To install Vulkan for AMD, you will run the following command: Also, Mesa (OpenGL & 3d Driver) is installed as a part of the Manjaro installation. Drivers for AMD cards are built into the Gnu/Linux kernel as they were made open source a few years back. So next we need to install the DXVK ( Direct X to Vul Kan) dependencies. We’ve already installed the Wine dependencies, we also need a Vulkan capable GPU (anything made in the past 5-6 years should be fine), as well as a driver supported by DXVK. Installing Graphics drivers & DXVK/Vulkan Sudo pacman -S wine-staging giflib lib32-giflib libpng lib32-libpng libldap lib32-libldap gnutls lib32-gnutls mpg123 lib32-mpg123 openal lib32-openal v4l-utils lib32-v4l-utils libpulse lib32-libpulse libgpg-error lib32-libgpg-error alsa-plugins lib32-alsa-plugins alsa-lib lib32-alsa-lib libjpeg-turbo lib32-libjpeg-turbo sqlite lib32-sqlite libxcomposite lib32-libxcomposite libxinerama lib32-libgcrypt libgcrypt lib32-libxinerama ncurses lib32-ncurses opencl-icd-loader lib32-opencl-icd-loader libxslt lib32-libxslt libva lib32-libva gtk3 lib32-gtk3 gst-plugins-base-libs lib32-gst-plugins-base-libs vulkan-icd-loader lib32-vulkan-icd-loader Next, type (or copy & paste) the following command (yes all of it as one block) to install Wine and its dependencies: Next run a system update & refresh the mirrors: Either way save changes and close down the file. You may very easily find it’s already enabled by default (I re-installed Manjaro in a VM this morning and it was enabled). Just ensure you run the text editor as sudo, as otherwise you won’t be able to save any changes. Use a text editor (I prefer Nano (sudo pacman -S nano) a terminal-based text editor, but any will do, such as mousepad) to edit the /etc/nf file to remove the # sign in front of it like so: We do this by editing a text file to remove a # sign. First up, we need to enable the Multilib repository.
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