OpenDeck is a desktop application for using stream controller devices like the Elgato Stream Deck. OpenDeck conforms to the OpenAction API, which is cross-compatible with the Stream Deck SDK, allowing a wide range of pre-existing plugins to be used.
OpenDeck supports ProntoKey, Elgato Stream Deck and some Ajazz hardware on all three major desktop platforms. If you would like to contribute support for additional hardware (e.g. Loupedeck) feel free to reach out on any of the support forums and make a pull request!
If you would like to support development of OpenDeck, consider sponsoring me on GitHub Sponsors!
Special thanks go to the developers of Tauri, elgato-streamdeck, Wine, and Phosphor Icons.
- Download the latest release from GitHub Releases.
- You should avoid AppImage releases of OpenDeck as they tend to have problems (you should also just avoid AppImages in general).
- For users of Arch-based distributions, there is the
opendeck
AUR package for the latest release, as well as theopendeck-git
AUR package for the latest commit on themain
branch of this repository.
- Install OpenDeck using your package manager of choice.
- If using Elgato hardware, install the appropriate udev subsystem rules from here:
- If you're using a
.deb
or.rpm
release artifact, this file should be installed automatically. - Otherwise, download and copy it to the correct location with
sudo cp 40-streamdeck.rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
. - In both cases, you will need to reload your udev subsystem rules with
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
.
- If you're using a
- If you intend to use plugins that are only compiled for Windows or macOS (which are the majority of plugins), you will need to have Wine installed on your system.
- Download the latest release (
.exe
or.msi
) from GitHub Releases. - Double-click the downloaded file to run the installer.
- Download the latest release from GitHub Releases.
- If you downloaded a
.dmg
, open the downloaded disk image and drag the application inside into your Applications folder; otherwise, extract the.tar.gz
to your Applications folder. - Open the installed application. Note: if you receive a warning about OpenDeck being distributed by an unknown developer, right-click the app in Finder and then click Open to suppress the warning.
- If you intend to use plugins that are only compiled for Windows, you will need to have Wine installed on your system.
To view or modify an action's settings, left-click on it to display its property inspector. To remove an action, right-click on it and choose "Delete" from the context menu.
To edit an action's appearance, right-click on it and select "Edit" in the context menu. You should then be able to customise the image and title of each of its states. To choose an image from your device: left-click on the image, to reset it to the plugin-provided default: right-click on the image, and to remove the image entirely: CTRL+right-click on the image.
To select another device, or to view or switch profiles, use the dropdowns in the top right corner. You can organise profiles into group-like folders by prefixing the profile name with the folder name and a forward slash.
To enable automatic launch on startup, the light theme, or to change the language plugins are localised in, open Settings. From here, you can also view information about your version of OpenDeck or open the configuration directory. To add or remove plugins, visit the Plugins tab.
- Check the OpenDeck log file for any important messages. This file should be included with any support request.
- GNU+Linux:
~/.config/opendeck/logs/
- Windows:
%appdata%\opendeck\logs\
- macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/opendeck/logs/
- GNU+Linux:
- For issues with plugins, you can also check the plugin's logs (in the same folder as above, sometimes as well as a file named
plugin.log
or similar in the plugin's own folder). - When trying to run Windows-only plugins (which are the majority of plugins) on GNU+Linux or macOS, please ensure you have the latest version of Wine (and Wine Mono) installed on your system.
- If your device isn't showing up, ensure you have the correct permissions to access it, and that you have restarted OpenDeck since connecting it.
You'll need to ensure that all of the prerequisites for building a Tauri application are satisfied to build OpenDeck, as well as making sure that Deno is installed. On GNU+Linux, you'll also need libudev
installed for your distribution. You can then use deno task tauri dev
and deno task tauri build
to work with OpenDeck.
Before each commit, please ensure that all of the following are completed:
- Rust code has been linted using
cargo clippy
and it discovers no violations - Rust code has been formatted using
cargo fmt
- TypeScript code has been linted using
deno lint
and it discovers no violations - Svelte code has been linted using
deno task check
and it discovers no violations - Frontend code has been formatted using
deno fmt
Feel free to reach out on the support channels above for guidance when contributing!
OpenDeck is licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.0 or later. For more details, see the LICENSE.md file.