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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    METADATA not saving - Favorites will never remain tagged

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help and Support
    nespi casemetadata issuesfavoritesshutdown scriptgameslist.xml
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    • cyperghostC
      cyperghost @Yahmez
      last edited by

      @yahmez No! I don't use wiringpi.... or raspi-gpio.

      But would be possible with bash, too

      raspi-gpio set $trigger_pin ip pu
      echo "monitoring BCM $trigger_pin"
      
      pin_state() {
          raspi-gpio get $trigger_pin | grep -c "level=0 fsel=0 func=INPUT"
      }
      
      shutdown_trigger() {
          if [ `pin_state` = 1 ]; then
              echo "BCM $trigger_pin asserted low"
      ....
      
      YahmezY 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • YahmezY
        Yahmez @cyperghost
        last edited by

        @cyperghost That is the problem then, at least part of it.

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

          @yahmez afaik this should work without the pullup. As I said, I sadly have no POLOLU switch available. Is there no connection to ground from the POLOLU to the GPIO?

          YahmezY 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • S
            Semper 5
            last edited by Semper 5

            sorry for the late reply. I'm trying to get out of work.
            my GPIO config is exactly as configured in Yahmez's tutorial.
            23 reset
            24 power
            25 power (ON)

            my GPIO readall with cyperghost's script
            but as we see here, its not looking very live.

            just as a reminder, I can get Yahmez's to fire up with no problem - just to rule out the possibility of bad wiring and I did confirm that my wiring looked good to a few other people who are VERY familiar with this mod.

            EDIT: SORRY I didn't run the gpio readall with the script running. GPIO 25 has a difference now

            cyperghostC YahmezY 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • YahmezY
              Yahmez @cyperghost
              last edited by Yahmez

              @cyperghost No. It will absolutely not work without the pullup. There is a reason I put it in my script :p

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • cyperghostC
                cyperghost @Semper 5
                last edited by cyperghost

                @semper-5 Why is GPIO25 set low? Okay corrected now.
                @Yahmez Okay, that's interesting.... but I think it's no problem to integrate the script into yours. So I would suggest to remove the GPIO init and just make a call to to PID detection/removal routine.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • YahmezY
                  Yahmez @Semper 5
                  last edited by

                  @semper-5 Looks like the script is not setting GPIO 25 high according to your GPIO readall

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

                    @Semper-5 Use sudo command for this

                    echo "$GPIOpin2" > /sys/class/gpio/export
                    echo "out" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio$GPIOpin2/direction
                    echo "1" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio$GPIOpin2/value
                    

                    With GPIOpin2=25 it will be a self runner ;)

                    @Yahmez Ah so you tried out without using the pullups? That's interesting. So I should investigate this ;) As I said: No POLOLU switch, no testing area.

                    So I say thank you to both of you! You should integrate a small 3,3V regulator. Then it's no problem to generate this. So intead of

                    python os.system("sudo shutdown -h now")

                    hook to a stripped down script with sudo command

                    # Detect PID or EMULATOR NAMES
                    emucall="$(sed '4!d; s/\([\\"]\|[[:alnum:]_]\+=[^ ]* \)//g; s/[][(){}^$*.|+? ]/\\&/g' /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
                    espid="$(pgrep -f "/opt/retropie/supplementary/.*/emulationstation([^.]|$)")"
                    
                    # Handle calls and send TERM signal
                    if [[ -n "$emucall" ]]; then
                        emupid="$(pgrep -f "$emucall" | tr '\n' ' ')"
                        pkill -P "$(echo $emupid | tr ' ' ',')"
                        kill -9 "$emupid"
                        sleep 4
                    fi    
                    
                    if [[ -n "$espid" ]]; then
                        touch /tmp/es-shutdown && chown pi:pi /tmp/es-shutdown
                        kill "$espid"
                        exit
                    fi
                    
                    poweroff
                    
                    YahmezY 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • YahmezY
                      Yahmez @cyperghost
                      last edited by

                      @cyperghost it's not just the Pololu, but the way everything is wired in the case, the existing switches plus the added parts to convert it for safe shutdown. The Pololu on it's own is straight forward. Pin 25 has a diode between it's self and the switch to protect it from the 5v. It's internal pullup pulls it high. When you hit the switch it connects to ground and pulls gpio 25 down, which the script detects and initiates the shutdown.

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

                        @Yahmez But what is the difference to connect a GPIO directly to ground (maybe over an external resistor) or to activate the internal ones? I see there no difference. Maybe you can explain, me?

                        The internal pullup prevents from floating... yes.. but where is the difference?

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

                          @cyperghost Not sure what you mean about the 3.3v regulator but the pin needs a pull-up resistor to work. It can be a physical resistor added to the circuit from the pi's 3.3v rail or it can be the internal pullup. I used the internal pullup in my tutorial because it was cheaper and easier.

                          You want the pin to be high by default, detect a low, then shutdown.

                          If you can get the internal pullups working thru bash, it should all work. If you can not, than how about stripping out the shutdown part from my script and calling the bash to exit es and shutdown? Basically have the python handle the pins and the bash handle the exit and shutdown...

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

                            @yahmez Well a regulator would convert the 5.0V to 3.3V (just a few cents) are use the internal 3.3V rail... or strip down the script ... Already done here

                            Thank you for your patience and helpfull explaination. So it would be nice that you would implent this in your scripts.
                            It has to be excuted with sudo command

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

                              @cyperghost no problem. Unfortunately, I do not have the knowledge to properly incorporate your script into mine. At best, it would be trial and error on my part. Perhaps @Semper-5 can tinker with it though.

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

                                @yahmez Well.... I can also try to deal with raspi-gpio
                                Let us work together on this if you want.
                                sudo apt install raspi-gpio will install a 66kB binary

                                help page ;)

                                  raspi-gpio get [GPIO]
                                OR
                                  raspi-gpio set <GPIO> [options]
                                OR
                                  raspi-gpio funcs [GPIO]
                                OR
                                  raspi-gpio raw
                                
                                Valid [options] for raspi-gpio set are:
                                  ip      set GPIO as input
                                  op      set GPIO as output
                                  a0-a5   set GPIO to alternate function alt0-alt5
                                  pu      set GPIO in-pad pull up
                                  pd      set GPIO pin-pad pull down
                                  pn      set GPIO pull none (no pull)
                                  dh      set GPIO to drive to high (1) level (only valid if set to be an outpu$
                                  dl      set GPIO to drive low (0) level (only valid if set to be an output)
                                Examples:
                                  raspi-gpio get              Prints state of all GPIOs one per line
                                  raspi-gpio get 20           Prints state of GPIO20
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 a5        Set GPIO20 to ALT5 function (GPCLK0)
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 pu        Enable GPIO20 ~50k in-pad pull up
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 pd        Enable GPIO20 ~50k in-pad pull down
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 op        Set GPIO20 to be an output
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 dl        Set GPIO20 to output low/zero (must already be se$
                                  raspi-gpio set 20 ip pd     Set GPIO20 to input with pull down
                                

                                @Semper-5 Ready for some tests?

                                S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • S
                                  Semper 5 @cyperghost
                                  last edited by

                                  @cyperghost oh I'm excited to do some testing :)

                                  Forgive me in advance if my replies are a bit far and few between this weekend. I packed up my system to take home but I'll be doing a lot of errands and driving. I'll check in as frequent as I can. Thank you once again team for your efforts!

                                  Let's kick this can of worms!

                                  cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • cyperghostC
                                    cyperghost @Semper 5
                                    last edited by cyperghost

                                    @semper-5

                                    Please install raspi-gpio, this tool gives BASH control over internal pullup resistors ;)
                                    install with sudo apt install raspi-gpio
                                    That are just 66kB ;)

                                    Then copy script as done times before, make it executable and execute it in SSH ;)
                                    I'm not sure if it needs sudo privileges.

                                    1. If it is not working, then you may alter until [[ $power == 0 ]] from 0 to 1
                                    2. If this is sill not working then alter raspi-gpio set $GPIO_powerswitch ip pu from pu to pd
                                      So all in all you have 4 possibilites ;)

                                    then the new switch.sh

                                    #!/bin/bash
                                    # End Emulationstation if condition of running binary is true (v1.7)
                                    # v1.00 07/21/17 by cyperghost - Inital run 
                                    # v1.50 07/27/17 - Great step to exit ES even if emulators is running by runcommand.sh are started // meleu
                                    # v1.56 07/30/17 - All emulators will be detected. // meleu
                                    # v1.58 08/02/17 - generel method: Use PPID to detect child PIDs now (ScummVM fix) // cyperghost
                                    # v1.59 11/14/17 - Inserted newest emucall detection // meleu
                                    # v1.60 04/20/18 - added kill -9 to terminate emulators // julenvitoria
                                    # v1.70 version for NESPi case // Yahmez, Semper-5
                                    
                                    # Please install raspi-gpio via sudo apt install raspi-gpio before!
                                    
                                    #this is the GPIO pin connected to POWER SWITCH
                                    GPIO_powerswitch=24
                                    
                                    #this is the GPIO pin connected to POWER ON CONTROL
                                    GPIO_powerctrl=25
                                    
                                    # Init ...
                                    raspi-gpio set $GPIO_powerswitch ip pu
                                    raspi-gpio set $GPIO_powerctrl op dh
                                    
                                    until [[ $power == 0 ]]; do
                                        power=$(raspi-gpio get $GPIO_powerswitch | grep -c "level=1 fsel=0 func=INPUT")
                                        sleep 1
                                    done
                                    
                                    # Detect PID or EMULATOR NAMES
                                    emucall="$(sed '4!d; s/\([\\"]\|[[:alnum:]_]\+=[^ ]* \)//g; s/[][(){}^$*.|+? ]/\\&/g' /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
                                    espid="$(pgrep -f "/opt/retropie/supplementary/.*/emulationstation([^.]|$)")"
                                    
                                    echo "Button Pressed pullup going from 1 to 0: $power"
                                    echo "ES-PID: $espid"
                                    sleep 5
                                    
                                    # Handle calls and send TERM signal
                                    
                                    if [[ -n "$emucall" ]]; then
                                        emupid="$(pgrep -f "$emucall" | tr '\n' ' ')"
                                        pkill -P "$(echo $emupid | tr ' ' ',')"
                                        kill -9 "$emupid"
                                        sleep 4
                                    fi
                                    
                                    if [[ -n "$espid" ]]; then
                                        touch /tmp/es-shutdown && chown pi:pi /tmp/es-shutdown
                                        kill "$espid"
                                        exit
                                    fi
                                    
                                    echo "Script terminated not by ES!"
                                    

                                    Thanks for your patience!


                                    @Yahmez I tested the script on my old Pi1B+. Just connected a momentary push button to GPIO24 and to ground. Works flawless if I press the button. On default (no button action) the GPIO24 status is 1, if the button is pressed the pullup is dropped to 0 and the loop is breaked! Got an excellent knowledge base from you - Thx.

                                    @Semper-5
                                    If you need guidance then don't hestiate to ask. But I think the script should work out of the box after installing the raspi-gpio binary

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • S
                                      Semper 5
                                      last edited by Semper 5

                                      EUREKA! IT WORKS!

                                      Just some minor bumps in the road...some emulators/ports I can add games/entries and they'll save to favorites but can't be removed (they can be removed but on a power down, power up, they remain added). I'm going to be doing some updating from sources to see if this will fix it, but this is a huge leap in the right way team :D

                                      Also to add, this has been tested on the 4.4 Retropie image

                                      cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • cyperghostC
                                        cyperghost @Semper 5
                                        last edited by cyperghost

                                        @semper-5 Thx ;)

                                        Now I have ready setted script for you!
                                        This got working power button
                                        If you press reset and a emulator is running it will fire you back to ES
                                        If you are in ES and press reset again ES will reload!

                                        It's uses the same script base as here but is much much extended!

                                        Use the same procedure to install script as always....

                                        But now it supports parameters:
                                        in your case: scriptname.sh --nespicase &

                                        Get this thread here

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • S
                                          Semper 5 @cyperghost
                                          last edited by Semper 5

                                          @cyperghost I had a chance to update the script to its entirety from your thread and using your parameters, but unfortunately I'm set back a bit.

                                          I ran the script with its parameter in SSH and it was complaining about not finding commands, but with executing it, it immediately starts a shutdown command and does not keep any favorites tagged. It's a good thing I didn't put it into the autostart.sh or else it'd probably start up and shutdown as soon as ES was loaded.

                                          SSH output screenshot

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

                                            Well I don't know why this is don't running.
                                            Did you have raspi-gpio installed?

                                            Please do so with sudo apt install raspi-gpio

                                            Then cd /home/pi/RetroPie/scripts

                                            Then wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/crcerror/ES-generic-shutdown/master/multi_switch.sh && chmod +x multi_switch.sh

                                            Then run the scripts via SSH
                                            ./multi_switch.sh --nespicase &

                                            You don't need sudo, you don't need the bash interpreter to call, all automatic done ;)

                                            caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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