<metapackage xmlns:os="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install" xmlns="http://opensuse.org/Standards/One_Click_Install">
<group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP3">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP3 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP3-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP3</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP4">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP4 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP4-Backports-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP4</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP5">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP5 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP5-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP5</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP6">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP6 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP6-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP6</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 15 SP7">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 15 SP7 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-15-SP7-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 15 SP7</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  <group distversion="SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 16.0">
    <name>SUSE Package Hub 16.0 one-click install</name>
    <summary>Install wine-staging</summary>
    <description>
    NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled.
See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension

If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo.

This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered.
    </description>
    <repositories>
      <repository recommended="true">
        <name>SUSE-PackageHub-16.0-Standard-Pool</name>
        <summary>Package Hub 16.0</summary>
        <description>Dummy repo - this will fail</description>
        <url></url>
      </repository>
    </repositories>
    <software>
      <item>
        <name>wine-staging</name>
        <summary>An MS Windows Emulator</summary>
        <description>Wine is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows
applications. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a
virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into
POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory
penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate
Windows applications into your desktop.


This WINE flavor contains the &quot;staging&quot; development patchset
on top of the regular Wine release.






You can run your Windows executables with it and write your Windows
programs under Linux and link against the WINE libraries. It is not
necessary to have a Windows installation to run WINE.

Refer to /usr/share/doc/packages/wine/README.SUSE. There is more
documentation available in that directory. Read &#x27;man wine&#x27; for further
information.

You can invoke wine by entering &#x27;wine program.exe&#x27;. Configure it by
running &#x27;winecfg&#x27;.</description>
      </item>
    </software>
  </group>
  </metapackage>