this post was submitted on 24 Sep 2023
9 points (84.6% liked)
SteamDeckPirates
1697 readers
2 users here now
Discuss piracy on Valve's portable handheld - the Steam Deck.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
From what i understand any changes to the system outside of the userland will be overwritten after a SteamOS update.
That is correct. The best case is to write a script to make your desired changes, and then run it after each system update.
My own use-case is that I have a NFS mount-point for my Steam Deck to use extra storage on my NAS. After the first time I figured out how to get it mounted, I made a script to disable read-only filesystem, make all the changes to the system, and then re-enable read-only filesystem. After every system update, I just run that script once.
Thanks for the reply!
I can find my way around bash, but the most advanced script I've personally authored it probably "Hello World." Would you be willing to share the script from pastebin or github? IDK, I guess you could copy and paste it posted on Lemmy.
I think I need to do exactly what you recommended, but I may need some help setting it up. So are an update, you simply run the script to get the system changes re-applied?
This is the script.
/home/deck/scripts/fstab
contains my customised fstab file. Yes, after an update, I just run this script once.Thank you. I really appreciate you sharing, this helps a lot!
No you can install them persistent and update your OS
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/02/steam-deck-desktop-mode-plus-other-stores-like-the-epic-games-store/