Adding roms directly
-
If your PI and your PC are in your own home network, I don't see how uploading ROMs would affect your internet data - the data is not routed over the internet and stays within your home wireless/wired LAN.
-
@mitu said in Adding roms directly:
If your PI and your PC are in your own home network, I don't see how uploading ROMs would affect your internet data - the data is not routed over the internet and stays within your home wireless/wired LAN.
Yeah I thought so too but xfinity is weird I guess... that or I really have downloaded almost 1tb worth of crap this month I'm just using linux to add roms now through lubuntu to be safe. Because I thought the same thing. I'm technically on a LAN so why is my data usage spiking when I'm uploading roms. And on the xfinity website it shows a spike during the times I've been adding roms
-
@UberLumby never mind lubuntu is giving me permission denied when copying files to the retropie sd LOL
-
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
I'm technically on a LAN so why is my data usage spiking when I'm uploading roms
You'll have to ask Comcast (?) about this - it would be absurd if this is classified as 'internet usage'.
lubuntu is giving me permission denied when copying files to the retropie sd
Where are you copying the files ?
-
@mitu copying files from hard drive to sd card.
-
@mitu said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
I'm technically on a LAN so why is my data usage spiking when I'm uploading roms
You'll have to ask Comcast (?) about this - it would be absurd if this is classified as 'internet usage'.
lubuntu is giving me permission denied when copying files to the retropie sd
Where are you copying the files ?
Home/pi/retropie/roms
-
Check the permissions on the folder - if your regular user doesn't have access to it, then use
sudo
to start a file manager and do the copying. You'll have to fix the roms folders' permissions on the Pi - but this can be done easily. -
@mitu said in Adding roms directly:
Check the permissions on the folder - if your regular user doesn't have access to it, then use
sudo
to start a file manager and do the copying. You'll have to fix the roms folders' permissions on the Pi - but this can be done easily.sudo chmod -R ugo+rw
I used this command and it worked. So ollie just have to run the done easily
And I should be good to go thanks! -
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
sudo chmod -R ugo+rw
That's not the correct way to do it and if you've done it against the whole partition you might have problems later on.
-
@mitu said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
sudo chmod -R ugo+rw
That's not the correct way to do it and if you've done it against the whole partition you might have problems later on.
I did it with dreamcast.... oh boy lol
-
@UberLumby sudo chmod-R ugo+rw/media/lubuntu/retropie/home/pi/retropie/roms/dreamcast is what I did exactly
-
@mitu said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
sudo chmod -R ugo+rw
That's not the correct way to do it and if you've done it against the whole partition you might have problems later on.
It seems alright so far
-
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby never mind lubuntu is giving me permission denied when copying files to the retropie sd LOL
Linux distinguishes users by their user id (uid). If your uid on Lubuntu is different than that of
pi
on RetroPie (normally 1000), you won't have write access to it even if the username on both systems is the same, e.g. you made api
user on Lubuntu just for that.Vice versa, you would have full access if the usernames are different but the uids are equal, say "pi" on RetroPie and "lubuntu" on Lubuntu both had the uid 1000 on their systems.
You can see the uids and gid (group ids) of files and directories with the
-n
("numeric ids") option ofls
:$ ls -n drwxr-xr-x 6 1000 1000 4096 Apr 28 02:38 RetroPie drwxr-xr-x 7 1000 1000 4096 Sep 19 19:01 RetroPie-Setup
If your uid and gid differ on RetroPie and Lubuntu, you could change the ownership of the directories only temporarily, and change them back after working with the files:
sudo chown -R lubuntu /media/lubuntu/retropie/home/pi/retropie/roms/dreamcast # use your username or uid for "lubuntu" here. # Do your stuff. sudo chown -R 1000 /media/lubuntu/retropie/home/pi/retropie/roms/dreamcast # Provided that pi's uid is 1000 on RetroPie
To me this is more "elegant" than the
chmod
way, as it doesn't mess with the files permissions. But this may be mere preference. And as with chmod, be sure to not to use it globally as it can mess up thinks equally bad. Use it only on directories where all files and subdirs have the same uid from the start. -
@Clyde said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby said in Adding roms directly:
@UberLumby never mind lubuntu is giving me permission denied when copying files to the retropie sd LOL
Linux distinguishes users by their user id (uid). If your uid on Lubuntu is different than that of
pi
on RetroPie (normally 1000), you won't have write access to it even if the username on both systems is the same, e.g. you made api
user on Lubuntu just for that.Vice versa, you would have full access if the usernames are different but the uids are equal, say "pi" on RetroPie and "lubuntu" on Lubuntu both had the uid 1000 on their systems.
You can see the uids and gid (group ids) of files and directories with the
-n
("numeric ids") option ofls
:$ ls -n drwxr-xr-x 6 1000 1000 4096 Apr 28 02:38 RetroPie drwxr-xr-x 7 1000 1000 4096 Sep 19 19:01 RetroPie-Setup
If your uid and gid differ on RetroPie and Lubuntu, you could change the ownership of the directories only temporarily, and change them back after working with the files:
sudo chown -R lubuntu /media/lubuntu/retropie/home/pi/retropie/roms/dreamcast # use your username or uid for "lubuntu" here. # Do your stuff. sudo chown -R 1000 /media/lubuntu/retropie/home/pi/retropie/roms/dreamcast # Provided that pi's uid is 1000 on RetroPie
To me this is more "elegant" than the
chmod
way, as it doesn't mess with the files permissions. But this may be mere preference. And as with chmod, be sure to not to use it globally as it can mess up thinks equally bad. Use it only on directories where all files and subdirs have the same uid from the start.Okay noted thanks! My rom folder IS gonna be okay I hope hahaha
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.