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    Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1

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    18.04debianubunutux64x86
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    • M
      MisterB
      last edited by

      Latest release is published:
      https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/tree/LTS-20.04

      Some of the feedback from above has been put in the "master" script, while others have been setup in the Optional Script Library. Lots of additional information is in the README.

      I may include the unattended upgrade and WiFi scripts into the master script at a later time, but want to test those out further before committing.

      In the meantime, hopefully some of you will test out these changes and let me know how it goes for you. Thanks!

      johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • johnodonJ
        johnodon @MisterB
        last edited by

        @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

        Latest release is published:
        https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/tree/LTS-20.04

        I'll take a snapshot of my system today and rebuild from scratch using the new scripts.

        John

        johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • johnodonJ
          johnodon @johnodon
          last edited by

          @johnodon said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

          @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

          Latest release is published:
          https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/tree/LTS-20.04

          I'll take a snapshot of my system today and rebuild from scratch using the new scripts.

          John

          OK...just ran my first test and submitted my first issue. :)

          https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/issues/7

          I'm combing through the logfile now to look for issues.

          After the script finished running, I was dropped at a black screen. I had to ALT+F1 to get a prompt and startx manually. I'll keep investigating but this could be the kernel issue referenced earlier.

          John

          johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            MisterB
            last edited by

            I responded to your issue on GitHub.

            Not sure when you started your install today, but I made some edits earlier, so it's possible we crossed paths and that is causing your issue. However, I can confirm that I have a working setup built from the mini.iso as of the latest commit - 12794d0.

            johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • johnodonJ
              johnodon @MisterB
              last edited by johnodon

              @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

              I responded to your issue on GitHub.

              Not sure when you started your install today, but I made some edits earlier, so it's possible we crossed paths and that is causing your issue. However, I can confirm that I have a working setup built from the mini.iso as of the latest commit - 12794d0.

              The issue is only for people who fork your repo. The change to the bootstrap.sh is easy enough...just wondering if there is a way to avoid it programmatically.

              John

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • johnodonJ
                johnodon @johnodon
                last edited by

                @johnodon said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                @johnodon said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                Latest release is published:
                https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/tree/LTS-20.04

                I'll take a snapshot of my system today and rebuild from scratch using the new scripts.

                John

                OK...just ran my first test and submitted my first issue. :)

                https://github.com/MizterB/RetroPie-Setup-Ubuntu/issues/7

                I'm combing through the logfile now to look for issues.

                After the script finished running, I was dropped at a black screen. I had to ALT+F1 to get a prompt and startx manually. I'll keep investigating but this could be the kernel issue referenced earlier.

                John

                FYI...logfile is nice and clean. Also, upgrading kernel to 5.8.10 fixes my issue with X not starting.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • M
                  MisterB
                  last edited by

                  FYI - I have promoted all of the 20.04 code to the master branch, and have archived 18.04 to its own branch.

                  ethelingE 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • johnodonJ
                    johnodon
                    last edited by

                    @etheling @MisterB @movisman @ObiEric

                    I think I may have found another fix for the issue of the screen going black after the Plymouth theme (Pacman) and eventually dropping to a prompt. This one doesn't require mucking with kernel updates and is VERY simple...

                    All I did was add 'exec' before the 'startx' command in the .bash_profile file:

                    if [[ -z $DISPLAY ]] && [[ $(tty) = /dev/tty1 ]]; then
                        exec startx -- >/dev/null 2>&1
                    fi
                    

                    This works for me on a vanilla install of Ubuntu 20.04 mini + MisterB's installer script. The only ill effect I have seen so far is that it take 15 - 20 seconds for ES to finally load once past the Pacman theme. I'll continue to investigate to see what is causing the delay.

                    John

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • johnodonJ
                      johnodon
                      last edited by johnodon

                      OK...figured out what is causing the boot process to take longer than expected.

                      It is the Plymouth theme.

                      If I remove 'splash' from /etc/default/grub

                      GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet vt.global_cursor_default=0"

                      boot time takes about 14 seconds from the last BIOS post message I see.

                      If I leave 'splash' in...

                      GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet vt.global_cursor_default=0"

                      ...my boot time goes up to 30 seconds...even though the Pacman theme is gone in like 3 seconds. I think he eats about 10 dots before disappearing.

                      I can certainly do without the plymouth theme but when I disable it, I am now seeing 2 boot errors that I would need to figure out how to handle.

                      One is the typical 'clean' message on /dev/sda5 (like below):

                      dev/sda1: clean, 552599/6111232 files, 7119295/24414464 blocks

                      The other is a message I am not familiar with:

                      pnp 00:01 can’t evaluate _crs 12311

                      Any ideas?

                      John

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • M
                        MisterB
                        last edited by

                        Take a look at the suggestions here:

                        https://askubuntu.com/questions/772874/how-to-turn-off-the-filesystem-check-message-which-occures-while-booting

                        I'm wondering if a line like this might suppress both messages:
                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet loglevel=3 fsck.mode=skip splash vt.global_cursor_default=0"

                        johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • johnodonJ
                          johnodon @MisterB
                          last edited by

                          @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                          Take a look at the suggestions here:

                          https://askubuntu.com/questions/772874/how-to-turn-off-the-filesystem-check-message-which-occures-while-booting

                          I'm wondering if a line like this might suppress both messages:
                          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet loglevel=3 fsck.mode=skip splash vt.global_cursor_default=0"

                          Thanks. I'll give that a try in a few mins.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • M
                            MisterB
                            last edited by

                            Bad copy/paste above...of course, remove the splash in the above line for your use case.

                            johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • johnodonJ
                              johnodon @MisterB
                              last edited by

                              @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                              Bad copy/paste above...of course, remove the splash in the above line for your use case.

                              I saw that. :)

                              So, this works well. The only thing I had to do was set loglevel=0. If I set it to 3, I would see something flash quickly (in red)...to fast to read. Setting to 0 I see nothing.

                              Thanks for pointing me in the right direction!

                              John

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • M
                                MisterB
                                last edited by

                                How about loglevel 2 (CRITICAL)? Curious if there is a minimum threshold that hides everything for 'normal' use, but can still show a truly critical system error if it occurs.

                                johnodonJ ethelingE 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • johnodonJ
                                  johnodon @MisterB
                                  last edited by

                                  @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                                  How about loglevel 2 (CRITICAL)? Curious if there is a minimum threshold that hides everything for 'normal' use, but can still show a truly critical system error if it occurs.

                                  I'm reimaging right now. Give me 30 mins and I'll report back.

                                  johnodonJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • johnodonJ
                                    johnodon @johnodon
                                    last edited by

                                    @johnodon said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                                    @MisterB said in Retropie Installation on Ubuntu Server x64 18.04.1:

                                    How about loglevel 2 (CRITICAL)? Curious if there is a minimum threshold that hides everything for 'normal' use, but can still show a truly critical system error if it occurs.

                                    I'm reimaging right now. Give me 30 mins and I'll report back.

                                    OK...so it looks like loglevel 2 is hiding those messages. However, on the first reboot after running the script, I am seeing a single red 'FAILED' message. It happens so fast I can't read the rest and it doesn't happen on subsequent reboots. I tried looking in dmesg but didn't see anything I didn't already mention.

                                    Where is the best place to look for that error after the first reboot? I'd like to see what it is about and if it is script related.

                                    John

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • johnodonJ
                                      johnodon
                                      last edited by

                                      Quick update...

                                      I am seeing the same longer boot time behavior on my Lenovo T430 as I did on my other system. If I remove splash from the the grub line, boot time is shortened by about 20 seconds.

                                      John

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • johnodonJ
                                        johnodon
                                        last edited by

                                        @MisterB I think it may be close to time to start a new thread that is dedicated to your install scripts and just reference this one for posterity.

                                        What do you think?

                                        John

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • ethelingE
                                          etheling @MisterB
                                          last edited by etheling

                                          @MisterB Just wanted to chime in to say that I modified my pre/post scripts for Intel NUC to run from under optional_scripts/ and it worked out beautifully - in one swift run the pre-install part drops in new kernel, wpa_supplicant, and connects NUC to wifi and then proceeds with the rest of the install.

                                          Couple of observations:

                                          • I had edited my pre-install script under optional_scripts/pre_install, so I had preinstall.sh~ there as I executed main install script. Which then ran the preinstall script, and broken preinstall.sh~. Maybe filter out files with ~ at the end, or only run files with .sh extension?
                                          • Would it make sense to run inxi -F at the end of the script just before reboot (and maybe some other utilities) to 'document' into install log hw etc. configuration?
                                          • I think unrelated to your script, but I had to recompile xpad afterwards to fix button mappings at the controller. E.g. select, start and others were not reporting at correct values when looking /dev/input/js* with jstest. I'll look into this maybe next weekend to see if it reproduces.
                                          • Unrelated to your script, but lr-puae doesn't install currently. It compiles ok, but there is no README file under /home/pi/RetroPie-Setup/tmp/build/lr-puae/ which breaks the install ('touch /home/pi/RetroPie-Setup/tmp/build/lr-puae/README' works around it - see here).

                                          As for my post install scripts, I split my post install scripts to two parts, one that is specific to NUC and another that (I think, didn't test yet) will also work on Pi that sets up themes, overlays, emulator specific retroarch congifs, core overrides, sets up retroachievements.org account, etc.

                                          Thanks again for all the work on the script. Very much appreciated!

                                          ethelingE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • johnodonJ
                                            johnodon
                                            last edited by johnodon

                                            WIP... :)

                                            I'm currently working out the code to separate pre-install and post-install package options.

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