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    shell scripting topic

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Ideas and Development
    shellshell scriptprogramming
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    • cyperghostC
      cyperghost
      last edited by

      @meleu Wow you are really master meleu

      #!/bin/bash
      # RESET is mandotary for releasing terminal from being busy
      # inkey function demo
      inkey() { char="" ; stty -icanon min 0 time 1 ; char=`dd count=1 2>/dev/null` ; }
      
      # ---- main -----
      
      echo "Press some keys and I will show you keybuffer after 3 seconds"
      sleep 3
      inkey && reset # <-- this is mandotary
      echo "You wrote \"$char\""
      
      read -p "Type something: " var
      echo $var
      

      I think this function is just a dirty trick. Thanks for looking deeper in. Just did a few simple tests with that.

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      • meleuM
        meleu
        last edited by

        @cyperghost talking about indentations in this thread to not messing that other.

        @meleu ;) How about the indentations?

        it really improved, I just would like to make one little note.

        This snippet here

        until [[ "${console[idx]}" == "$1" ]]
            do
               idx=$(( $idx + 1 ))
            done
        

        Could be better indented this way:

        until [[ "${console[idx]}" == "$1" ]]
        do
            idx=$(( $idx + 1 ))
        done
        

        It's a more common practice.

        I'm glad to see you improving your coding style! :-)

        Cheers!

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        • cyperghostC
          cyperghost
          last edited by

          @meleu About your newest ES-termination code.
          Is tty is setting the trigger to start the service? Don't get me wrong I thought tty is just the terminal like ssh ;) Can you please explain?

          cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • cyperghostC
            cyperghost @cyperghost
            last edited by

            @meleu
            Is there no annother approach?
            systemd is very complicated?
            Can we export a function call to shell that would end ES?
            Can we use an alias ... as it can't be used from scripts - is there annother way?

            meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • meleuM
              meleu @cyperghost
              last edited by meleu

              @cyperghost There are as many approaches as creativity allows. I just tried to find a way to encompass as many use cases as possible. The explanation for how it works can be complex, but the steps to make it work is not.

              Using an alias has its limitations, but it's an option.

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              • cyperghostC
                cyperghost @meleu
                last edited by cyperghost

                @meleu Hello brother ;)
                Yes I know it's maybe easy for me and you but take a look here
                https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/12930/
                I suggested the first solution (yours)
                but it didn't work, so I used the "old" way.....

                I bought now one of these mausberry devices to test ;)
                It's really hard to test without the device.


                AFAIK an alias can't be called within a script. So you may export the bash function with export -f func_call. But how this works? Do you have a clue?

                meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • meleuM
                  meleu @cyperghost
                  last edited by

                  @cyperghost said in shell scripting topic:

                  @meleu Hello brother ;)
                  Yes I know it's maybe easy for me and you but take a look here
                  https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/12930/
                  I suggested the first solution (yours)
                  but it didn't work, so I used the "old" way.....

                  I'll try to find what he made wrong. I think it was my fault: I didn't give really clear instructions for inexperienced Linux users.

                  I bought now one of these mausberry devices to test ;)
                  It's really hard to test without the device.

                  Oh yeah! Let's break that infinite loop!!

                  AFAIK an alias can't be called within a script.

                  I thought you were talking about creating an alias for shutdown command, making it call the killes.sh script before actually shutdown. But this approach has limitations.

                  So you may export the bash function with export -f func_call. But how this works? Do you have a clue?

                  When you export something in a shell (functions or variables) only the child shells will know the respective variable/function.

                  A good way would be to add this function and the export command to one of these files:

                  • ~/.profile
                  • ~/.bash_profile
                  • ~/.bashrc
                  • /etc/profile
                  • create a file at /etc/profile.d/ directory (btw, did you notice that you have a /etc/profile.d/10-retropie.sh on your RetroPie? :) )

                  But this approach also has its limitations...

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                  • lilbudL
                    lilbud
                    last edited by

                    I have followed @meleu down the bash rabbit hole and need some help getting out.

                    I am trying to write a script for the retropie menu that will allow you to select the overlay you want, (kind of like the SNES Mini). That is where I get stuck.

                    My idea is this: When the script starts, it will list all of the overlays in a directory and allow you to select them. Upon selection, it will modify the overlay.cfg file and replace what is there, and finally start the game with the overlay applied.

                    Better example of what I am trying to accomplish: https://ghostbin.com/paste/avjcs

                    Creator of the Radiocade: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/6077/radiocade

                    Backlog: http://backloggery.com/lilbud

                    meleuM cyperghostC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • meleuM
                      meleu @lilbud
                      last edited by

                      @lilbud it's possible. But you have to specify where do you want to apply the overlay (specific for a game? specific for a system?).

                      Expand the use case.

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                      • cyperghostC
                        cyperghost @lilbud
                        last edited by

                        @lilbud Yes please - I can't imagine what you exactly want.
                        I think it can be wrapped up like here

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                        • lilbudL
                          lilbud @meleu
                          last edited by lilbud

                          @meleu The script would apply the overlay to all systems automatically. Individual systems can be modified when launching a game from the system where the user doesn't want an overlay, like GB/GBC/GBA or other hand held systems were aspect ratio is not 4:3

                          @cyperghost Something like that would be nice for this, having the script and be able to choose which systems you want the overlay to be applied to.

                          Creator of the Radiocade: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/6077/radiocade

                          Backlog: http://backloggery.com/lilbud

                          cyperghostC meleuM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • cyperghostC
                            cyperghost @lilbud
                            last edited by cyperghost

                            @lilbud automatically means to invoke runcommand-onstart.sh
                            I think it's doable but we need more input about usecase...

                            I think there is a need of 2 parts....

                            1. Part let you choose overlay for special system
                            2. Invokes seleceted overlay to system on start of emulator run

                            I think.... you should start coding. And we will help you ;)
                            You can read the full thread I've posted ... The issue here was solved in an efficient way (imho)

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                            • meleuM
                              meleu @lilbud
                              last edited by

                              @lilbud said in shell scripting topic:

                              @meleu The script would apply the overlay to all systems automatically.

                              I'm not sure if an overlay for all systems would look good. I think some systems have a different aspect ratio.

                              As @cyperghost said, we can help you once you start the coding. But maybe the fastest solution is to use rpie-art tool. Learning how to create an info.txt file is faster than learning a programing language.

                              Here is the info.txt creation doc: https://github.com/meleu/rpie-art/blob/master/INFO.md

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                              • cyperghostC
                                cyperghost @meleu
                                last edited by

                                @meleu Yes... therefore the runcommand-onstart. $1 shows current used system. So there is a way to set an overlay for a specfic system ... ;)

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                                • lilbudL
                                  lilbud
                                  last edited by

                                  @meleu @cyperghost I had this to start with:
                                  sed -i 's/01.png/08.png/g' overlay.cfg

                                  Something feels missing, not sure what at the moment.

                                  Creator of the Radiocade: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/6077/radiocade

                                  Backlog: http://backloggery.com/lilbud

                                  meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • meleuM
                                    meleu @lilbud
                                    last edited by

                                    @lilbud where is placed the script with that line of code? maybe you have to use the full path to the overlay.cfg.

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                                    • lilbudL
                                      lilbud @meleu
                                      last edited by

                                      @meleu I believe it is placed in the overlay directory.

                                      opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch/overlay

                                      Creator of the Radiocade: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/6077/radiocade

                                      Backlog: http://backloggery.com/lilbud

                                      cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • cyperghostC
                                        cyperghost @lilbud
                                        last edited by cyperghost

                                        @lilbud Just start coding use echo commands to show results in your bash
                                        You can test sedcommands directly from CLI and results will be marked red.
                                        Don't use -i parameter for testing... it will directly write to input file and may give unwantend results. If you want create altered files then work with direction > output-file first.

                                        If all works then use -i

                                        lilbudL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • lilbudL
                                          lilbud @cyperghost
                                          last edited by

                                          @cyperghost Ok, I can get the original command to replace the text, but only if both fields are specified.

                                          sed -i 's/01.png/08.png/g' overlay.cfg

                                          This works fine, 01.png is replaced with 08.png. But what would I put in the first field if the overlay name is not 01.png. Something like this?:

                                          sed -i 's/${FILENAME}.png/08.png/g' overlay.cfg

                                          Creator of the Radiocade: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/6077/radiocade

                                          Backlog: http://backloggery.com/lilbud

                                          mituM cyperghostC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • mituM
                                            mitu Global Moderator @lilbud
                                            last edited by

                                            @lilbud You can use a wildcard:

                                            sed -i 's/.*.png/08.png/g' overlay.cfg
                                            

                                            Note that this will replace any <filename>.png in the file with 08.png.

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