The modding API for Stardew Valley.
Go to file
Jesse Plamondon-Willard 89221b8b2d add editorconfig, minor style fixes 2017-04-26 14:38:47 -04:00
docs/imgs Attempt to migrate to new directory structure. 2016-05-29 18:23:01 -04:00
src add editorconfig, minor style fixes 2017-04-26 14:38:47 -04:00
.gitattributes normalise inconsistent line endings 2016-11-04 00:10:10 -04:00
.gitignore fix crlf 2017-01-16 16:10:50 -05:00
LICENSE license change. GPL to LGPL. 2016-04-06 06:08:32 -04:00
README.md fix typo in readme 2017-04-22 23:59:42 -04:00
release-notes.md remove new manifest field for minimum game version (#264) 2017-04-24 12:39:06 -04:00

README.md

Contents

What is SMAPI?

SMAPI is an open-source modding API for Stardew Valley that lets you play the game with mods. It's safely installed alongside the game's executable, and doesn't change any of your game files. It serves five main purposes:

  1. Load mods into the game.
    SMAPI loads mods when the game is starting up so they can interact with it. (Code mods aren't possible without SMAPI to load them.)

  2. Provide APIs and events for mods.
    SMAPI provides low-level APIs and events which let mods interact with the game in ways they otherwise couldn't.

  3. Rewrite mods for crossplatform compatibility.
    SMAPI rewrites mods' compiled code before loading them so they work on Linux/Mac/Windows without the mods needing to handle differences between the Linux/Mac and Windows versions of the game.

  4. Rewrite mods to update them.
    SMAPI detects when a mod accesses part of the game that changed in a recent update which affects many mods, and rewrites the mod so it's compatible.

  5. Intercept errors.
    SMAPI intercepts errors that happen in the game, displays the error details in the console window, and in most cases automatically recovers the game. This prevents mods from accidentally crashing the game, and makes it possible to troubleshoot errors in the game itself that would otherwise show a generic 'program has stopped working' type of message.

For players

For mod developers

For SMAPI developers

This section is about compiling SMAPI itself from source. If you don't know what that means, this section isn't relevant to you; see the previous sections to use or create mods.

Compiling from source

Using an official SMAPI release is recommended for most users.

If you'd like to compile SMAPI from source, you can do that on any platform using Visual Studio or MonoDevelop. SMAPI uses build configuration derived from the crosswiki mod config to detect your current OS automatically and load the correct references. Compile output will be placed in a bin folder at the root of the git repository.

Debugging a local build

Rebuilding the solution in debug mode will copy the SMAPI files into your game folder. Starting the StardewModdingAPI project with debugging will launch SMAPI with the debugger attached, so you can intercept errors and step through the code being executed.

Preparing a release

To prepare a crossplatform SMAPI release, you'll need to compile it on two platforms. See crossplatforming a SMAPI mod for the first-time setup. For simplicity, all paths are relative to the root of the repository (the folder containing src).

  1. Update the version number in GlobalAssemblyInfo.cs and Constants::Version. Make sure you use a semantic version. Recommended format:

    build type format example
    dev build <version>-alpha.<timestamp> 1.0.0-alpha.20171230
    beta <version>-beta.<incrementing ID> 1.0.0-beta, 1.0.0-beta.2, <20>
    release <version> 1.0.0
  2. In Windows:

    1. Rebuild the solution in Release mode.
    2. Rename bin/Packaged to SMAPI <version> (e.g. SMAPI 1.6).
    3. Transfer the SMAPI <version> folder to Linux or Mac.
      This adds the installer executable and Windows files. We'll do the rest in Linux or Mac, since we need to set Unix file permissions that Windows won't save.
  3. In Linux or Mac:

    1. Rebuild the solution in Release mode.

    2. Copy bin/internal/Packaged/Mono into the SMAPI <version> folder.

    3. If you did everything right so far, you should have a folder like this:

      SMAPI-1.x/
         install.exe
         readme.txt
         internal/
            Mono/
               Mods/*
               Mono.Cecil.dll
               Newtonsoft.Json.dll
               StardewModdingAPI
               StardewModdingAPI.AssemblyRewriters.dll
               StardewModdingAPI.config.json
               StardewModdingAPI.exe
               StardewModdingAPI.exe.mdb
               steam_appid.txt
               System.Numerics.dll
               System.Runtime.Caching.dll
            Windows/
               Mods/*
               Mono.Cecil.dll
               Newtonsoft.Json.dll
               StardewModdingAPI.AssemblyRewriters.dll
               StardewModdingAPI.config.json
               StardewModdingAPI.exe
               StardewModdingAPI.pdb
               StardewModdingAPI.xml
               steam_appid.txt
      
    4. Open a terminal in the SMAPI <version> folder and run chmod 755 internal/Mono/StardewModdingAPI.

    5. Copy & paste the SMAPI <version> folder as SMAPI <version> for developers.

    6. In the SMAPI <version> folder...

      • edit internal/Mono/StardewModdingAPI.config.json and internal/Windows/StardewModdingAPI.config.json to disable developer mode;
      • delete internal/Windows/StardewModdingAPI.xml.
    7. Compress the two folders into SMAPI <version>.zip and SMAPI <version> for developers.zip.

Advanced usage

Configuration file

You can customise the SMAPI behaviour by editing the StardewModdingAPI.config.json file in your game folder. It contains these fields:

field purpose
DeveloperMode Default false (except in SMAPI for developers releases). Whether to enable features intended for mod developers. Currently this only makes TRACE-level messages appear in the console.
CheckForUpdates Default true. Whether SMAPI should check for a newer version when you load the game. If a new version is available, a small message will appear in the console. This doesn't affect the load time even if your connection is offline or slow, because it happens in the background.
ModCompatibility A list of mod versions SMAPI should consider compatible or broken regardless of whether it detects incompatible code. Each record can be set to AssumeCompatible or AssumeBroken. Changing this field is not recommended and may destabilise your game.

Command-line arguments

SMAPI recognises the following command-line arguments. These are intended for internal use or testing and may change without warning.

argument purpose
--log-path "path" The relative or absolute path of the log file SMAPI should write.
--no-terminal SMAPI won't write anything to the console window. (Messages will still be written to the log file.)