Well, that was easier than I expected... and generally quite useable.
My system/software: Debian 12, wine-staging 7.20, winetricks. Audio server is pipewire. MediaMonkey version: 5.0.5.2695
First, I just installed a 'portable' version of MM5 by running the windows installer with wine.
Next, I got winetricks. https://github.com/Winetricks/winetrick ... me-ov-file
in winetricks > windows components (cancel past the first screen)
(as per the guide)
https://www.mediamonkey.com/wiki/index. ... y_.2B_Wine
i installed:
(- gecko -- couldn't find)
- vb6run
- vcrun6
- vcrun6sp6 (just cos i know i need it elsewhere)
- wsh57 (there's no wsh56)
i did them all in one shot.
Next, as recommended by the guide i did:
sudo apt-get install winbind
That's it.
Basically it works pretty well. Playback can get a bit choppy when using GUI elements... and there's no devices connectivity, but it seems to work ok otherwise so far...
Media folder scanning works. Navigating my library seems fine. Can add playlists, can update file info.
Seems the GUI can get bit janky on first load sometimes, but just needs a resize or move it about a bit to correct it.
Lookup image caused a crash... so not too sure if fetching metadata is going to work either.
-- For my use-case it'll probably be OK since I like to have a portable install alongside my music collection, which is on a portable drive. I'm happy to do actual database management on Windows and just use MM5 in Linux as a player.
I should mention I've only played FLAC, not mp3 so can't vouch for whether it's necessary to install the MAD plugin that the guide recommends.
Incidentally, the portable install I made via windows DOES NOT work on linux. So, it seems I have to create a fresh one via Linux/Wine. Am hoping my windows systems can open this new portable version and database too then I can look towards importing my settings/playlists, etc from the old install. Yet to test this out... I have a feeling it's a path format problem, so maybe it won't be possible to have one portable install that is cross-compatible, we'll see.
-- side-note, maybe it's just me but I really don't find any of the players/library managers available on linux are anywhere near as good as MM, so I'm quite pleased to have a passable version to use.
Well, that was easier than I expected... and generally quite useable.
My system/software: Debian 12, wine-staging 7.20, winetricks. Audio server is pipewire. MediaMonkey version: 5.0.5.2695
[b]First, I just installed a 'portable' version of MM5 by running the windows installer with wine.
Next, I got winetricks.[/b] https://github.com/Winetricks/winetricks?tab=readme-ov-file
[b]in winetricks > windows components[/b] (cancel past the first screen)
(as per the guide) https://www.mediamonkey.com/wiki/index.php/Linux%2C_Wine_%26_MediaMonkey#Adding_MediaMonkey_.2B_Wine
i installed:
(- gecko -- couldn't find)
[b]- vb6run
- vcrun6
- vcrun6sp6[/b] (just cos i know i need it elsewhere)
[b]- wsh57[/b] (there's no wsh56)
i did them all in one shot.
Next, as recommended by the guide i did:
[b]sudo apt-get install winbind[/b]
That's it.
Basically it works pretty well. Playback can get a bit choppy when using GUI elements... and there's no devices connectivity, but it seems to work ok otherwise so far...
Media folder scanning works. Navigating my library seems fine. Can add playlists, can update file info.
Seems the GUI can get bit janky on first load sometimes, but just needs a resize or move it about a bit to correct it.
Lookup image caused a crash... so not too sure if fetching metadata is going to work either.
-- For my use-case it'll probably be OK since I like to have a portable install alongside my music collection, which is on a portable drive. I'm happy to do actual database management on Windows and just use MM5 in Linux as a player.
I should mention I've only played FLAC, not mp3 so can't vouch for whether it's necessary to install the MAD plugin that the guide recommends.
Incidentally, the portable install I made via windows DOES NOT work on linux. So, it seems I have to create a fresh one via Linux/Wine. Am hoping my windows systems can open this new portable version and database too then I can look towards importing my settings/playlists, etc from the old install. Yet to test this out... I have a feeling it's a path format problem, so maybe it won't be possible to have one portable install that is cross-compatible, we'll see.
-- side-note, maybe it's just me but I really don't find any of the players/library managers available on linux are anywhere near as good as MM, so I'm quite pleased to have a passable version to use.