steam-runtime
A binary compatible runtime environment for Steam applications on Linux.
Introduction
This release of the steam-runtime SDK marks a change to a chroot environment used for building apps. A chroot environment is a standalone Linux environment rooted somewhere in your file system.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chroot
All processes that run within the root run relative to that rooted environment. It is possible to install a differently versioned distribution within a root, than the native distribution. For example, it is possible to install an Ubuntu 12.04 chroot environment on an Ubuntu 14.04 system. Tools and utilities for building apps can be installed in the root using standard package management tools, since from the tool's perspective it is running in a native Linux environment. This makes it well suited for an SDK environment.
Steam-runtime Repository
The Steam-runtime SDK relies on an APT repository that Valve has created that holds the packages contained within the steam-runtime. A single package, steamrt-dev, lists all the steam-runtime development packages (i.e. packages that contain headers and files required to build software with those libraries, and whose names end in -dev) as dependencies. Conceptually, a base chroot environment is created in the traditional way using debootstrap, steamrt-dev is then installed into this, and then a set of commonly used compilers and build tools are installed. It is expected that after this script sets the environment up, developers may want to install other packages / tools they may need into the chroot environment. If any of these packages contain runtime dependencies, then you will have to make sure to satisfy these yourself, as only the runtime dependencies of the steamrt-dev packages are included in the steam-runtime.
Installation
All the software that makes up the Steam Runtime is available in both source and binary form in the Steam Runtime repository http://repo.steampowered.com/steamrt
Included in this repository are scripts for building local copies of the Steam Runtime for testing and scripts for building Linux chroot environments suitable for building applications.
Testing or shipping with the runtime
Steam ships with a copy of the Steam Runtime and all Steam Applications are launched within the runtime environment. For some scenarios, you may want to test an application with a different build of the runtime. You can use the build-runtime.py script to download various flavors of the runtime.
usage: build-runtime.py [-h] [-r RUNTIME] [-b] [-d] [--source] [--symbols]
[--repo REPO] [-v]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-r RUNTIME, --runtime RUNTIME
specify runtime path
-b, --beta build beta runtime
-d, --debug build debug runtime
--source include sources
--symbols include debugging symbols
--repo REPO source repository
-v, --verbose verbose
Once the runtime is downloaded, you can use the run.sh script to launch any program within that runtime environment.
To launch Steam itself (and any Steam applications) within your runtime, set the STEAM_RUNTIME environment variable to point to your runtime directory;
~/.local/share/Steam$ STEAM_RUNTIME=~/rttest ./steam.sh
Running Steam on ubuntu 14.04 64-bit
STEAM_RUNTIME has been set by the user to: /home/username/rttest
Building in the runtime
To prevent libraries from development and build machines 'leaking' into your applications, you should build within a Steam Runtime chroot environment. setup_chroot.sh will create a Steam Runtime chroot on your machine. This chroot environment contains development libraries and tools that match the Steam Runtime.
You will need the 'schroot' tool installed as well as root access through sudo. Run either "setup-chroot.sh --i386" or "setup-chroot.sh --amd64" depending on whether you want to build a 32-bit or 64-bit application.
Both roots can co-exist side by side. 32 bit steam-runtime libraries are installed into the i386 root, and 64 bit steam-runtime libraries are installed into the amd64 root.
Once setup-chroot.sh completes, you can use the schroot command to execute any build operations within the Steam Runtime environment.
~/src/mygame$ schroot --chroot steamrt_scout_i386 -- make -f mygame.mak
The root should be set up so that the path containing the build tree is the same inside as outside the root. If this path is not within the current user's home directory tree, it should be added to /etc/schroot/default/fstab
Then the next time the root is entered, this path will be available inside the root.
The setup script can be re-run to re-create the schroot environment.
Default Tools
By default, a build environment is created that contains:
- gcc-4.6
- gcc-4.8 (default)
- clang-3.4
- clang-3.6
Switching default compilers can be done by entering the chroot environment:
~$ schroot --chroot steamrt_scout_i386
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ # for gcc-4.6
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --auto gcc
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --auto g++
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --auto cpp-bin
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ # for gcc-4.8
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set gcc /usr/bin/gcc-4.8
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set g++ /usr/bin/g++-4.8
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set cpp-bin /usr/bin/cpp-4.8
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ # for clang-3.4
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set gcc /usr/bin/clang-3.4
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set g++ /usr/bin/clang++-3.4
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set cpp-bin /usr/bin/cpp-4.8
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ # for clang-3.6
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set gcc /usr/bin/clang-3.6
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set g++ /usr/bin/clang++-3.6
(steamrt_scout_i386):~$ update-alternatives --set cpp-bin /usr/bin/cpp-4.8