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

    PlayStation and .zip files

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help and Support
    psxplaystationzip
    40 Posts 13 Posters 11.9k 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.
    • mituM
      mitu Global Moderator @IyonUK
      last edited by

      @iyonuk Just be aware that every time you'll launch the game, the game will be unzipped. You'll have to wait for the unzip command to finish its job before the game will actually be launched.
      If you're doing this on a Raspberry PI, you can wait quite a few minutes and maybe more.

      I mediamogulM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • I
        IyonUK @mitu
        last edited by

        @mitu Hmm, I hadn’t really thought of the unzipping performance. I’ll have to try a few unzips out.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mediamogulM
          mediamogul Global Moderator @mitu
          last edited by

          @mitu said in PlayStation and .zip files:

          If you're doing this on a Raspberry PI, you can wait quite a few minutes and maybe more.

          No problem. Just script another game to launch while you're waiting. ;)

          RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

          mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
          • mituM
            mitu Global Moderator @mediamogul
            last edited by

            @mediamogul said in PlayStation and .zip files:

            Just script another game to launch while you're waiting. ;)

            Just quickly launch a game while you're waiting for the game to start :)

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • I
              IyonUK
              last edited by IyonUK

              Well... no need for any of this. Added zip to the supported list in es_systems.cfg and tried a game for the sake of it and it works. RetroArch unpacks it to /tmp/retroarch. It takes a while to start, blank screen whilst it unpacks but that solves my storage issue. 😃

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • I
                IyonUK
                last edited by

                Probably spoke too soon. Need to try some with multiple bin files.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • I
                  IyonUK
                  last edited by

                  Bit of a mixed bag at the moment. Passing a zip file in does indeed extract the zip to /tmp/retroarch but only the first bin file. I’ve adapted your script to work with a zip file and extract everything to /tmp/psx (cue and all bins). This works fine and the game loads, however RetroArch is now ignoring the display settings I had setup for PCSX ReArmed and is launching in 1080p with only the top-left quarter of the screen displaying the full image (I had display for PCSX ReArmed set to CEA1 with custom offsets/width/height to fill my screen). I noticed that an —appendconfig is used when launching PCSX ReArmed normally but this is only to set the refresh rate to 60hz. The other issue is minor in that running from /tmp/psx also saves the srm file there. So I might have to switch back your script to extract to the rom location. Any ideas why my display settings might be borked?

                  mediamogulM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • mediamogulM
                    mediamogul Global Moderator @IyonUK
                    last edited by mediamogul

                    @iyonuk said in PlayStation and .zip files:

                    Any ideas why my display settings might be borked?

                    If these are RetroArch settings, then they should have carried over. If the display settings you're referencing were set in the Runcommand menu and if you've changed the launch command in /opt/retropie/configs/psx/emulators.cfg, then your previous settings are tied to the 'lr-pcsx-rearmed' named launch command from that file. You would need to either configure those same settings for 'lr-pcsx-rearmed-zip', or manually change 'lr-pcsx-rearmed' to 'lr-pcsx-rearmed-zip' in /opt/retropie/configs/all/videomodes.cfg.

                    RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • I
                      IyonUK
                      last edited by

                      I’ve set the runcommand resolution for the new unzip emulator/script to CEA-1 to match which works fine but RetroArch still doesn’t play ball. I had set the aspect ratio to “Custom” and manually entered figures for the X and Y offsets, width and height but those have gone. I have set them back but every time I launch those setting have reset. I checked the config at /opt/retropie/configs/psx/retroarch.cfg and my settings are there (same location as where RetroArch says its saved the settings and the same config passed on emulator launch) so I’m a little lost right now. Will do some more digging later. On a positive note the unzipping etc. works fine, will probably tart it up a bit.

                      dankcushionsD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • dankcushionsD
                        dankcushions Global Moderator @IyonUK
                        last edited by

                        @iyonuk unzipping ~400MB files to an SD card every game launch sounds like an efficient way of destroying an SD card ;)

                        i guess you could unzip to a ram drive, but multi-disk psx games would consume more system ram than an rpi has.

                        i would definitely recommend the .pbp approach.

                        I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DarksaviorD
                          Darksavior
                          last edited by

                          Nothing pure about preferring one disc format over another. Pbp saves space, and your "purist" butt won't know the difference.

                          I 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • I
                            IyonUK @dankcushions
                            last edited by IyonUK

                            @dankcushions said in PlayStation and .zip files:

                            @iyonuk unzipping ~400MB files to an SD card every game launch sounds like an efficient way of destroying an SD card ;)

                            I’m currently unzipping to /tmp/psx so on the SD card but I’ll most likely move it to the rom location which is mounted on an external HDD. Although it’d be cheaper to replace the SD card. 😉

                            I could also consider leaving the unzipped files in place until a certain limit is reached and then delete the oldest files, like a cache.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • I
                              IyonUK @Darksavior
                              last edited by

                              @darksavior said in PlayStation and .zip files:

                              Nothing pure about preferring one disc format over another. Pbp saves space, and your "purist" butt won't know the difference.

                              Probably more to do with effort than purism. Also the PSX2PBP thing failed a few times for me.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • I
                                IyonUK @Darksavior
                                last edited by

                                @darksavior Loving the Super Famicom BTW. 👍🏻

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • I
                                  IyonUK
                                  last edited by IyonUK

                                  Hi

                                  I have got a script working to my liking. I'm posting it here in case anyone else wants to use/butcher/edit it.

                                  It creates a .cache directory in /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/psx into which it unzips the games. It keeps the files there until it hits the cache limit (which is set at 5Gb) and then starts deleting older files to recover the space.

                                  There are probably bugs/improvements to be found/made.

                                  As mentioned by @mediamogul I put the following script in /opt/retropie/configs/psx named as lr-pcsx-rearmed-unzip.sh

                                  #!/bin/bash
                                  
                                  function centre_string() {
                                    local LPAD=$(( ( $(tput cols) - ${#1} ) / 2))
                                    local RPAD=$(( ( $(tput cols) - ${#1} ) - $LPAD ))
                                    local STRING=$(printf ' %.0s' $(seq 1 $LPAD))${1}$(printf ' %.0s' $(seq 1 $RPAD))
                                    echo "$STRING"
                                  }
                                  
                                  function ticker() {
                                    STR=""
                                    B=$(( $P - 1 ))
                                    while [[ $B -gt 0 ]]; do
                                      STR="${STR}."
                                      B=$(( $B - 1 ))
                                    done
                                    STR="${STR}:"
                                    B=$(( $W - $P ))
                                    while [[ $B -gt 0 ]]; do
                                      STR="${STR}."
                                      B=$(( $B - 1 ))
                                    done
                                    tput cup $SL3Y 0
                                    echo -e "${TC_YELLOW}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                    Z=$(( $Z + 1 ))
                                    P=$(( $P + $D ))
                                    if [[ $P -gt $W ]]; then
                                      P=$(( $W - 1 ))
                                      D=-1
                                    fi
                                    if [[ $P -lt 1 ]]; then
                                      P=2
                                      D=1
                                    fi
                                  }
                                  
                                  # Clear display and hide cursor
                                  tput clear
                                  tput civis
                                  
                                  # Declare terminal colours
                                  TC_CYAN="\e[0;36;49m"
                                  TC_DEFAULT="\e[0;39;49m"
                                  TC_YELLOW="\e[0;33;49m"
                                  
                                  # Declare cache variables
                                  CACHE_DIRECTORY="/home/pi/RetroPie/roms/psx/.cache"
                                  CACHE_IDEAL_SIZE=5242880 # 5242880 = 5Gb
                                  
                                  # Declare path variables
                                  ZIP_FILE="$(sed '3q;d' /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
                                  ZIP_FILE_DIRECTORY=$(dirname "$ZIP_FILE")
                                  CUE_FILE="${ZIP_FILE##*/}"
                                  CUE_FILE="${CACHE_DIRECTORY}/${CUE_FILE%.*}.cue"
                                  
                                  # Declare status line variables
                                  SL1Y=$(( ($(tput lines) / 2) - 1 ))
                                  SL2Y=$(( $SL1Y + 1 ))
                                  SL3Y=$(( $SL2Y + 1 ))
                                  
                                  # Create cache directory (if not exists)
                                  mkdir -p "${CACHE_DIRECTORY}"
                                  
                                  # Status update
                                  tput cup $SL2Y 0
                                  STR="Checking cache ..."
                                  echo -e "${TC_CYAN}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  sleep 0.2
                                  
                                  # Get current cache size
                                  CACHE_SIZE=$(find "$CACHE_DIRECTORY" -type f \( -iname \*.bin -o -iname \*.cue \) -print0 | du --files0-from=- -c | tail -n1 | cut -f1)
                                  
                                  # Does the cache need clearing?
                                  if [[ $CACHE_SIZE -gt $CACHE_IDEAL_SIZE ]]; then
                                  
                                    # Status update
                                    tput cup $SL1Y 0
                                    STR="Shrinking cache ..."
                                    echo -e "${TC_CYAN}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                    # Keep removing files, oldest first, until cache is below maxiumum size
                                    while [[ $CACHE_SIZE -gt $CACHE_IDEAL_SIZE ]]; do
                                  
                                      # Get oldest file
                                      FILE_TO_DELETE=$(ls -A1rt "$CACHE_DIRECTORY"/*.bin "$CACHE_DIRECTORY"/*.cue 2>/dev/null | head -n1)
                                  
                                      # Status update
                                      tput cup $SL2Y 0
                                      STR=$(basename "$FILE_TO_DELETE")
                                      echo -e "${TC_DEFAULT}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                      # Delete file
                                      rm -rf "$FILE_TO_DELETE"
                                  
                                      # Get current cache size
                                      CACHE_SIZE=$(find "$CACHE_DIRECTORY" -type f \( -iname \*.bin -o -iname \*.cue \) -print0 | du --files0-from=- -c | tail -n1 | cut -f1)
                                  
                                    done
                                  
                                    # Clear
                                    tput cup $SL1Y 0
                                    echo -e "$( centre_string "" )"
                                  
                                  fi
                                  
                                  # Spinner variables
                                  P=1;D=1;W=7
                                  
                                  # Declare first regular expression - Redump based
                                  REGEX1="^(.*\(Disc )[0-9]+(\).*)$"
                                  
                                  # Single disc or multiple discs?
                                  if [[ ! $ZIP_FILE =~ $REGEX1 ]]; then
                                  
                                    # Output file details
                                    tput cup $SL1Y 0
                                    STR="Unzipping disc ..."
                                    echo -e "${TC_CYAN}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                    # Output file name
                                    tput cup $SL2Y 0
                                    STR=$(basename "$ZIP_FILE")
                                    echo -e "${TC_DEFAULT}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                    # Unzip
                                    unzip -DDnq "$ZIP_FILE" -d "$CACHE_DIRECTORY" &
                                    UNZIP_PID=$!
                                  
                                    # Ticker
                                    while kill -0 $UNZIP_PID 2> /dev/null; do
                                      ticker
                                      sleep 0.05
                                    done
                                  
                                  else
                                  
                                    # Status update
                                    tput cup $SL2Y 0
                                    STR="Checking for other discs ..."
                                    echo -e "${TC_CYAN}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                    # Build second regular expression
                                    REGEX2=${BASH_REMATCH[1]}[0-9]+${BASH_REMATCH[2]}
                                    REGEX2=$(echo "$REGEX2" | sed -e 's/(/\\(/g' -e 's/)/\\)/g' -e 's/\./\\./g')
                                  
                                    # Unzip discs  
                                    CURRENT_FILE=1
                                    find "$ZIP_FILE_DIRECTORY" -maxdepth 1 -regextype posix-extended -regex "$REGEX2" | sort -t '\0' -n | while read LINE; do
                                  
                                      # Output file details
                                      tput cup $SL1Y 0
                                      STR="Unzipping disc ${CURRENT_FILE} ..."
                                      echo -e "${TC_CYAN}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                      # Output file name
                                      tput cup $SL2Y 0
                                      STR=$(basename "$LINE")
                                      echo -e "${TC_DEFAULT}$( centre_string "$STR" )"
                                  
                                      # Unzip
                                      unzip -DDnq "$LINE" -d "$CACHE_DIRECTORY" &
                                      UNZIP_PID=$!
                                    
                                      # Ticker
                                      while kill -0 $UNZIP_PID 2> /dev/null; do
                                        ticker
                                        sleep 0.05
                                      done
                                  
                                      # Next file
                                      CURRENT_FILE=$(( $CURRENT_FILE + 1 ))
                                  
                                    done
                                  
                                  fi
                                  
                                  # Clear display and restore cursor
                                  tput sgr0
                                  tput clear
                                  tput cnorm
                                  
                                  # Launch lr-pcsx-rearmed
                                  /opt/retropie/emulators/retroarch/bin/retroarch -L /opt/retropie/libretrocores/lr-pcsx-rearmed/libretro.so --config /opt/retropie/configs/psx/retroarch.cfg "$CUE_FILE" --appendconfig /dev/shm/retroarch.cfg &> /dev/shm/runcommand.log
                                  
                                  # Exit
                                  exit
                                  
                                  

                                  I added the following to /opt/retropie/configs/psx/emulators.cfg and set it to the default emulator

                                  lr-pcsx-rearmed-unzip = "bash /opt/retropie/configs/psx/lr-pcsx-rearmed-unzip.sh %ROM% &>/dev/tty"
                                  

                                  NB. The cache directory is on an external HDD so I'm not worried about SD card failure.

                                  Edit: Updated script to not use regex for single disc games.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                  • ClydeC
                                    Clyde
                                    last edited by Clyde

                                    Just a comment to @IyonUK's script: If your machine has enough ram, you might change the CACHE_DIRECTORY to something in the ramdisk /dev/shm (shared memory), e.g. /dev/shm/psx-cache. Most of today's Linux distributions install shm by default. (Does Retropie even work without it, since it uses it for Runcommand?)

                                    Be sure to change CACHE_IDEAL_SIZE accordingly. You can check the size and free amount of shm with the command df -h. But leave some of it for other applications and the system.

                                    As it is with ramdisks, everything stored there is lost on a system shutdown or reboot. So, contrary to on-disk caching, the zip extraction will have to happen every first time a game is started after a system shutdown or restart. Writing to ram is much faster than to disk, though.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • E
                                      el chupacabra
                                      last edited by el chupacabra

                                      @mediamogul Was that the only way to do it last year? It seems a pretty crazy workaround.

                                      Also pbp files were mentioned but you shouldn't use pbp files they cause headaches.
                                      @IyonUK You can use chd files with the main psx emulator which is far better and easier.
                                      You can get this on the device itself running. chd files also will embed multiple files into the single file which is great for multiple games.

                                      apt install mame-tools
                                      

                                      now the program 'chdman' is installed it is very simple to run it:
                                      chdman createcd -i FILENAME.cue -o FILENAME.chd

                                      
                                      chdman createcd -i Castlevania\ Symphony\ of\ the\ night.cue -o Castlevania\ Symphony\ of\ the\ night.chd
                                      

                                      The output looks like this:
                                      e20c3f01-e549-4cf3-99b0-85c6ff99441c-image.png

                                      This will put all your files in a single file, like any archive does. Twisted metal 2 for example goes from 12 files and 800mb to 460mb.

                                      cyperghostC mediamogulM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • cyperghostC
                                        cyperghost @el chupacabra
                                        last edited by

                                        @el-chupacabra No, pbp files are not a crazy workaround it the standard format for Playstation portable games. But I like your small tutorial - you should add it to the PSX section.

                                        The best format (imho) is ecm, no (logical) data loss - it removes the error correction from the physical data device. Are there any emulators supporting this format?

                                        E 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • E
                                          el chupacabra @cyperghost
                                          last edited by

                                          @cyperghost said in PlayStation and .zip files:

                                          @el-chupacabra No, pbp files are not a crazy workaround it the standard format for Playstation portable games. But I like your small tutorial - you should add it to the PSX section.

                                          The best format (imho) is ecm, no (logical) data loss - it removes the error correction from the physical data device. Are there any emulators supporting this format?

                                          I didn't say pbp was a crazy work around.
                                          https://retropie.org.uk/docs/Playstation-1/ Looks like chd is already mentioned briefly here

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

                                            @el-chupacabra Oh my bad! But then use the cite-function to avoid me from confusion.

                                            But this does not matter at all - I think chd is the better way to store data (lossless with LZMA for data and FLAC for audio) and can be handeled like original iso/bin with m3u/cue.

                                            Again do you know an emulator working with ecm format?

                                            E 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.