Wiki/wiki-rtd/docs/wiki_development/flatpak/retrodeck-flatpak.md
2024-02-13 19:15:29 +01:00

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About Flatpak

Flatpak is a packing method available on Linux and provides a seperate sandbox environment from the main OS like chroot or a docker container.

The /app folder

The flatpak application is located and built inside the /app folder within this environment.

The real location of the /app folder in the hostOS is in the none writable path: /var/lib/flatpak/app/

In RetroDECK's case it is /var/lib/flatpak/app/net.retrodeck.retrodeck/

Writable folders

These folder are the only folders writable by a flatpak.

/var/data is linked to ~/.var/app/<FLATPAKNAME>/data
/var/config is linked to ~/.var/app/<FLATPAKNAME>/config

For RetroDECK:

~/.var/app/net.retrodeck.retrodeck/

~/.var/app/net.retrodeck.retrodeck/config/

~/app/net.retrodeck.retrodeck/data/

The Manifest file

Flatpak Manifests ( The manifest is an .yml with a set of instructions to tell the flatpak-builder cli tool how to build the flatpak. The manifest got an header and a body.

RetroDECK flatpak's name is net.retrodeck.retrodeck and it's defined in the manifest file

For RetroDECK:

net.retrodeck.retrodeck.yml on our GitHub repository's root.

The Appdata file

To be published on Flathub a appdata .xml file is needed that contains all the information for the store:

  • Official name
  • Website links
  • Screenshots links
  • Version
  • Patchnotes
  • Etc...

For RetroDECK:

net.retrodeck.retrodeck.appdata.xml on our GitHub repository's root.

Permissions

Additional permissions arguments can be defined in the manifest to give access to several features of the hostsystem. Flatpak developers are always adding new permissions but the goal of a flatpak it should only request as much as it needs and not be over permissive .

More on Sandbox Permissions Reference

All permissions can be even overridden by the user doing cli commands or using flatseal to add more permissions.

Example arguments:

finish-args:
  - --share=ipc
  - --share=network
  - --device=all
  - --filesystem=home
  - --filesystem=/run/media
  - --filesystem=/media
  - --filesystem=/media

In this example we're telling the flatpak:

Enable ipc and networking

--share=ipc
--share=network

Have access to all plugged in devices, such as controllers and webcams.

--device=all

Have access to file systems paths for the entire home catalog and plugged in Disks / SDCards and USB Storage.

--filesystem=home
--filesystem=/run/media
--filesystem=/media
--filesystem=/mnt

Example Flatpak Manifests

A good way to learn how to write modules is to search on flathub's GitHub for other modules to get an idea, however our manifest is more or less using every module type possible. What follows are two examples (note that providing a sha256 is mandatory):

  - name: rclone
    buildsystem: simple
    build-commands:
      - cp rclone ${FLATPAK_DEST}/bin/
    sources:
      - type: archive
        url: https://github.com/rclone/rclone/releases/download/v1.61.1/rclone-v1.61.1-linux-amd64.zip
        sha256: 6d6455e1cb69eb0615a52cc046a296395e44d50c0f32627ba8590c677ddf50a9

This module is:

  • Downloading the file from the defined url
  • Extracts it automatically as it's defined as a archive
  • Executing the build-commands, a copy in this case.

An example of a cmake-ninja module:

  - name: glslang
    buildsystem: cmake-ninja
    config-opts:
      - -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
      - -DENABLE_CTEST=OFF
      - -DENABLE_OPT=OFF
    cleanup:
      - /include
      - /lib/cmake
    sources:
      - type: archive
        url: https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glslang/archive/13.1.1.tar.gz
        sha256: 1c4d0a5a38c8aaf89a2d7e6093be734320599f5a6775b2726beeb05b0c054e66

This module is:

  • Downloading the archive
  • Extracting it
  • Setting the config options
  • Executing cmake-ninja
  • Deleting the paths defined in the cleanup.