#!/bin/bash # MonoKickstart Shell Script # Written by Ethan "flibitijibibo" Lee # Modified for StardewModdingAPI by Viz and Pathoschild # Move to script's directory cd "`dirname "$0"`" # Get the system architecture UNAME=`uname` ARCH=`uname -m` # MonoKickstart picks the right libfolder, so just execute the right binary. if [ "$UNAME" == "Darwin" ]; then # ... Except on OSX. export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH:./osx/ # El Capitan is a total idiot and wipes this variable out, making the # Steam overlay disappear. This sidesteps "System Integrity Protection" # and resets the variable with Valve's own variable (they provided this # fix by the way, thanks Valve!). Note that you will need to update your # launch configuration to the script location, NOT just the app location # (i.e. Kick.app/Contents/MacOS/Kick, not just Kick.app). # -flibit if [ "$STEAM_DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES" != "" ] && [ "$DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES" == "" ]; then export DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES="$STEAM_DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES" fi # this was here before ln -sf mcs.bin.osx mcs # fix "DllNotFoundException: libgdiplus.dylib" errors when loading images in SMAPI if [ -f libgdiplus.dylib ]; then rm libgdiplus.dylib fi if [ -f /Library/Frameworks/Mono.framework/Versions/Current/lib/libgdiplus.dylib ]; then ln -s /Library/Frameworks/Mono.framework/Versions/Current/lib/libgdiplus.dylib libgdiplus.dylib fi # launch SMAPI cp StardewValley.bin.osx StardewModdingAPI.bin.osx open -a Terminal ./StardewModdingAPI.bin.osx $@ else # choose launcher LAUNCHER="" if [ "$ARCH" == "x86_64" ]; then ln -sf mcs.bin.x86_64 mcs cp StardewValley.bin.x86_64 StardewModdingAPI.bin.x86_64 LAUNCHER="./StardewModdingAPI.bin.x86_64 $@" else ln -sf mcs.bin.x86 mcs cp StardewValley.bin.x86 StardewModdingAPI.bin.x86 LAUNCHER="./StardewModdingAPI.bin.x86 $@" fi # get cross-distro version of POSIX command COMMAND="" if command -v command 2>/dev/null; then COMMAND="command -v" elif type type 2>/dev/null; then COMMAND="type" fi # open SMAPI in terminal if $COMMAND x-terminal-emulator 2>/dev/null; then # Terminator converts -e to -x when used through x-terminal-emulator for some reason (per # `man terminator`), which causes an "unable to find shell" error. If x-terminal-emulator # is mapped to Terminator, invoke it directly instead. if [[ "$(readlink -e $(which x-terminal-emulator))" == *"/terminator" ]]; then terminator -e "$LAUNCHER" else x-terminal-emulator -e "$LAUNCHER" fi elif $COMMAND xterm 2>/dev/null; then xterm -e "$LAUNCHER" elif $COMMAND xfce4-terminal 2>/dev/null; then xfce4-terminal -e "env TERM=xterm; $LAUNCHER" elif $COMMAND gnome-terminal 2>/dev/null; then gnome-terminal -e "env TERM=xterm; $LAUNCHER" elif $COMMAND konsole 2>/dev/null; then konsole -p Environment=TERM=xterm -e "$LAUNCHER" elif $COMMAND terminal 2>/dev/null; then terminal -e "$LAUNCHER" else $LAUNCHER fi # some Linux users get error 127 (command not found) from the above block, even though # `command -v` indicates the command is valid. As a fallback, launch SMAPI without a terminal when # that happens and pass in an argument indicating SMAPI shouldn't try writing to the terminal # (which can be slow if there is none). if [ $? -eq 127 ]; then $LAUNCHER --no-terminal fi fi