CrossOver (software)

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CrossOver
Developer(s)CodeWeavers
Stable release
24[1] / 22 February 2024; 30 days ago (22 February 2024)
Operating systemLinux, macOS, ChromeOS
TypeCompatibility layer
LicenseProprietary, GPL, LGPL
Websitewww.codeweavers.com/crossover/

CrossOver is a Microsoft Windows compatibility layer available for Linux, macOS, and ChromeOS. This compatibility layer enables many Windows-based applications to run on Linux operating systems, macOS, or ChromeOS.

CrossOver is developed by CodeWeavers and based on Wine, an open-source Windows compatibility layer. CodeWeavers modifies the Wine source code, applies compatibility patches, adds configuration tools that are more user-friendly, automated installation scripts, and provides technical support. All changes made to the Wine source code are covered by the LGPL and publicly available. CodeWeavers maintains an online database listing how well various Windows applications perform under CrossOver.[2]

Versions[edit]

CrossOver Linux[edit]

CrossOver Linux is the original version of CrossOver. It aims to properly integrate with the GNOME and KDE desktop environments so that Windows applications will run seamlessly on Linux distributions. Before version 6, it was called CrossOver Mac Office. CrossOver Linux was originally offered in Standard and Professional editions. CrossOver Linux Standard was designed for a single user account on a machine. CrossOver Linux Professional provided enhanced deployment and management features for corporate users and multiple user accounts per machine. With the release of CrossOver Linux 11 in 2012, these different editions merged into a single CrossOver Linux product.

CrossOver Mac[edit]

In 2005 Apple announced a transition from PowerPC to Intel processors in their computers, which allowed CodeWeavers to develop a Mac OS X version of CrossOver Office called 'CrossOver Mac'[3]

CrossOver Mac was released on January 10, 2007.[4] With the release of CrossOver Mac 7 on June 17, 2008, CrossOver Mac was divided into Standard and Pro editions like CrossOver Linux. The Standard version included six months of support and upgrades, while the Pro version included one year of support and upgrades, along with a free copy of CrossOver Games. With the release of CrossOver Mac 11 in 2012 these different editions were all merged into a single CrossOver Mac product.

In 2019, macOS Catalina went 64-bit only and eliminated support for 32-bit programs and libraries. In December 2019 Codeweavers released CrossOver 19, providing support for 32 bit Windows applications on an operating system with no 32 bit libraries solving this problem.[5] The technique, known as "wine32on64", requires using modified LLVM to build additional thunk code that allows running 32-bit programs in a 64-bit wine.[6]

In early June 2023, CodeWeavers announced early stages of DirectX 12 support on macOS would be available in CrossOver 23.[7] At WWDC 2023, Apple announced the Game Porting Toolkit based on CrossOver to bring Windows games to macOS. Apple did not collaborate with CodeWeavers on this toolkit.[8][9] In September 2023, CodeWeavers released version 23.5 of Crossover which supports D3DMetal from the Game Porting Toolkit as well as the GStreamer media framework.[10]

Component's versions details[edit]

As example of the complexity of the final package:

  • CrossOver v19.0.0 (2019): Wine v4.12[11]
  • CrossOver v20.0.0 (2020): Wine v5.0
  • CrossOver v21.0.0 (2021): Wine v6.0, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.5, DXVK upstream (optional) v1.7[12]
  • CrossOver v21.1.0 (2021): Wine v6.3, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.5, DXVK upstream (optional) v1.7
  • CrossOver v21.2.0 (2022): Wine v6.3, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.5, DXVK upstream (optional) v1.7
  • CrossOver v22.0.0 (2022): Wine v7.0, VKD3D 1.3, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.5, DXVK upstream (optional) v1.8
  • CrossOver v22.1.0 (2023): Wine v7.7, VKD3D 1.5, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.7, DXVK upstream (optional) v1.8
  • CrossOver v23.0.0 (2023): Wine v8.0.1, Wine Mono 7.4.0, VKD3D 1.8, DXVK builtin (optional) v1.10.3, DXVK upstream (optional) v2.2, MoltenVK 1.2.3[13]
  • CrossOver v24.0.0 (2024): Wine v9.0, Wine Mono 8.1.0, VKD3D 1.10, DXVK builtin (optional) v?, DXVK upstream (optional) v2.?, MoltenVK 1.2.5.

Discontinued products[edit]

A standard copy of CrossOver now includes the functionality of CrossOver Games, CrossOver Standard, and CrossOver Professional editions. These older individual versions of Crossover have since been retired.[14]

CrossOver Games, announced on 10 March 2008, was a product intended to let users play a broad range of games by providing current Wine patches.[15] The expectation was that it would update on a weekly to monthly schedule in order to incorporate the latest Wine programming work being accepted. In contrast the general CrossOver Office product focused more on stability and productivity software, and had a much slower beta and release schedule. CrossOver Games wasn't able to release updates with enough frequency to justify its separate production track and was discontinued in 2012. It was merged back into a unified CrossOver product.

CrossOver Server was a specialized version of CrossOver Linux which allowed Windows applications to run on thin-client systems. It was discontinued in 2007 as many of its features were present in the CrossOver Linux Pro edition.

Software giveaway[edit]

On October 28, 2008 as the result of the Lame Duck Challenge, Codeweavers gave all of their products away for free. Codeweavers' main page was temporarily replaced due to the day's unusually high traffic.[16] According to CodeWeavers at least 750,000 product registrations were given away during October 28.[17]

On October 31, 2012, CodeWeavers had a second software giveaway, this one entitled "Flock the Vote".[18] CodeWeavers promised to have such a giveaway if 100,000 American voters would promise to vote on election day, in a nonpartisan bid to encourage activism. More than 100,000 people pledged, so CodeWeavers allowed any person in the world to download and register a copy of CrossOver Linux or CrossOver Mac.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Meredith Johnson (22 February 2024). "CrossOver 24 with Wine 9 in record time". Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  2. ^ "What Runs - CrossOver Mac and Linux". CodeWeavers. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  3. ^ "CodeWeavers Expands Developer Services, Enabling Future Windows Application Porting To Mac OS" (Press release). SAINT PAUL, MN: CodeWeavers. June 22, 2005. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  4. ^ "CodeWeavers Releases CrossOver 6 for Mac and Linux". Slashdot. January 10, 2007. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
  5. ^ Schmid, Jana. "So We Don't Have a Solution for Catalina...Yet". CodeWeavers.
  6. ^ Thomases, Ken (December 11, 2019). "win32 on macOS".
  7. ^ Cunningham, Andrew (2023-06-05). "New DirectX 12-to-Metal translation could bring a world of Windows games to macOS". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  8. ^ Warren, Tom (June 7, 2023). "Apple's new Proton-like tool can run Windows games on a Mac". The Verge. Retrieved June 7, 2023.
  9. ^ Johnson, Meredith (2023-06-06). "Wine comes to macOS: Apple's Game Porting Toolkit powered by CrossOver source code | CodeWeavers Blog". CodeWeavers. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  10. ^ "Change Log For CrossOver". CodeWeavers. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  11. ^ "Just Released! See the latest CrossOver bug fixes and features".
  12. ^ "Announcing CrossOver 21.0.0 | Announcements | Community Forums | CrossOver Support".
  13. ^ https://www.codeweavers.com/blog/mjohnson/2023/8/16/level-up-with-crossover-23
  14. ^ "CrossOver - Change Log - CodeWeavers". Archived from the original on 2012-08-19. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
  15. ^ White, Jeremy (2008-03-10). "Roadmap for 2008". Blogs. CodeWeavers. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  16. ^ Vaughan-Nichols, Steven J. (October 28, 2008). "Free (as in beer) CodeWeavers CrossOver Linux and Mac". Computerworld Blogs. Archived from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-03.
  17. ^ 2008.10.28 We Came! We Saw! We Burned to the Waterline!
  18. ^ Kruchowski, Anna. "CodeWeavers software free for download for 24 hours on October 31, 2012". CodeWeavers blog. Retrieved 29 October 2012.

External links[edit]