RetroPie forum home
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Home
    • Docs
    • Register
    • Login

    Multi Switch Shutdown Script!

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Ideas and Development
    shutdown scriptshutdown switchcyperghost
    272 Posts 40 Posters 109.5k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • cyperghostC
      cyperghost @gollumer
      last edited by cyperghost

      @gollumer Hello my friend!
      Today I got my NESPi+ case, too! And I was able to get the same behaviour as you descriped! So there is nothing wrong with your setup!

      The NESPi+ case is a real bummer! It can COMPLETLY shutdown power!!! Really!

      You need the shutdown_fan script. Please install with this line
      cd /lib/systemd/system-shutdown/ && sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/crcerror/ES-generic-shutdown/master/shutdown_fan && sudo chmod +x shutdown_fan

      That might work but you may edit the multi_switch.sh
      You can edit line that is round about 160 and change or download newest version 0.51
      I removed the line that sets GPIOPoweronctrl to low, this caused issues! You can alse let this line still commented and use old version!

          raspi-gpio set $GPIO_poweronctrl op dh
      
      to
      
          raspi-gpio set $GPIO_poweronctrl op pn dh
      
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • G
        gollumer
        last edited by

        @cyperghost - YES! That did it! I installed the shutdown_fan script, then edited multi_switch.sh. Problem solved! Thank you!

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

          @gollumer Yes, it was a long way. Thanks for your reports and patience.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • C
            cloudlink
            last edited by cloudlink

            Thank you so much @cyperghost!
            I updated the multi_switch.sh and installed the shutdown_fan script. Everything is working perfectly except that it is not saving metadata when powering off now.
            It is when I reset though.

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

              @cloudlink Well I tested several times now. And I've achived always flawless shutdown and poweroff with no loss of metadata ... So safe shutdown works!

              You can see if you restart ES ... as the file system is initiated you will see "retropie: clean" or "dirt bit set!"

              If the dirt bit is set! Then there were issues with the shutdown.

              In my setup it never accours. I would assume you've downloaded the newest version but did not remove the older one. So the new one is named multi_switch.sh.1

              Enter:
              cd /home/pi/RetroPie/scripts
              then rm multi_switch.*
              This will remove all copies of multi_switch.

              Then follow this guide here
              I've written it for NESPi+. If you made all steps right then you just need Pt. 3 of the guide!

              Btw: My NESPi+ board version is USB2 V2, 18/01/18

              caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • caver01C
                caver01 @cyperghost
                last edited by

                @cyperghost So, does this mean that with the proper software configuration using your latest updates etc., the NESPi+ case can function with full shutdown without the need for a Mauseberry or similar hardware hack/addition?

                My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • cyperghostC
                  cyperghost @caver01
                  last edited by

                  @caver01 As far is a tested: Yes, it makes a full power cut.

                  There aren't any LED activites anymore (red LED for power on Raspberry for ex.) and 5V rail is also shut off. So this seems to work. It seems to work very similar to the Pimoroni ShimOnOff ... You need also a GPIO set to 0 that immediatly cuts power also via systemd, too ;)

                  caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • caver01C
                    caver01 @cyperghost
                    last edited by

                    @cyperghost Amazing. This little case just keeps getting better and better. The updated script and NESPi+ means you can save $20 by not needing a power button circuit, and you save all of the modification time/risk, and you save the space inside the case for all of the rewiring etc.

                    About the only thing worth doing to these now is moving the ethernet port to the back.

                    My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                    cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • cyperghostC
                      cyperghost @caver01
                      last edited by cyperghost

                      @caver01 If you want to save money definitly a good choice! A user from github told me, that in python script from retroflag it is possible to cut power, without the systemd-service. Because he said, my script works with reboot/save shutdown and so on... but the fan is still blowing.

                      Therefore I used the systemd-service to cut power and now the fan is shutdown by poweroff - same was reported by @gollumer. He made constant report that helped a lot. On my first tests I had exact the same issues as he reported - The Pie was shutdown but only in idle-mode (means 5V rail on, red LED on Pie also on). But with the introduction of the systemd-script the fan-off issue is also solved and we obtain a complete unpowered device (means 5V rail off, red LED on Pie also off)

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

                        @caver01 I'm currently working on a version that supports command line options.

                        Up to now 4 parameters are supported

                        1. powerbtn= with this command you set desired GPIO the powerbutton is attached to. If you left unsigned or you enter wrong setting, then default values are used. All devices support that command
                        2. resetbtn= with this command you set desired GPIO the resetbutton is attached to. If you left unsigned or you enter wrong setting, then default values are used. Only the both NESPi cases supports that type. So if you use this command on a generic button it will be ignored!
                        3. powerctrl= with this command you set desired GPIO the power ON control is attached to. All devices needs this, except the generic button only! If you enter wrong values or leave it blank the default values for expected device are used. This command indicates the power device in which state the Raspberry is, so a complete power cut can be performed!
                        4. ledctrl= with this command you set desired GPIO a LED can be shut ON or OFF. Up to now only the NESPi cases supports that feature. I think I can integrate it to other devices, too.

                        So you set for example your Mausberry-switch via commandline:

                        1. default values: multi_switch.sh --mausberry this will use GPIO23 for power button and GPIO24 for power ON control.
                        2. multi_switch.sh --mausberry powerbtn=17 this will use GPIO17 for power button and GPIO24 for power ON control still as default
                        3. multi_switch.sh --mausberry powerctrl=4 powerbtn=3 this will use GPIO3 for power button and GPIO4 for power ON control
                        4. multi_switch.sh --mausberry powerbutton=3 powerctrl=3a will use default values GPIO23 for power button and GPIO24 for power ON control as parameters were all setted wrong.

                        Also better support pages will be contained. So you get support for each command or device if you just enter ./multi_switch.sh --nespi+ help for example. I will integrate this into a later version so we can rush to v1.00.

                        Annother thing I may add: --systemd value to create compatibility with Shutdown Service by @meleu. So you enter multi_switch.sh --systemdinto the service file:
                        instead : ExecStop=/etc/killes.sh
                        you enter: ExecStop=/path/to/multi_switch.sh --systemd
                        Then you are completly independent of the power switch settings from here and can use python or any other coding language to to get ES gracefully shutdown just by using sudo poweroff or sudo shutdown -h now. The script is in no way abolished by revitalising the shutdown service because you can still reset/reboot ES with commands this script provides ;)

                        And then maybe some installer scripts ;)
                        Much better documentatation ;)
                        So feedback is appreaciated ;)

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

                          Version 0.85 is now available.....

                          This is a huge step!

                          v0.70 Parameter control, added extended help pages
                          v0.75 Parameter --CLOSEEMU is called --ES-CLOSEEMU (both can be used for backward compatibility!)
                          v0.80 Introduced --ES-SYSTEMD parameter, now the ES gracefully shutdown service by @meleu can be used
                          v0.85 Code cleanup, added watchdog to kill only persistent emulators with sig -9, added more helppages

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • C
                            cloudlink
                            last edited by

                            Awesome!
                            With Version 0.85, are the installation instructions still the same?

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

                              @cloudlink Yes! Remove old version before and just download the newest. So first use point 3.1 and then do point 3.0 from instructions ;) But there are just a small things improved. It's just better documented now and some calls are much much cleaner. The biggest point is the possibility to setup GPIOs via commandline now and I differ between kill -15 and kill -9 signal now. I try to use kill -15 in first instance. If after 2 seconds the process is still active... kill level 9 is used. kill -9 can make some problems and it should only be used as last resort.
                              So I use this only for emulators.... you can test for example with pifba. This isn't closed with kill -15 so after 2 seconds the emulator will close caused by kill -9 signal.

                              @caver01 I tried to use a kind of systemd-like call. But I wasn't able to integrate this into the shutdown service. The call to should be ExecStop=path/to/multi_switch.sh --es-systemd but It didn't work. Even a call to killes.sh that calls the multi_switch.sh and waits several seconds.... Did not work! I hope the service can be done to rework again!

                              caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • caver01C
                                caver01 @cyperghost
                                last edited by

                                @cyperghost said in Multi Switch Shutdown Script!:

                                @caver01 I tried to use a kind of systemd-like call. But I wasn't able to integrate this into the shutdown service. The call to should be ExecStop=path/to/multi_switch.sh --es-systemd but It didn't work. Even a call to killes.sh that calls the multi_switch.sh and waits several seconds.... Did not work!

                                Bummer. This was exactly what I wanted to do. I wonder if needed subsystems are closing before the call.

                                My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • cyperghostC
                                  cyperghost @caver01
                                  last edited by

                                  @caver01 Maybe you can test and report? For me this did not work and I may hide it (it won't be displayed as option in help pages) if the --es-systemd switch will not run. It should in theoretically work the same way as @meleu's service (maybe you can add the sleep timer) but I had no success.

                                  caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • caver01C
                                    caver01 @cyperghost
                                    last edited by

                                    @cyperghost I see what you were doing. . . you were actually trying to define the service using multi_switch.sh --es-systemd. I guess I was simply going to call the multi_switch.shfrom meleu's service instead. I need to look at it and see how it is setup now. I wonder if the problem is what others are seeing--that even meleu's service is not working correctly now.

                                    My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                    cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • cyperghostC
                                      cyperghost @caver01
                                      last edited by cyperghost

                                      @caver01 Yes...

                                      My first try was the ExecStop=

                                      then later I used the killes.sh script and wrote just

                                      #!/bin/bash
                                      /path/to/multi_switch.sh --es-systemd
                                      sleep 10
                                      

                                      Made it executable with chmod a+x .... Did not work. So I think the service isn't working anymore. Maybe I've done something wrong?
                                      I think there is no difference to call a bash file with parameters or to call it without ;) But I'm not sure if these systemd services can parse commandlines.... I think yes! But that's the difference of a hobby user like me and someone who really digs deep into unix systems ;)

                                      caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • caver01C
                                        caver01 @cyperghost
                                        last edited by

                                        @cyperghost Ok, so on my main arcade build (custom case, Mausberry Switch, dedicated momentary power button, GPIO-->transistor trigger), I dropped in your multi_switch. I updating my Python script that watches the GPIO triggered by the switch on the Mausberry. Now, instead of doing the traditional kill PIDs and killES, I simply call multi_switch --es-poweroff. Fast and done. The Pi shuts down, Mausberry detects the drop on the other GPIO and cuts the power.

                                        For soft shutdown, I updated Meleu's service. My version of the service has been doing two things: First, it triggers the Mausberry via GPIO to the transistor which in turn closes the power switch. Second, it did the old emulator PID lookup and kill, plus killES. These commands got replaced with the multi_switch --es-poweroff call again.

                                        This works great, although I should say that my system is still running the previous RetroPie image (4.3, Jessie).

                                        We know that using the switch works great. We also know that soft shutdown also leads to the Mausberry cutting power correctly. So, I am certain that the service is triggering the transistor. What I don't know is if the trigger is getting picked up by the python script FIRST which calls multi_switch or if the call is being made by the service. Either way, my metadata is getting saved.

                                        I could try removing the call to multi_switch from meleu's service. That way, the only thing the service is doing is triggering the switch. I may just leave it alone.

                                        My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                        cyperghostC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • cyperghostC
                                          cyperghost @caver01
                                          last edited by cyperghost

                                          @caver01 Yes the scripts are called by the service but somehow the sleep commands are ignored.

                                          You can place the transistor call to /lib/systemd/system-shutdown/ as script.
                                          Then make the script executable.... Be aware to place the shebang #!/bin/sh in first line!

                                          You can use the same technique like I've done in Exposed Shim ON OFF

                                          With the script you can differ between reboots, shutdowns.... so the trigger can be called only by shutdown (=poweroff) and reboots.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • cyperghostC
                                            cyperghost @caver01
                                            last edited by cyperghost

                                            @caver01 said in Multi Switch Shutdown Script!:

                                            We know that using the switch works great. We also know that soft shutdown also leads to the Mausberry cutting power correctly. So, I am certain that the service is triggering the transistor. What I don't know is if the trigger is getting picked up by the python script FIRST which calls multi_switch or if the call is being made by the service. Either way, my metadata is getting saved.

                                            So with this setup following happens.
                                            The script is first triggered by your python script. It calls in first instance the multi_switch. The multi_switch closes all emulators and wait for ES to finish (so all metadata is saved!) then multi_switch is quit and gives control back to ES-script. The ES-script checks for apperance of files in /tmp-folder, this files trigger the further actions. It can be a restart of ES, a reboot of the system or a system shutdown!

                                            After that the service of meleu is initiated. So the service takes action AFTER all metadata is saved. I wasn't able to run the service in a proper way... so I can't say if it works proper in general :(

                                            caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post

                                            Contributions to the project are always appreciated, so if you would like to support us with a donation you can do so here.

                                            Hosting provided by Mythic-Beasts. See the Hosting Information page for more information.