Instalar o Steam
Iniciar sessão
|
Idioma
简体中文 (Chinês Simplificado)
繁體中文 (Chinês Tradicional)
日本語 (Japonês)
한국어 (Coreano)
ไทย (Tailandês)
Български (Búlgaro)
Čeština (Checo)
Dansk (Dinamarquês)
Deutsch (Alemão)
English (Inglês)
Español-España (Espanhol de Espanha)
Español-Latinoamérica (Espanhol da América Latina)
Ελληνικά (Grego)
Français (Francês)
Italiano (Italiano)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonésio)
Magyar (Húngaro)
Nederlands (Holandês)
Norsk (Norueguês)
Polski (Polaco)
Português (Brasil)
Română (Romeno)
Русский (Russo)
Suomi (Finlandês)
Svenska (Sueco)
Türkçe (Turco)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamita)
Українська (Ucraniano)
Relatar problema de tradução
https://github.com/GhostSquad57/Steam-Installer-for-Wheezy/wiki
Or try installing steam:i386 from Jessie repository.
EDIT: The main problem should rely on the fact that I'm using a default debian 7.1 install, no additional software installed. It may be required to install other software in order to install Steam so if somebody know about this, please comment.
1/ Enable multiarch
2/ Update sources:
3/ Install 32bit libraries:
4/ Install libgl1 library:
AMD -
4/ Download and install the Wheezy installer:
{LINK REMOVIDO}http://www.mediafire.com/download/ij1dpb4ida2n500/steam-debian_1.0.0.39-10-2_all.deb
5/ Start steam:
Good luck.
By the way - Steam works much better on Jessie in my opinion (I prefer Debian Testing for desktop).
BTW: Are there ways of installing Steam without the need of unnoficial software? Not that I don't trust your mediafire link, but that would break my security measures in 90%. I rather install with the original client, if you happen to know how.
Thanks.
Now you don't have to use the Wheezy installer. Just enable multiarch like I described above and edit your /etc/apt/sources.list to:
deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ jessie main contrib non-free
Update sources and install the "steam" package:
# aptitude update
# aptitude install steam
(64 bit) # aptitude install steam:i386
That's all.
There are so many better solutions, seriously.
I tried openSUSE but encrypting with Twofish is a pain in the ***. https://forums.opensuse.org/english/get-technical-help-here/install-boot-login/489467-newbie-question-change-default-loaded-crypto-algorithm.html (one of my threads on this subject)
I guess my problems relied on the fact that apt-get was not working so well here! :DD
EDIT: Well, seems to be working! Except I think I'll have problems with the video drivers, I install them 'the hard way' by:
* Downloading the driver from nvidia.com
* tty1
* Services gdm3 stop
* cd *location of the driver*
* sh *driver name*
And all processes that include the downloaded driver to disable nouveau, rebooting, creating an xconfig and all that.
Hope I don't get a steam.so error.
Edit 2: You are missing the following 32-bit libraries, and Steam may not run:
libGL.so.1
Guess I'll re-install everything, start from scratch.
It's almost the same. Aptitude is a little bit smarter.
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/767/what-is-the-real-difference-between-apt-get-and-aptitude-how-about-wajig
EDIT:
# aptitude install libgl1-nvidia-glx:i386 libgl1-nvidia-glx
Don't do that. Go the Debian way. I'm running Steam on Wheezy with some unstable packages and it runs very well.
For NVidia I've installed these:
libgl1-nvidia-glx/experimental
nvidia-alternative/experimental
nvidia-glx/experimental
nvidia-kernel-dkms/experimental
nvidia-settings/experimental
nvidia-vdpau-driver/experimental
nvidia-xconfig/experimental
xserver-xorg-video-nvidia/experimental
Thanks.
1) Read this about mixing debian versions: http://jaqque.sbih.org/kplug/apt-pinning.html
2) Additionally to stable/wheezy or testing/jessie (your choice), put experimental into your apt sources list.
3) Make very sure that experimental has got a small number in the apt preferences!
4) call "aptitude update" and "aptitude upgrade". This should not change anything, because experimental has got a low priority!
5) call "apt-get -t experimental install libgl1-nvidia-glx nvidia-glx nvidia-kernel-dkms nvidia-vdpau-driver"
It's possible that you are now getting messages about missing dependencies or missing kernel headers. You may try to install the headers matching the output of the command "uname -a" on your own, or you post the messages.
(Plus a bunch of the packages on Jessie/Sid/Experimental) will not work anymore on Wheezy because of that - newer libc and the like)
Better bite the bullet and move onto the testing train (AKA Jessie). I did exactly that - working like a champ.
1) Update from Wheezy to Jessie
2) Pull your nVidia drivers from Experimental (or ATi if you're unlucky enough :P)
3) Install Steam from the repos
4) Enjoy.