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Install scrcpy on Linux From Snap Package (App To Display And Remote Control Android From PC)

scrcpy openSUSE

scrcpy is an application that allows displaying and controlling Android devices connected via USB or or wireless, from a macOS, Windows or Linux desktop. The application focuses on performance and quality, offering 30~60 FPS with a resolution of 1920x1080 or more, and low latency.

I wrote about scrcpy recently, so visit the previous article for a lot more scrcpy information, and how to install it from source in Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint or Fedora:


While there are no official scrcpy Linux packages, an unofficial snap package was created (thanks to Ferenc Czumbil) a while back, which allows installing the application easily on Linux distributions that support snapd. I couldn't get the snap package to work when trying it a while back, but it's working now so I thought I'd write a new article for how to install and use the scrcpy snap package. It takes a bit more to get scrcpy running from snap than other snap packages, but it's still a lot easier than building scrcpy from source.

I installed the scrcpy snap package and tried to run it on Ubuntu 18.10, Linux Mint 19.1 (based on Ubuntu 18.04), Fedora 29, and openSUSE Tumbleweed. scrcpy worked on Ubuntu, Linux Mint and openSUSE, but not on Fedora (bug reported). The alternative is to install scrcpy on Linux from source, either by following the official instructions, or see the Linux Uprising article on installing scrcpy from source on Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint and Fedora.

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