This Python library allows developers to easily build community integrations for various gaming platforms with GOG Galaxy 2.0.
- refer to our documentation
Each integration in GOG Galaxy 2.0 comes as a separate Python script and is launched as a separate process that needs to communicate with the main instance of GOG Galaxy 2.0.
The provided features are:
- multistep authorization using a browser built into GOG Galaxy 2.0
- support for GOG Galaxy 2.0 features:
- importing owned and detecting installed games
- installing and launching games
- importing achievements and game time
- importing friends lists and statuses
- importing friends recommendations list
- receiving and sending chat messages
- cache storage
Each integration can implement only one platform. Each integration must declare which platform it's integrating.
Each integration should inherit from the :class:~galaxy.api.plugin.Plugin
class. Supported methods like :meth:~galaxy.api.plugin.Plugin.get_owned_games
should be overwritten - they are called from the GOG Galaxy client at the appropriate times.
Each of those methods can raise exceptions inherited from the :exc:~galaxy.api.jsonrpc.ApplicationError
.
Communication between an integration and the client is also possible with the use of notifications, for example: :meth:~galaxy.api.plugin.Plugin.update_local_game_status
.
import sys
from galaxy.api.plugin import Plugin, create_and_run_plugin
from galaxy.api.consts import Platform
class PluginExample(Plugin):
def __init__(self, reader, writer, token):
super().__init__(
Platform.Generic, # Choose platform from available list
"0.1", # Version
reader,
writer,
token
)
# implement methods
async def authenticate(self, stored_credentials=None):
pass
def main():
create_and_run_plugin(PluginExample, sys.argv)
# run plugin event loop
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
The client has a built-in Python 3.7 interpreter, so integrations are delivered as Python modules. In order to be found by GOG Galaxy 2.0 an integration folder should be placed in lookup directory. Beside all the Python files, the integration folder must contain manifest.json and all third-party dependencies. See an exemplary structure.
-
Windows:
%localappdata%\GOG.com\Galaxy\plugins\installed
-
macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/GOG.com/Galaxy/plugins/installed
Obligatory JSON file to be placed in an integration folder.
{
"name": "Example plugin",
"platform": "generic",
"guid": "UNIQUE-GUID",
"version": "0.1",
"description": "Example plugin",
"author": "Name",
"email": "[email protected]",
"url": "https://github.com/user/galaxy-plugin-example",
"script": "plugin.py"
}
property | description |
---|---|
guid |
|
description |
|
url |
|
script |
path of the entry point module, relative to the integration folder |
All third-party packages (packages not included in the Python 3.7 standard library) should be deployed along with plugin files. Use the following command structure:
pip install DEP --target DIR --implementation cp --python-version 37
For example, a plugin that uses requests could have the following structure:
installed
└── my_integration
├── galaxy
│ └── api
├── requests
│ └── ...
├── plugin.py
└── manifest.json
By integrating or attempting to integrate any applications or content with or into GOG Galaxy 2.0 you represent that such application or content is your original creation (other than any software made available by GOG) and/or that you have all necessary rights to grant such applicable rights to the relevant community integration to GOG and to GOG Galaxy 2.0 end users for the purpose of use of such community integration and that such community integration comply with any third party license and other requirements including compliance with applicable laws.