The Ludusavi Manifest format is a YAML structure for defining the location of game save data and other files that are of interest to back up. Although this project was started for use by Ludusavi, the goal is for the manifest format to be generic enough for any game backup tool to implement, while leaving room for new fields and functionality over time.
This repository contains the primary manifest, which is compiled from data on PCGamingWiki, along with accessing the Steam API for game installation directory names. If you find any data that is missing or incorrect, please contribute to the wiki, and such changes will be incorporated into the primary manifest periodically. There is also a list of games without any info on what to back up.
Game developers may include a secondary manifest (named .ludusavi.yaml
) with
their games, so that backup tools can automatically detect and use it to discover
what files need to be backed up for save data and configuration.
For the schema, refer to schema.yaml. Note that the primary manifest is validated with schema.strict.yaml, which additionally specifies enums for some fields. However, tools should implement schema.yaml, so that new values in the manifest do not break older tools.
Here is an example:
An Example Game:
files:
<base>/saves:
tags:
- save
<base>/settings.json:
when:
- os: windows
- os: linux
tags:
- config
<base>/other:
when:
- os: mac
store: steam
installDir:
AnExampleGame: {}
registry:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/An Example Game:
tags:
- save
- config
steam:
id: 123
This means:
<base>/saves
will be backed up on any system.<base>/settings.json
will be backed up if you're using Windows or Linux.<base>/other
will be backed up if you're using Mac and Steam.- On Windows, the registry key
HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/An Example Game
will be backed up.
Paths in the files
section can include these placeholders:
placeholder | meaning |
---|---|
<root> |
a directory where games are installed (configured in backup tool) |
<game> |
an installDir (if defined) or the game's canonical name in the manifest |
<base> |
shorthand for <root>/<game> (unless overridden by store-specific rules) |
<home> |
current user's home directory in the OS (~ ) |
<storeUserId> |
current user's ID in the game store |
<osUserName> |
current user's name in the OS |
<winAppData> |
%APPDATA% on Windows |
<winLocalAppData> |
%LOCALAPPDATA% on Windows |
<winDocuments> |
<home>/Documents (f.k.a. <home>/My Documents ) or a localized equivalent on Windows |
<winPublic> |
%PUBLIC% on Windows |
<winProgramData> |
%PROGRAMDATA% on Windows |
<winDir> |
%WINDIR% on Windows |
<xdgData> |
$XDG_DATA_HOME on Linux |
<xdgConfig> |
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME on Linux |
Tools must implement the following in addition to respecting the schema:
- For paths, first substitute the placeholders, then evaluate as a glob. Because of treating paths as globs, a path may match multiple files or directories.
- When a path identifies a folder, the backup includes all of its files and subdirectories recursively.
- When backing up registry keys, the backup includes all sub-keys recursively.
- Relative paths must be resolved relative to the location of the manifest file. This is important for secondary manifests to work correctly without hard-coding their location.
- If a tool supports secondary manifests, they must be automatically detected
when they are named
.ludusavi.yaml
and exist anywhere within a configured root.
Tools may also:
- Use store-specific logic to determine the
<base>
. For example, with Steam, if the root is~/.steam/steam
, then<base>
would be<root>/steamapps/common/<game>
. Or a tool could use<root>/**/<game>
as a generic option, although it could lead to wasted search time. - Check possible save data locations even if the entry has inapplicable
constraints. For example, if a file entry is marked as
os: windows
, then ideally a tool should only need to check that entry when running on Windows; however, it is a reality of the data set that it may simply be the only confirmed occurrence of the file, and it may in fact occur on other operating systems as well.
The latest version of the primary manifest can be downloaded from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mtkennerly/ludusavi-manifest/master/data/manifest.yaml . To check for updates:
- Store the value of the
ETag
header for the last downloaded version. - Send a GET request to the URL with the
If-None-Match
header set to the last knownETag
value. - If the response code is 304, then no update is needed.
- If the response code is 200, then store the new
ETag
value.
Please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md.