this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2024
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Are there any open source Steam clients? Maybe it can be like Heroic, because desktop Steam is technically browser with specific website opened.

Steam and Valve has great Linux support, but it would be interesting to try alternative open source client.

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[–] tal@lemmy.today 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I assume not, but there is a command-line client, steamcmd. I used it the other day when I wasn't near a machine that I had Steam installed on to remotely install FTL on a machine via ssh that I had Steam installed on so that I could copy it to a remote laptop, which I didn't have Steam installed on (FTL is one of the games that doesn't use Steam for DRM)

I'd imagine that one could theoretically slap an open-source frontend on that.

EDIT: Also, graphical frontends aside, it doesn't even have readline/editline support, so running it via:

$ rlwrap steamcmd

...is already throwing a minimal open-source frontend on it that rather improves the experience.

EDIT2: I don't care that much about most of Steam, but I do wish that the downloader portion of Steam were open source so that I could push a patch to let one cap the number of concurrent TCP connections open. Normally, a saturated network connection will tend to allocate bandwidth evenly on a per-TCP-connection basis, and because Steam opens a ton of concurrent connections, it gets the lion's share of the connection...for Steam downloads, which are very much low priority, and which I don't want trying to eat up all the bandwidth.

EDIT3: There's apparently some Linux ncurses-based client that uses library injection to take over the graphical client, but that repo last saw a change 6 years ago, and I'd bet that it hasn't worked in a long time. Looking at steam_injector.c, It looks like it prevents XMapWindow() from running, so it should keep the graphical client from actually doing anything graphical.