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posted by janrinok on Tuesday October 01, @07:53AM   Printer-friendly
from the by-the-way-Valve-uses-Arch dept.

Several sites, including OS Technix, are reporting that Arch will be collaborating with Valve. A heavily modified in-house Arch distro is used by Valve for SteamOS.

In an exciting development for the Linux community, Arch Linux has announced a new partnership with Valve, the company behind the Steam gaming platform and Steam Deck. This collaboration will see Valve financially support two major projects for Arch Linux: an improved build service infrastructure and a secure signing enclave.

[...] By providing freelance backing, Valve's support allows Arch Linux to work on these critical projects without being hindered by limitations in volunteer time. This will significantly accelerate progress and enable the Arch Linux team to tackle ambitious endeavours that would have otherwise taken much longer.

The collaboration will lead to the development of a robust build service infrastructure. This infrastructure will involve servers for building software, potentially similar to continuous integration systems. The system will likely manage compiling and distributing software, simplifying the process and reducing the need for custom setups for different devices.

The introduction of a secure signing enclave marks a significant advancement in security for Arch Linux. This enclave will leverage code signing to provide a higher level of assurance that packages downloaded from the official repositories haven't been tampered with. Users will be able to cryptographically verify the origin and integrity of software packages, making it much harder for malicious actors to distribute compromised software.

There is speculation that Valve might publicly release SteamOS in the future or that native support for games on GNU/Linux will improve greatly.

Previously:
(2021) Valve's Upcoming Steam Deck Will be Based on Arch Linux--Not Debian
(2015) Steam Now Has 1500 Linux-Compatible Game Titles
(2015) Valve's SteamOS Dreams Beginning to Look Like Reality


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  • (Score: 2) by bart9h on Tuesday October 01, @01:27PM (1 child)

    by bart9h (767) on Tuesday October 01, @01:27PM (#1375265)

    neat, but these forced arbitration clauses should be illegal anyway

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  • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday October 01, @04:01PM

    by ikanreed (3164) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday October 01, @04:01PM (#1375303) Journal

    It's only a scant few countries where they are legal.

    I was researching that specific question recently, and there's some odd cases like China where the clauses are legal, but the arbitration committees are run by the government, which raises the question of "What's the difference?"