![]() Now, from inside DOSBox-X: imgmake win98hd.img -t hd_2gig -nofs Note that you’ll have to rerun the setcap command whenever you upgrade DOSBox-X.įrom a Terminal, run: dosbox-x -conf win98_nf Sudo setcap cap_net_raw+ep /usr/bin/dosbox-xĬheck that this worked: getcap /usr/bin/dosbox-x You’ll need the PCAP library to give DOSBox-X network access. However, if you encounter any issues or wish to use a different internet connection, set reallnic=list in the DOSBox-X config file and check the Network Interfaces List that DOSBox-X will show in the Bash terminal window. This is correct if you’re using Raspberry Pi 4’s integrated wireless LAN. These files enable NE2000 networking, with NIC 1 selected. # imgmount 0 -el-torito D -t floppy -fs none # If you have a bootable Win98 disc replace the above line with: # This also requires that you set realnic= to a suitable value for your PC - that should be 1 for Raspberry Pi 4 wlan ![]() # If you want networking in Windows, set ne2000=true. Now exit, because we’ll be using a custom config file for our Windows 98 shenanigans.īefore we get started in earnest, set Raspberry Pi’s desktop resolution to 1280×720 under Preferences > Screen Configuration, accessible from the main menu: this improves full-screen performance under Windows 98.ĭownload our win98_nf and nf files from The MagPi GitHub and put them in your home directory. Open a Terminal window and enter: sudo apt install automake libncurses-dev nasm libsdl-net1.2-dev libpcap-dev libfluidsynth-dev ffmpeg libavdevice58 libavformat-* libswscale-* libavcodec-*ĭOSBox-X should open at its Z: prompt. In this tutorial, we’ve put all our media images in our home directory, but you may wish to create dedicated CD and floppy directories to house them in. You can use another computer to image your discs and then copy them over, but if you have USB CD and floppy disk drives that play nicely with Raspberry Pi – not all do – then you can use dd in a Terminal window.įloppy example: dd bs=512 count=2880 if=/dev/sda of=win98boot.img It’s easiest to install Windows 98 from images, so we’ll want to copy both boot and install media. You’ll also need a boot floppy to run most versions of the installation disc. The Windows product key is the really important bit here as the software is useless without it: check for key stickers on your old laptop or desktop PCs. Perhaps this is obvious, but I'm not very familiar with Linux.That means you’ll have to find a second-hand or unsold stock copy – eBay is a good bet for this – or rummage through your loft for old installation discs. Go/src//google/gopacket/pcap/pcap_unix.go:34:18: fatal error: pcap.h: No such file or directory This is the message that I get when I run this command: #/google/gopacket/pcap Then I attempted to install ipxbox: $ go get $ cd $ go build ipxbox.go So, I installed Go: $ sudo apt-get install $ export $ export $ sudo apt-get install golang Games against real DOS machines connected to the same network. So emulated DOS clients should be able to play DOSBox clients canĬommunicate with each other on the server, but with this featureĮnabled they can also communicate with physical IPX nodes on theĬonnected network. Physical networks, in a manner similar to a VPN. DOSBox clients can connect to the server and play together.Ī unique feature is that it is optionally able to bridge to real Ipxbox is a standalone DOSBox IPX server written in Go. I started the ipx server and mounted the drive in DOSBox Z:\>ipxnet startserver 19900ĭrive C is mounted as local directory /home/pi/dos-games/ Ĭopyright 2002-2010 DOSBox Team, published under GNU GPL.ĬONFIG:Loading primary settings from config file /home/pi/.dosbox/dosbox-0.74.confĪLSA:Can’t subscribe to MIDI port (65:0) nor (17:0) I enabled IPX in the configuration file started DOSBox under Raspbian. I have DOS running LNE100TX (I can share the configuration files if that is helpful). My long-term-goal is to get Doom (version 1.1) running in 3 screen mode on a mix of hardware (1 x Pentium 3 under DOS 7.10 and 2 x Raspberry Pis under Raspbian).
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