Steam under Linux: Difference between revisions
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First of all you have to set up a working Wine installation. | First of all you have to set up a working Wine installation. | ||
===Installing Wine=== | ===Installing Wine=== | ||
'''TODO:''' Add install guides for other popular distributions | '''TODO:''' Add install guides for other popular distributions. 'm I doing this right? | ||
====Arch Linux==== | |||
:See from [http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wine#Installation Arch Linux Wiki pages]. | |||
====Debian==== | |||
:See from [http://www.winehq.org/site/download-deb Wine's Howto pages]. | |||
====Fedora==== | |||
:See from [http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/AndreasBierfert/Wine Fedora Wiki pages]. Red Hat users must turn to their support provider. | |||
====Gentoo==== | ====Gentoo==== | ||
:Install Wine with <code>emerge wine</code>. In order to get the most recent Wine version you have to put <code>app-emulation/wine ~{arch}</code> into <code>/etc/portage/package.keywords</code>. Replace <code>{arch}</code> with the architecture of your linux installation, e.g. <code>x86</code> or <code>amd64</code>. (This step maybe has to be done for possible dependencies as well.) | :Install Wine with <code>emerge wine</code>. In order to get the most recent Wine version you have to put <code>app-emulation/wine ~{arch}</code> into <code>/etc/portage/package.keywords</code>. Replace <code>{arch}</code> with the architecture of your linux installation, e.g. <code>x86</code> or <code>amd64</code>. (This step maybe has to be done for possible dependencies as well.) | ||
:For more information about installing wine on Gentoo see [http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Wine Gentoo Wiki]. | |||
====openSUSE / SUSE==== | |||
:See from [http://en.opensuse.org/Wine openSUSE Wiki pages]. | |||
====Ubuntu==== | |||
:See from [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Wine#head-fcdabfb34a519fd7d3c13329e1920429c1a3f202 Ubuntu community documentation]. | |||
====Other distributions / manual installation==== | ====Other distributions / manual installation==== | ||
:There are packages for several other linux distributions and a source tarball available on the [http://www.winehq.org/site/download official download page]. | :There are packages for several other linux distributions and a source tarball available on the [http://www.winehq.org/site/download official download page]. You might also find a lot of good information from [http://wiki.jswindle.com/index.php/Installing_Wine Wine's official wiki pages]. | ||
===Installing required fonts=== | ===Installing required fonts=== | ||
:Steam uses the font ''Tahoma'' which is included in all Windows versions, but is not available on Linux. This will result in invisible text when running Steam without installing ''Tahoma'' first. | :Steam uses the font ''Tahoma'' which is included in all Windows versions, but is not available on Linux. This will result in invisible text when running Steam without installing ''Tahoma'' first. | ||
:The easiest way to work around this issue is to put a copy of <code>tahoma.ttf</code> from a Windows installation (<code>%WINDIR%\Fonts</code>) to <code>~/.wine/drive_c/windows/fonts</code>. | :The easiest way to work around this issue is to put a copy of <code>tahoma.ttf</code> from a Windows installation (<code>%WINDIR%\Fonts</code>) to <code>~/.wine/drive_c/windows/fonts</code>. | ||
===Troubleshooting=== | |||
:If you are having problems you might want to take a look [http://wiki.jswindle.com/index.php/Installing_Wine Wine's official wiki pages]. If this doesn't help try find what kind of live support method does your distribution provides. You might find the solution for your problems from the distributions official forum, IRC channel or mailing list very efficiently. Try looking the distributions home page for more information. | |||
==Step 2: Installing Steam== | ==Step 2: Installing Steam== |
Revision as of 13:01, 30 July 2007
This should become a comprehensive guide to install and use Steam under a Linux environment. At least it should prove usable as one as long as Valve doesn't release a real Linux Steam client.
TODO: Add a guide to get Steam running and additional information
Step 1: Setting up Wine
First of all you have to set up a working Wine installation.
Installing Wine
TODO: Add install guides for other popular distributions. 'm I doing this right?
Arch Linux
- See from Arch Linux Wiki pages.
Debian
- See from Wine's Howto pages.
Fedora
- See from Fedora Wiki pages. Red Hat users must turn to their support provider.
Gentoo
- Install Wine with
emerge wine
. In order to get the most recent Wine version you have to putapp-emulation/wine ~{arch}
into/etc/portage/package.keywords
. Replace{arch}
with the architecture of your linux installation, e.g.x86
oramd64
. (This step maybe has to be done for possible dependencies as well.) - For more information about installing wine on Gentoo see Gentoo Wiki.
openSUSE / SUSE
- See from openSUSE Wiki pages.
Ubuntu
- See from Ubuntu community documentation.
Other distributions / manual installation
- There are packages for several other linux distributions and a source tarball available on the official download page. You might also find a lot of good information from Wine's official wiki pages.
Installing required fonts
- Steam uses the font Tahoma which is included in all Windows versions, but is not available on Linux. This will result in invisible text when running Steam without installing Tahoma first.
- The easiest way to work around this issue is to put a copy of
tahoma.ttf
from a Windows installation (%WINDIR%\Fonts
) to~/.wine/drive_c/windows/fonts
.
Troubleshooting
- If you are having problems you might want to take a look Wine's official wiki pages. If this doesn't help try find what kind of live support method does your distribution provides. You might find the solution for your problems from the distributions official forum, IRC channel or mailing list very efficiently. Try looking the distributions home page for more information.
Step 2: Installing Steam
Download the installer, open a terminal and change to the download directory. Run wine SteamInstall.exe
and follow the instructions. After that Steam is installed in Wine's "virtual" Windows drive, usually ~/.wine/drive_c/Programs/Valve/Steam
.
- with newer versions of wine you have to copy tahoma.ttf to ~/.wine/drive_c/windows/fonts/ ***

Known Issues
Minimizing Steam
- Minimizing Steam causes the X server to ignore your mouse / keyboard input. Don't minimize Steam to work around this issue, instead close the window and open it with the Wine Systray. If you accidently minimize Steam you either have to restart the X server / computer or you can log-in from another computer (e.g. SSH) and kill steam.exe processes.
Wine, Steam & ntfs-3g
- ntfs-3g is a powerful user-mode driver for Linux which is capable of almost all file operations on NTFS partitions. Sadly, ntfs-3g and/or Wine are currently unable to work with a NTFS-based installation of Steam. Steam will crash with the following error:
Steam.exe (main exception): Cannot open blob archive file: CMultiFieldBlob(mem-mapped file): Failed to MapViewOfFile
- Creating a Symlink to
SteamApps
on a NTFS partition doesn't work either. Steam will start up, but your GCFs will get corrupted or - if you're lucky - Steam only assumes they are corrupted. So you won't get around having duplicate GCFs for Linux and Windows if you plan on using Steam with both operating systems and having NTFS partitions for Windows.
See also
- Wine HQ (official Wine homepage)
- linuX-gamers.net guide
- TransGaming Inc. (home of Cedega - also known as WineX)