I just put together my first dedicated Linux machine. Running Pop!_OS, and I've got a problem with Steam. I've tried installing it from the Pop Shop (i love that name), both the .deb and flatpak versions as well as sudo apt install steam
. In both cases, when I open the app it will just blink at me. Like the window is trying to maximize but then minimizes before it can get that far. I made sure that all my drivers look good and was just playing Starfield, so I know it's at least somewhat functional. What's weird is that it launched once for me. Long enough to get signed in. But after a reboot, it will not open unless I type steam --reset
from terminal. Then it opens just fine and acts like nothing happened. Of course if I close that terminal window, Steam closes. And if I don't do a reset, it will go right back to flashing at me again.
I've also noticed that games show "Cloud Status: Unable to sync" in the app. The following games are installed currently:
- The Outer Worlds: Spacer's Choice Edition
- Warhammer 40,000: Boltgun
- Starfield Premium edition All of these games show the cloud sync error. But when I checked the first two, the game save I had from my steam deck worked fine. But it still shows the error.
I tried opting into Beta to see if that might have some bleeding edge fix, nope. I'm still new to Linux and I'll admit I'm not even sure where to look for Steam errors specifically to give more details.
Hardware (in case it helps):
- AMD Ryzen 5 7600X
- 32GB G.Skill Flare
- Gigabyte B650i Aurous ITX
- WD Black 1TB boot drive
- Samsung Evo Plus 2TB storage
- Cooler Master 850w gold SFX PSU
- XFX 6700XT 12GB
Any ideas on what I can try? Or where I can find logs to better understand? I asked in the Linux Gaming sub…lemmy? at least about the cloud sync, but got no traction.
This is an issue/bug with steam trying to open with the dGPU. In the steam.desktop file, change the PrefersDedicatedGPU (might not be exactly worded like this) parameter from true to false. Though after using this, you might have to use the DRI_PRIME=1 with your games to make them use the dGPU
Edit : credit for this goes to a kind gentleman who helped with the issue 2 months ago when the new steam UI dropped.
These are the two options in steam.desktop that I see. I've tried setting both, one at a time, and then both simulanteously. Rebooting in between each change. I still can only get it to launch once to sign in and then it just sits in the task tray with no response from any of the menu items other than
exit
. Am I adjusting the right file? It was the only one that came up in a system-wide search.The line you are changing is the right one. Change the PrefersNonDefaultGPU option from true to false
https://lemmy.one/post/151466. Refer to this for the location of the file. This is for the native .deb package
Well this is frustrating… I changed it as referenced in your other thread and it still will not work. Since this is a new computer, it was no big loss to format the drive and start with a fresh install. But this time I installed EndeavorOS, since it's not Ubuntu-based like Pop. Then installed Steam and opened it to login. Then closed it, reopened, repeatedly to see if I could replicate the issue. Nope. It works fine on EndeavorOS. Nothing against that OS in general, but Pop is a much better fit for me. So I formatted the drive once again and did a fresh install of Pop instead. I then installed the .deb package from Pop Shop and before even launching the app for the first time I edited steam.desktop and switched PrefersDedicateGPU to false. It won't launch at all now. Before it would launch once to let me login and I could even install and play games. But once I closed the app it was right back to the flashy business. Looks like I'll need to try to get some help from Valve and/or System76 on this one. So strange!
Maybe you can try logging in before changing the file. Then quit steam, change the file and restart your
steamsystem and then try to open steam. This was the exact process I followed and it worked.Edit : the change to the .desktop file is not applied until you reboot your system.
No luck. I uninstalled it via Pop Shop first, but it was still holding onto my login. So I removed it via terminal:
sudo apt remove steam
sudo apt purge steam
sudo apt autoremove
rm -rf ~/.steam
rm -rf ~/.local/share/Steam
At this point I conffirmed the steam.desktop was removed
sudo apt clean
I was able to open it to logon page and sign in. But it immediately began the flash dance.
steam
via Terminal does work to open it, but of course if you kill that session the app closes as well.