (formerly DEC) Alpha and Intel (also Intel compatibles, such as AMD, Cyrix, etc.) systems running RedHat Linux 6.0. On other systems, these binary RPMs may refuse to install, or may run but then crash with mysterious segmentation faults due to library conflicts.
  1. Download the Alpha or i386 (Intel) RPM with your web browser. (If your browser is incorrectly set up, it may try and display the file, in which case tell it explicitly to save the file - Shift+Mouse button 1 in Netscape.)
  2. Become root on your Unix box (if you cannot become root, then you will probably not be able to use RPM installation, depending on how "rpm" is set up).
  3. Change to the directory containing the dopewars rpm, and install it with the command
    rpm -i dopewars-1.4.6-1.xxx.rpm
    (where xxx is i386 or alpha). If you have a previous version of dopewars installed, upgrade it instead with
    rpm -U dopewars-1.4.6-1.xxx.rpm

RPM source installation

This route is open to you if your system has "rpm", but the binary RPMs do not work on your system, or your machine is not an Intel or Alpha (for example, a PowerMac). It involves obtaining the RPM of the source code, and then building the binaries from it on your system.
  1. Download the source code RPM.
  2. Become root and change to the directory containing the new rpm.
  3. Build a binary rpm with the command
    rpm --rebuild dopewars-1.4.6-1.src.rpm
  4. Change to the directory which the binary rpm has been written to (check the output of the above - usually /usr/src/redhat/RPMS/xxx, where xxx is your machine type - for example, "i386" on Intel machines, "alpha" on Alphas)
  5. Install the binary rpm with the command
    rpm -i dopewars-1.4.6-1.xxx.rpm
    or upgrade an existing version with
    rpm -U dopewars-1.4.6-1.xxx.rpm

Tarball installation

If you don't have, or don't want to use, RPM, you can obtain the source code in gzipped, tarred ("tarball") format and recompile and install it yourself. This is also usually a necessity if you cannot become root (the superuser) on your Unix box.
  1. Download the source code tarball.
  2. Change to the directory containing the tarball and extract the contents with the command
    tar -xvzf dopewars-1.4.6.tar.gz
    (or similar).
  3. Change into the dopewars-1.4.6 directory, and read all the important documentation in there ;)
  4. Build the binary with the command
    make
  5. Become root and install the dopewars files with
    make install
    If you cannot become root, place the dopewars binary in the directory of your choosing, and when running it specify a location for the high score file where you have write access, with the -f command line option.

Last update: 30-9-99