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Hardware Wiki

mikeyd edited this page Nov 11, 2015 · 50 revisions

Table of contents

  • Coming soon!

Important: Please read

Please try to first reference Valve's Official FAQ and SteamOS DIY pages before searching this page, reporting issues, or otherwise calling for help.

About

This page will serve to provide community help with identifying compatible hardware for the latest version of SteamOS, and offering assistance and knowledge for hardware that does not appear to work "out of the box." If your hardware does not work correctly, please do create an issues ticket with detailed system information, including, but not limited to:

  • A GitHub Gist with the output of lscpi -v (See the How-To pages for enabling the Linux desktop)
  • Basic system information
    • Steam version information for Settings > System in SteamOS)
    • System hardware
    • Output of lsb_release -a
  • Steps to reproduce your issue

Resources for hardware and driver reference

Adding hardware to this page

Please use the below table structure at the top of the page when adding hardware to a category page (such as Headsets). Be sure to include the correct number of "pipes" (aka "|") to create the row. The below example should be fine, but is subject to change. For the link column, it may be good to create and link a wiki page for the device if it involves a lot of information. If you wish to include more than one link, please use "Link1,Link2" as a format. Client/OS information can be obtained from Settings > System. If you do not wish to to note a column, please write "N/A" or "Unknown."

If a particular hardware does not work, you can flag it "out of date," (seen below) and check who made the change previously in the revisions link the top of any wiki page. Hardware that does not work should always be reported, in full, to the issues page, with information noted in the above about section. Please try to include a change message at the bottom of the screen when adding new hardware, such as "Added Gigabyte GA-Z97N-WIFI."

Understanding the table structure

General categories, such as keyboards, and controllers, should be added as a separate wiki page (if they do not already exist) to avoid creating a TL:DR mess. Please try to name the page "Hardware Wiki: NAME". The Compat. Lvl stands for "Compatibility level," and should follow:

  • None (not common, but can be included to signal "avoid buying."
  • Partial (basic functions work needed for use in SteamOS)
  • Full (All basic functions work, available hotkeys work)

Note:
Please do not confuse compatibility with SteamOS with the compatibility in-game. If you wish to make notes about in-game issues, create a wiki page (as noted above in the first paragraph) for the device.

Device OS ver. Steam Link? link Tested on Compat. Lvl
Device text yes/no Link text text1

Adding footnotes/citations

If you wish to add a footnote/citation (useful for quick notes when a wiki page is not needed), use this code to add the note/link. I ask that you add it to the available "References" section at the bottom of the page, or create it, if it does not exist.

Create the superscript link:

[<sup>1</sup>](#cite1)

Linking it in the "References section"

1. <a name="cite1">This is my comment / [hyperlink](https://www.google.com)</a>

Flagging hardware "out of date"

If you run across hardware that no longer works, or is "out of date" in its information, please place two tildas around the Compat. Lvl, such as "Partial (old)".

Shorthand legend

I also want to try and preserve vertical and horizontal space, so the following shorthand is used:

  • u - update
  • Tested on - date shorthand format YYYYMMDD

Hardware List


Bluetooth Devices

USB Devices

GPUs

  • Nvidia
  • AMD
  • Intel

Motherboards

Networking hardware

Various peripherals

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