evdevhook
steam-devices
evdevhook | steam-devices | |
---|---|---|
7 | 24 | |
40 | 132 | |
- | 3.8% | |
0.0 | 0.9 | |
9 months ago | 3 months ago | |
C++ | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
evdevhook
- Nintendo Switch Pro Controller motion controls with yuzu
-
DS4Windows on Linux
By default, evdevhook currently has an axis inverted on the DualSense, which you can fix with a simple config file change.
-
Motion Control in yuzu?
As suggested at https://github.com/FrogTheFrog/steam-gyro-for-cemuhook/issues/47 you could try out using https://github.com/v1993/evdevhook. My Steam Deck arrives Q2 so I can't tell you if this works at all - would be cool if you/someone could tell us :).
- Motion control games and Xbox 360 on Steam Deck
-
TIL: you can use a PS5 controller as touchpad on Linux (out of the box)
Motion controls work. For emulators that need a cemuhook-style DSU protocol server, check out the evdevhook project.
-
DualSense on Lutris
I'm on POP OS and my dualsense controller works fine. I followed this guide though (https://christitus.com/ultimate-linux-gaming-guide/) to install the xanmod kernel which might have the dualsense drivers in it. When I finished setting up everything I just pressed the Share + Playstation button the dualsense controller then searched for devices on the bluetooth device manager. Besides that evdevhook (https://github.com/v1993/evdevhook) is good for motion controls on CEMU and Dolphin.
-
How do I enable gyro support for a switch pro controller on linux?
Joaorb64's joycond-cemuhook and v1993's evdevhook are probably your best options. I can't speak on either since I've used neither.
steam-devices
-
What is the point of Steam Linux runtime if in a clean opensuse install XCOM2, Dota Underlords or Artifact for example the game not work even using that
if you mean this ( https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-devices/blob/master/60-steam-input.rules ) in /etc/udev/rules.d , yes i did
- Silverblue and Gaming!
-
how to give a app (like Steam) access to /dev/hidraw* devices?
Create an udev rule for the device, you can copy the rule for your device from here.
-
Proton Controller Support or just Spelunky?
I am attempting to play Spelunky with a controller but I am not having any luck. Spelunky has a platinum rating on protondb and runs as expected. I am in a flatpak and I did install the udev rules from valve if any of that makes a difference. My controller works fine in native games.
-
How has your experience with Silverblue/Kinoite been?
I solved the problem by copying the 60-steam-input.rules file to the folder: /etc/udev/rules.d
-
how to install controller drivers / steam-devices package?
this is their Github: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-devices
-
Writing udev rule for nintendo switch pro controller
steam maintains udev rules for controllers that might help: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-devices/blob/master/60-steam-input.rules
-
PS4 Fightstick not recognized by Fedora/Steam
Here is my open PR for the hori alpha for reference: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-devices/pull/42/files
-
Anyone tried gaming/development on silverblue?
To use a controller with the Steam flatpak, you need to layer the steam-devices package from RPM Fusion, or download the udev rules from upstream and install them to /etc/udev/rules.d/ (which is what I did).
-
An X11 Apologist Tries Wayland
> The effort you need to go through to actually use these depends on how your distribution handles the file permissions of /dev/uinput. Some of them have it as root:input, in which case you just need to usermod -a -G input and then relog to get it working. Others have it as root:root so you either need to go do some reconfigurations to change its permissions or live with running the software using it as root.
There's a trick to that. The TL;DR is "install the steam-devices package or similar" (https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-devices/), which adds the following udev rule (and others, but this is the relevant one):
# Steam Controller udev write access
What are some alternatives?
cemu-no-gyro - Maps analog sticks to motion controls for Cemu.
com.valvesoftware.Steam
joycond-cemuhook - Support for cemuhook's UDP protocol for joycond devices
Simple-ArchLinux-Install-Guide - Archlinux manual and automated simple installation UEFI with GRUB,GUI,NVIDIA,AMD,User Space with all popular Desktop Environments.
steam-gyro-for-cemuhook - App to add Steam Controller's motion support to Cemuhook
game-devices-udev
OpenRCT2 - An open source re-implementation of RollerCoaster Tycoon 2 🎢
bluez - Main BlueZ tree
protonup - Install and Update Proton-GE
linuxmotehook2 - Cemuhook UDP server for WiiMotes on Linux
steam-for-linux - Issue tracking for the Steam for Linux beta client