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About udev
udev is a device manager for the Linux kernel that gives the system access to various running hardware via device .rules
files also known as udev rules
.
udev rules are used to allow and manage the access to a specific devices, so without a proper udev rule some devices such as custom controller could not be used by RetroDECK nor by Steam or any other part of the system.
Read more on:
Important directories
/lib/udev/rules.d/
This directory contains the default .rules file
shipped by your system.
They should not be edited.
/etc/udev/rules.d/ or /run/udev/rules.d (depending on the system)
This directory contains custom .rules file
additions to those shipped in /lib/udev/rules.d/
and the administrator can add more rules into this directory.
If a .rules file
exist for the same device under /lib/udev/rules.d/
and /etc/udev/rules.d/
the /etc
version will always take preset over the lib
version.
Example of a .rules file
The content of a Merlin UTMS modem .rules file.
ATTRS{prod_id2}=="Merlin UMTS Modem", ATTRS{prod_id1}=="Novatel Wireless", SYMLINK+="MerlinUMTS"
A .rules file can also contain more the one devices example multiple 8Bitdo controllers:
# 8Bitdo F30 P1
SUBSYSTEM=="input", ATTRS{name}=="8Bitdo FC30 GamePad", ENV{ID_INPUT_JOYSTICK}="1", TAG+="uaccess"
# 8Bitdo F30 P2
SUBSYSTEM=="input", ATTRS{name}=="8Bitdo FC30 II", ENV{ID_INPUT_JOYSTICK}="1", TAG+="uaccess"
Controller udev projects
Valve's - Steam Devices
The Steam Devices package is usually installed when you install Steam on your system, it contains rules for the most common controllers.
steam-devices github
Game Devices udev
The following project is an effort to combine all game devices into one package but it is still early and several are missing.
game-devices-udev codeberg
Batocera udev
The Batocera project has also combined a list of other controllers that might be missing from the two projects above.
Batocera - Controllers github
Quick tips on udev installation
Administrator sudo access is needed
Installing a udev rule needs administrator root access with sudo and the rules should be put in either the /etc/udev/rules.d/
or /run/udev/rules.d
example from above.
- You can copy the
.rules
from terminal into the directory either from terminal or with a file browser. - The rules should be in the
.rules
file format and should be extracted from any.zip
.7z
.tar
or any other compressed format.
Reboot or reload rules
After a rule is added you will need to either reload the udevadm
from terminal by issuing the following command: sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
or just reboot the system.
- The udev rule should be added when the RetroDECK or any other software that you want access to the device is not running.
SteamOS or immutable systems
For SteamOS or other immutable systems udev rules might or might not persistent persist over SteamOS updates (we can't say for certain).