/steam-rom-manager

An app for managing ROMs in Steam

Primary LanguageTypeScriptGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Steam ROM Manager

Build Status GitHub commit activity GitHub all releases Discord Chocolatey Crowdin

Overview

Steam ROM Manager (SRM) is a super flexible tool for adding non-Steam games to Steam in bulk and managing their artwork assets and controller templates. Added games could be ROMs for emulators, games from other stores such as Epic or GOG, or even not games at all. Have you always wanted your notes from junior year as a category in steam? If so that's pretty weird! But now it's possible.

For an overview of how SRM works see here. There is plenty of documentation available in the app's built in FAQ and documentation, and if you need further help there are expert users to be found on the SGDB discord under the Steam ROM Manager category and the SRM subreddit.

Check out the releases page for compiled downloads for Windows (exe, msi), macOS (dmg), and Linux (AppImage, deb).

The Windows version is also available as a Chocolatey package.

The Linux version is also available as a Flatpak at Flathub/steam-rom-manager. Linux caveats:

If you're on a Steam Deck we recommend setting everything up through EmuDeck, as it will install and automatically configure Steam ROM Manager and whatever emulators you want.

Support SteamGridDB

If you enjoy Steam ROM Manager and want it to continue to be useful consider supporting SteamGridDB's Patreon. SteamGridDB hosts all of the artwork Steam ROM Manager uses to make your Steam library the envy of the town, so we should probably help them keep their lights on.

Parsers

Parsers are the heart and soul of SRM. If Steam is the octopus, then these are its tentacles — reaching into your ROM directories and the databases and manifest files of other game stores and pulling out the games you want.

ROM Parsers

ROM parsers allow one to import shortcuts using search strings, e.g. games/${title}.@(iso|rvz), or in the case of the manual parser by specifying ROM locations directly.

Parsers Windows Mac OS Linux Description
Glob Parsing using simple glob style search strings
Glob-regex Parsing using reg-ex style search strings
Manual Parsing using a JSON file specifying locations

Platform Parsers

In addition to flexible importing of ROMS, SRM now has several platform parsers for importing from popular game stores:

Parser Windows Mac OS Linux Launch Modes
Amazon Games 🟦 🟦
  • Launch via Amazon Games
  • Launch via executable
EA Desktop 🟦 🟦
  • Launch via EA Desktop
  • Launch via executable
Epic 🟦
  • Launch via Epic
  • Launch via executable
GOG Galaxy 🟦
  • Launch via GOG Galaxy
  • Launch via executable
Itch.io
  • Launch via executable
Legendary
  • Launch via executable
Ubisoft Connect 🟦
  • Launch via Ubisoft Connect
  • Launch via executable
UWP/XBox 🟦 🟦
  • Launch via UWP
  • Launch via executable
Battle.net 🟦
  • Launch via Battle.net

✅ Implemented ❌ Planned 🟦 Store not present

We are open to suggestions and pull requests if you would like a platform parser added!

Artwork Only Parsers

Artwork only parsers allow you to change the artwork for existing non-SRM games. Put it simply they just change artwork, they don't add shortcuts.

Parser Windows Mac OS Linux Description
Steam Manages artwork for Steam Games
Non-SRM Shortcuts Manages artwork for Steam Shortcuts not added via SRM

For developers

Command Line Interface

SRM has a fully featured command line interface, documented in the wiki.

Building SRM

To compile this app, you'll need the latest Node.js and npm. Every script will need to be run from the project directory.

Before running any scripts, dependencies must be installed using:

npm ci

Unfortunately, because of an issue with better-sqlite3 you will most likely also have to run npm ci after building for windows if you want npm run start to work. Otherwise, you will likely see the runtime error better-sqlite3 is not a valid win32 application.

Scripts

All script must be run using npm run command. For example, npm run watch:renderer.

Script Function
postinstall Recompiles native apps to match Electron's NodeJS version if needed
start Launches compiled app
watch:main Compiles Electron app and watches for changes
watch:renderer Compiles a renderer for an Electron app and watches for changes
build:main Compiles Electron app in production mode
build:renderer Compiles a renderer for an Electron app in production mode
build:dist Runs build:main and build:renderer
build:win Compiles an executable installer for Windows
build:linux Compiles a deb package and AppImage for linux
build:linuxdir Builds an unpacked linux x64 version for use with flatpak
build:flatpak Builds a flatpak from the unpacked linux version
build:docker build:win and build:linux joined together
build:mac Compiles a dmg package for MacOS

Debugging an app

Run watch:main (usually once since one rarely changes anything in the main Electron process) and watch:renderer. Each command creates separate webpack instance which will watch referenced files for changes and will recompile app.

App can be run using start script or npx electron . (if you want to test the CLI use npx electron . [command] [flags]). After every recompile by watch:renderer, app can be refreshed using Ctrl + R, however watch:main requires need a restart.

Ctrl + Shift + I can be used to launch Chrome inspector once the app is running. This works even in the release version.

For Windows

Scripts must be run in this order:

npm run build:dist
npm run build:win

For MacOS

Scripts must be run in this order:

npm run build:dist
npm run build:mac

For linux

Scripts must be run in this order:

npm run build:dist
npm run build:linux

For linux flatpak

Unfortunately electron-builder does not yet competently build flatpaks, and the older approach using electron-packager and electron-installer-flatpak can't handle native modules. A work-around is to use electron-builder for the packaging step and electron-installer-flatpak for the actual flatpak creation.

First you need to run npm install -g @malept/electron-installer-flatpak (this can't be added as dev-dependency since it is not cross-platform and npm doesn't allow optional dev-dependencies).

Then

npm run build:dist
npm run build:linuxdir
npm run build:flatpak

In order for this to work you must have already installed flatpak-builder using your favorite package manager (e.g. sudo pamac install flatpak-builder) and run:

flatpak install flathub org.freedesktop.Platform//19.08;
flatpak install org.freedesktop.Sdk//19.08;
flatpak install org.electronjs.Electron2.BaseApp/x86_64/stable

Updating dependencies

Use npx ncu to list available dependency updates, and npx ncu -u target [target] to update, where [target] is either patch, minor, latest, greatest, or newest.