[Solved] How to bind a shell command to a hotkey? (raspi2png)
-
would it be possible to pass the variable % ROM% to raspi2png to create a file with the name of the rom? thank you
-
@hermit
triggerhappy
is not related to retropie. AFAIK%ROM%
or$ROM
is not available from the environment. However, to get the rom file name you may start withbasename `ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | head -1 | awk '{ print $NF }'`
Without a physical keyboard attached the tool jslisten may be an option.
-
This post is deleted! -
@Lolonois I'm sorry I did not understand ... can you give me an example?
I launched the command but it does not work
./raspi2png basenameps a | grep RetroPie / roms | head -1 | awk '{print $ NF}'
-
The command @Lolonois posted would get the name of the currently playing ROM, which you can then save in a variable to be used instead of %ROM%. If you're not running any game, then the command might return an empty string.
-
@mitu Thanks for jumping in.
@hermit It was a brief example to extract the rom name when a rom is in use/in play.
You can decompose my hint into the different commands and make yourself familiar with them (same for the bash pipe|
and bash backtick ` operator). Then put the commands again together with the pipe symbol one-after-another and view the results each time you added a pipe.FYI in my
raspi2png
I have to use--pngname
to give the screenshot a different name, can judge if you have a different version than me. -
@Lolonois I meant an example of the complete command
./raspi2png --prgname and then what should I write?
launching the following command, create a file (PNG) only with the name BASENAME
./raspi2png --pngname basenameps a | grep RetroPie/roms | head -1 | awk '{ print $NF }'
Excuse me, but I do not know these commands
p.s. of course a game is started (super mario world 2 snes)
edit:
if I write the command like this, it creates a file with the name B1W7RX ~ O.PNG./raspi2png --pngname basename+`ps a|grep RetroPie/roms/|head -1|awk '{ print $NF }'`+.png
-
@mitu Sorry about the late answer, I don't have much time at the moment. I'll look into triggerhappy this weekend.
@hermit You'll have to put @Lolonois' commands in brackets following a
$
and remove the two+
afterbasename
and before.png
:./raspi2png --pngname $(basename `ps a|grep RetroPie/roms/|head -1|awk '{ print $NF }'`).png
This will creat a screenshot called gamename.ext.png, e.g. gorf.zip.png. If you want to remove the zip extension, add
-s .zip
as an option tobasename
:./raspi2png --pngname $(basename -s .zip `ps a|grep RetroPie/roms/|head -1|awk '{ print $NF }'`).png
-
thank you all, but I give up
the only result was a file with a type name: _NCE72 ~ 2.PNG -
@hermit It seems like this method has problems with spaces in the filename, because awk will treat them as field separators, and thus handing over only the part of the filename after the last space in it (I think, as I'm not very experienced in awk).
Could you test it with a rom filename without spaces?
-
@Clyde Could you test it with a rom filename without spaces?
yes :)
I have rename "Super Mario World 2 - Yoshi's Island (Europe) (En,Fr,De) (Rev 1).zip" in 000super_mario_world2.zip and the result was: 000super_mario_world2.pngbut normally the roms have spaces ... :(
-
@hermit My dirty hack solution after some reading:
raspi2png --pngname $(basename -s .zip `ps a|grep RetroPie/roms/|head -1|sed -e 's/ /_/g'|awk '{ print $NF }'|sed 's/\\\//g'`).png
I inserted the command
sed -e 's/ /_/g'
before awk to convert any whitespace to an underscore, and ased 's/\\\//g'
after awk to remove any\
which the Linux shell uses to mark special characters like whitespaces,'
,(
,)
etc.I did it this way because awk seems to have problems with whitespaces (thus sed removes them beforehand), but also needs the backslash before special characters (thus sed removes them only afterwards).
I sometimes can't let unsolved problems just go … although I now have to hurry cleaning up my flat before going to a party. 😌
edit: See @mitu's optimised version with whitespace-passthrough and multiple filename extensions support here.
-
@Clyde perfect :) tested with both snes and amiga :) Thanks a lot :)
thank you all :)
-
Okay, I finally got around working on this. Here's my tested solution:
- Install triggerhappy:
sudo apt install triggerhappy
- Change its service configuration file using sed to run it as user
pi
for writing permissions in that user's $HOME directory (optional, but needed for the example below):
sudo sed -i -e 's/nobody/pi/' /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/triggerhappy.service
- Use
thd
to find the code of the key you want to connect a shell command to:
thd --dump /dev/input/* # exit with CTRL+C
- Put the code and the desired shell command into a fittingly named file in the directory
/etc/triggerhappy/triggers.d/
Example: Running the raspi2png command from above on the press of "Print Screen", using the config file/etc/triggerhappy/triggers.d/raspi2png.conf
:
KEY_SYSRQ 1 raspi2png --pngname "/home/pi/$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g; s/\\//g')"-$(date +%Y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S).png
- KEY_SYSRQ is the code for the "Print Screen" key on most standard keyboards.
- "1" = pressing the key, "2" = holding the key down, "0" = releasing the key
- The rest is the command or script to run in this event. You may have to add the path to your raspi2png if it's not in your shell's search path like
/home/pi/bin
is for example. - Optional: Put the command in a shell script and run the script from the
.conf
file. See @roslofs post below. This may be advisable for multiple commands or if you change them from time to time, sparing you the reloading of the demon (see #4).
- Reload the service to apply the changes:
sudo systemctl daemon-reload # reload the changes in triggerhappy.service sudo systemctl restart triggerhappy.service # reload the changes in /etc/triggerhappy/triggers.d/
Now, in the above example, pressing "Print Screen" should save a screenshot named after the currently running ROM file in the directory
/home/pi/
.Comments, test results, corrections, and enhancements are welcome. :)
edit: You can check the status and any error messages of the triggerhappy daemon with the command
sudo systemctl status triggerhappy.service
.
edit 2: Changed the raspi2png command to @mitu's optimised version.
edit 3: Added @mitu's correction and @roslofs script variant. -
-
@Clyde Hey, you got it working - great stuff !
Now, the suggestions :) :
- You can probably replace the long line of
`ps a|grep RetroPie/roms/|head -1|sed -e 's/ /_/g'|awk '{ print $NF }'|sed 's/\\\//g'`
with something like
ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | head -1 | awk -F "/" '{ print $NF }'
This will get you the last path segment (which can be a file or folder) from the line containing the ROM path.
EDIT: this will also preserve whitespaces in the filename, so it's not a drop-in replacement for the original command.
- You're assuming the ROM is a
.zip
, but that not might be the case. Can't think of a simple and elegant way of dealing with this but I have an idea.
-
@mitu I already played around with
awk -F
but I got no good results.raspi2png --pngname /home/pi/$(basename -s .zip `ps a | grep RetroPie/roms/ | head -1 | awk -F "/" '{ print $NF }'`).png
will save a file called
7th\
, whereas my command will save7th_Saga,_The_(USA).png
.edit: I gave up on preserving the whitespaces. :)
edit 2: Have to leave for the gym now. I'm curious about your idea about the rom's filename extension. -
If you don't quote your argument, spaces will surely be a problem. Anyway, here it is what I got so far.
raspi2png --pngname "$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g')"-$(date +%Y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S).png
This should work with spaces, regardless of extension, and adds a timestamp at the end. If you'd like to keep the date format the way RetroArch does it, you can use:
raspi2png --pngname "$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g')"-$(date +%y%m%d-%H%M%S).png
Now, the RetroArch reference got me thinking, so I checked and you can tell RA to take a screenshot with the Network control interface - https://docs.libretro.com/tech/network-control-interface/. Assuming you got RA configured to start this interface (I don't think it's enabled by default, I just have it for the power off/reset buttons), the command to take a screenshot can be just
echo -n "SCREENSHOT" | nc -u -w1 127.0.0.1 55355
and a screenshot would be saved in
~/.config/retroarch/screenshots
(a.k.a./opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch/screenshots
or\\retropie\configs\all\retroarch\screenshots
). You'll neednetcat
installed to provide thenc
command. -
@mitu said in How to bind a shell command to a hotkey? (raspi2png):
If you don't quote your argument, spaces will surely be a problem. Anyway, here it is what I got so far.
raspi2png --pngname "$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g')"-$(date +%Y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S).png
This still won't get rid of the backslashes, e.g. creating
Super\ Mario\ Bros.\ \(2P\ Hack\)-2019.02.23-18.10.44.png
. But it does work with the.nes
extension of this rom, thanks!raspi2png --pngname "$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g')"-$(date +%y%m%d-%H%M%S).png
Same here:
Super\ Mario\ Bros.\ \(2P\ Hack\)-190223-181049.png
echo -n "SCREENSHOT" | nc -u -w1 127.0.0.1 55355
Works like a charm, thanks again for this alternative!
-
Yes, the dreaded
\
, forgot about them - I was testing with an emulator started. This can be fixed taking thesed
command from your initial line:raspi2png --pngname "$(ps a | grep RetroPie/roms | awk -F "/" 'NR==1 { print $NF }' | sed 's/\.[^.]*$//g; s#\\##g')"-$(date +%Y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S).png
E.T.\ The\ Extra-Terrestrial\ \(1982\)\ \(Atari\)\ \(PAL\)\ \[\!\]-2019.02.23-17.20.15.png
becomesE.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982) (Atari) (PAL) [!]-2019.02.23-17.25.43.png
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.