Suggestions for ports
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@tpo1990 can you make scripts for Plex server and Transmission server for retropie?
im trying my self but not succefull at all
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@retropi19 said in Suggestions for ports:
can you make scripts for Plex server and Transmission server for retropie?
Why would you need scripts ? You can install them directly with
apt
-transmission
is in the Raspbian repositories, and Plex Server can be installed like explained here. -
@shavecat Unfortunately no, but the source files for Captain Claw is here: https://github.com/pjasicek/OpenClaw It should also work on Windows if you want to try it out. I haven't looked into Postal 1. Not sure about that game. I have never played Postal 1 only Postal 2 on Windows a long time ago. The game was not one of my favorites.
@retropi19 I don't think it makes sense to create a scriptmodule for Plex server and Transmission as it probably will require custom configuration and by then, not everyone might like the idea of how it would automatically be installed on their RetroPie system. As @mitu says the guide can be used for setting up a Plex server and Transmisson server. This should provide enough for installation.
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@tpo1990 ok no problem do you have any ports in the making?
win95/98 is a pain in the ass to make a script will make things easier
did you improve my script for dune legacy to get the latest version and to work without the flickering without have to edit manual the sdl file? -
@retropi19 Not yet, but I will begin soon. At the moment my time is limited I can only make work on it in the weekends and even that it is my spare time that will be used. Maybe I should try to get my Dune Legacy scriptmodule to work. Either Dune Legacy or Captain Claw.
I haven't tried out Win95/98 on a Raspberry Pi, but I can imagine it being difficult to get that to work.
I have already fixed the flickering last year for Dune Legacy. Last time I checked the flickering was gone when playing Skirmish. I have already done the most of the job on that.
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@tpo1990 I was wondering if Pitfall the Mayan Adventure (the definitive win95 version) would be playable, but I'm betting that windows 95/98 wont' be running in a state where it's..usable.
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https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/19274/guide-stable-windows-95-on-retropie?_=1582293470878
i never tried it but some people got it going, not sure how well or what can even be done with it
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@mitu said in Suggestions for ports:
@retropi19 said in Suggestions for ports:
can you make scripts for Plex server and Transmission server for retropie?
Why would you need scripts ? You can install them directly with
apt
-transmission
is in the Raspbian repositories, and Plex Server can be installed like explained here.Because it's easier to ask someone to do all the work, do you know how difficult it is to enter a search term in a search engine like google?
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you think i havent try that.many games like age of empires 1/2 are playable on win95/98
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tpo1990 i really think you should take zerojay`s github repository i have corrected/updated most of the ports to work in stretch and in buster,i can give you the corrections and help to add more ports to the script/s
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@Darksavior Don't know about that game and how well it would run in a Win95 environment on a Raspberry Pi. There are many old PC games that I would like to see working on a Raspberry Pi, but at the moment it probably will not work great and if it runs the games, you might experience slowdowns in gameplay due to low or no video driver support. I think an open source port of it is our best bet. I could probably name a few PC games that I would like to see happen. Take for ex: Unreal. That is one game I personally would like to see running.
@ExarKunIv Maybe if someone who has the skills or a Project exists that would make it an optional OS to be installed via Noobs to be perfectly emulated with opengl and gl es drivers it would be possible. Win95 would probably need to emulate some of the original drivers used. Yes you are correct that there are guides out there for Windows 95 on a Raspberry Pi.
@retropi19 I haven't decided if I want to take over zerojay's github repository yet. I want to wait and see how it goes with the Raspberry Pi 4 and RetroPie. I still have pull requests open for Hexen 2, ECWolf and Jazz Jackrabbit on the RetroPie Project on Github. Right now that is the only thing I have at the moment. Thank you for your opinion.
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tpo1990
i used this command/s in a script to run firefox fron retropie raspbian strech image and worked fine
#!/bin/bash
xset -dpms s off s noblank
matchbox-window-manager -use_titlebar no &
/usr/bin/firefox-esrBut in raspbian buster image of retropie it does nothing just exit in emulation station
Do you know/have any solution to this?
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@retropi19 No as I haven't tried out Raspbian Buster yet. I only tried out Firefox once and that was a long time ago. I think it was before Raspbian Stretch were released with RetroPie. At the time it was Raspbian Jessie.
You should probably test Firefox in Raspbian Desktop (X11) and see if it works. If it does, then you might need to adjust your script(runcommand file) to make it work completely. As Raspbian Buster is still experimental it can be difficult to say if what you are installing works or not.
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tpo1990 in the Buster image of retropie for RPi2-3 they work fine (firefox,chrome) but for buster image for Rpi4 they dont work its the ones that use matchbox to run eg minecraft-pi,micropolis,firefox,chrome etc.
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Just to weigh in a bit on the Windows 95 comments here, about a year ago I tried to get it working under DosBox, after noting that (in my opinion) the performance of Windows 3.1 was passable and you could automate things ok with a joystick and menu interface of RetroPie --- save a few rough edges that seem to be fixable at some point (see: WinExit.exe).
What I found then is that although I could get things stable on DosBox on my Windows PC, I could not get it stable (constant OS driver crashes) under RetroPie, so I figured that the driver support between the platforms was not seamless. I had tried a few different versions of both Windows 95 (A, B, C) and Windows 98 (FE, SE).
Also as noted, there's a lot of limitations running Windows 95 under DosBox, including video card support and RAM. Also, there are some quirks mounting CD ISOs after mounting HDD images, which are required for running under DosBox. But there's a DosBox variant/fork here that seems to have decent momentum that at least one person reported being able to compile on a Raspberry Pi, so I figured that one of these days I would want to try to give it a spin and at least check to see what kind of performance we're talking. These builds seem to have solved a good number of these limitations from what I can see. Also has some native support for translating mouse input to a joystick, which would be way useful.
https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=52414
IMHO, RetroPie makes the ultimate device, between media playback, retrogaming, and high portability of both. It can run anything up to about 1994 fairly well, and you can get most titles starting at around Windows Vista working reasonably well with some shaking on Windows 10 and using NVidia or Valve streaming. But there's that middle area in between not so much--- optimally I'd love to see some titles like the original half-life build, Max Payne, Worms, and some stuff like that working natively (not streaming). If I had a choice and the performance between the two were comparable, I'd go for Windows 98 over Windows 95 to get the maximum amount of game compatibility bleeding into Windows XP territory.
You're most likely right that any direct port will be much more performant, but I think some of these might be playable.
Anyway, just my past observations.
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@ParadoxGBB Yes I also recently noticed that someone has improved DosBox emulation and made an enhanced version out of it. It might be possible to compile and add the changes to the original DosBox in RetroPie's scriptmodule, or it could be included as an alternative installation. However it might need some testing and improvement of the code in DosBox before being released officially.
I too would like to see many more PC games working on a Raspberry Pi as you do. I could mention quite a few games that I would like to see running. Running Windows 98 would probably be better than Windows 95 since it improves game compatibility. At the moment our best bet is to use open source ports that has compatibility for ARM architecture and the Raspberry Pi it self.
I would say that the existing open source ports that is out there which uses SDL with Linux probably has the highest succes rate in compiling and getting them to work on a Raspberry Pi. This is as far as my experience goes. I know that you could run into other issues trying to get a specific game to work that also need to use other important dependencies such as OpenGL. The most advanced game I have gotten to run was Alien versus Predator and that game was from 1999. It worked but the gameplay was too slow to be played. The best I have done is Return to Castle Wolfenstein and Hexen 2.
From what I have noticed in the past year is that more ports of PC games was showing up as working on the Raspberry Pi. Shadow Warrior, Jagged Alliance 2, Diablo 2 and Half Life.
Thank you for your insight on this.
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@tpo1990, I forgot to mention thanks a ton for your work with the ports --- I grabbed RTCW and it's always awesome to see how far you can push software scenarios on the hardware --- even if not playable, 1999 is pretty impressive on a $35 device.
I actually prefer running games under DosBox because of the additional control it provides (lr-dosbox allows pretty solid joystick mapping without configuring each one piecemeal) and it allows a near-perfect port of my entire library. Plus, it's a nice little parlor trick when I have people over or travel with it to boot into Windows 3.1, and that'd only be more awesome if I could get full Windows 95/98 on there too. But I'm a more "let's see what runs" kind of guy and as much as an OS collector as a retro game one as opposed to really expecting to play every one of these things to completion, so I get that I'm probably not your typical RRPi user.
That said, if anyone locates a compiled copy of DosBox ECE (or finds another reasonable way to do it) on RPi I'd gladly help test. At the moment it seems that DosBox is kind of slowly doing their own thing preparing for their 0.75 release, and there's been many splinters and varients that are undermining the validity of the root project. I haven't seen any real commitment or statement indicating that any of the ECE work is going to make it to an official release... I believe there are concerns that any of these variants compromise on compatibility they've fought hard to build up.
(Thanks for allowing me to crash this thread a bit)
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No problem. Your gratitude is appreciated. It seems as tough 1999 is mostly the limit of PC game ports to be running on a $35 device such as a Raspberry Pi, however that may change with future builds and compatibility with the Raspberry Pi 4.
Ah yes DosBox. A great emulator that needs some configuring to get it up and running as best it can to each owns setup. Even Windows 3.1 is nice to emulate though it mostly would be only for preview rather than normal usage. It would be cool to get a full Windows 95/98 desktop running. Me too. I have probably spent way more configuring and testing to see what works and what doesn't in the past year than playing the games.
Maybe the creator of the original work of DosBox for RetroPie can help out with that, otherwise it will probably need someone else with the knowhow to make it happen.
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tpo1990 is it possible to create portable bosbox games for retropie eg:a game with dosbox in the same folder run dosbox and play directly the game eg: like the game beneath a steel sky that can be installed directly with apt install and include dosbox and when you run the game its loads it thought dosbox directly
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@retropi19 I'm not sure why you would want to do that on a RetroPie system, but I think I have seen something about creating script files that you can use with DosBox to be able to run certain files that are located in a folder. I cannot remember where I saw that.
However you could possibly just place the DosBox contents in a subfolder placed in the specific Dos game that you want. I know that GOG.com does that when you install older PC games that are used with DosBox.
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