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

Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm Released

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
bookworm
86 Posts 11 Posters 26.8k 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.
  • D
    Div1nus @mitu
    last edited by 9 Feb 2024, 21:03

    @mitu Yes, I don't know why, but if "dtoverlay=vc4-kms-v3d" is enabled, nothing is displayed on the screen, only the backlight is on. Even though it seems all the necessary DPI parameters are specified. The screen only starts working if I comment out #dtoverlay=vc4-kms-v3d or if I use dtoverlay=vc4-fkms-v3d, but I need a 90-degree rotation, otherwise, the screen works vertically, and with fkms, the parameters display_rotate=1 and display_lcd_rotate=1 don't result in the screen rotating. However, I will try to experiment, because I just transferred the screen settings from the config.txt that came with the console purchase. And KMS was also commented out there... Maybe this is some kind of specific problem with the Chinese screen...

    M 1 Reply Last reply 10 Feb 2024, 07:32 Reply Quote 0
    • M
      mitu Global Moderator @Div1nus
      last edited by 10 Feb 2024, 07:32

      @Div1nus Take a look at this RPF topic - https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=329872 - to see how you can configure such panel using the KMS overlays.

      D 1 Reply Last reply 10 Feb 2024, 21:14 Reply Quote 1
      • D
        Div1nus @mitu
        last edited by Div1nus 2 Nov 2024, 17:03 10 Feb 2024, 21:14

        @mitu OMG! Thank you very much! Now I have a full KMS!

        It was a little tricky, but I was able to convert my old parameters:

        framebuffer_width=800
        framebuffer_height=480
        enable_dpi_lcd=1
        display_default_lcd=1
        dpi_group=2
        dpi_mode=87
        dpi_output_format=0x050227
        dpi_timings=480 0 13 3 32 800 0 40 48 88 0 0 0 60 0 32000000 6
        display_rotate=1
        display_lcd_rotate=1
        extra_transpose_buffer=2
        

        In new:

        dtoverlay=vc4-kms-v3d
        dtoverlay=vc4-kms-dpi-generic,rotate=90,hactive=480,hfp=13,hsync=3,hbp=32
        dtparam=vactive=800,vfp=40,vsync=48,vbp=88
        dtparam=clock-frequency=32000000,bgr888
        max_framebuffers=2
        

        If anyone has the same GP430 console or DPI display with:
        dpi_output_format=0x050227
        dpi_timings=480 0 13 3 32 800 0 40 48 88 0 0 0 60 0 32000000 6

        You can safely use the new parameters for kms, just replace the old parameters, they are no longer needed, with new ones, which are even more compact.

        If you have a problem with colors and you don’t know how to correctly convert “dpi_output_format”, I haven’t really figured it out, just use the selection method.
        Here is the list: rgb565, rgb565-padhi, bgr666, bgr666-padhi, rgb666-padhi, bgr888, rgb888.
        These seem to be all the available options.

        If your display doesn't require 90 degree rotation, remove "rotate=90".

        And swap width and height, 480 and 800 in my example, if you have a vertical, not horizontal screen.

        Documentation on the parameters is also available here: https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi.html
        If anyone needs it, search in the page using the keyword "vc4-kms-dpi-generic".

        UPD:
        After updating the kernel via rpi_update, rotation=90 stopped working no matter where I set it, so I went back to adding the parameter "fbcon=rotate:1" to the end of cmdline.txt.
        In the emulationstation autostart .sh: --screenrotate 1 --screensize 800 480 #auto
        In the retroarch.cfg add video_allow_rotate = "true" and video_rotation = "1".

        M 1 Reply Last reply 11 Feb 2024, 12:44 Reply Quote 0
        • M
          mitu Global Moderator @Div1nus
          last edited by mitu 2 Nov 2024, 12:45 11 Feb 2024, 12:44

          @Div1nus said in Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm Released:

          After updating the kernel via rpi_update, rotation=90 stopped working no matter where I set it, so I went back to adding the parameter "fbcon=rotate:1" to the end of cmdline.txt

          Don't use rpi-update unless you want to test things - it shouldn't be used for normal updates. Normal kernel updates are automatically performed if you're upgrading via apt (apt update && apt full-upgrade).

          D 1 Reply Last reply 11 Feb 2024, 17:04 Reply Quote 0
          • D
            Div1nus @mitu
            last edited by Div1nus 2 Nov 2024, 17:34 11 Feb 2024, 17:04

            @mitu You're right, it's just my habit, I always want to update everything to the latest version, no matter what it is. And this time it created another problem, you need to rotate cmd, ES and retroarch separately.

            And doesn't this mean that the "rotation=" parameter may disappear in new versions?

            M 1 Reply Last reply 11 Feb 2024, 18:45 Reply Quote 0
            • M
              mitu Global Moderator @Div1nus
              last edited by mitu 2 Nov 2024, 18:45 11 Feb 2024, 18:45

              You're right, it's just my habit, I always want to update everything to the latest version ...

              rpi-update is NOT an update tool

              And doesn't this mean that the "rotation=" parameter may disappear in new versions?

              Wait until the next stable kernel version comes along and check to see if the parameter is still not working. If that's the case, check the documentation for the overlay you're using - it could have been renamed. If the parameter is valid, but not working, then open a topic in the Raspberry Pi forums and provide the configuration you're trying and it's not working.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • R RapidEdwin08 referenced this topic on 11 Mar 2024, 15:40
              • R
                rhino
                last edited by rhino 23 Mar 2024, 00:38

                Hi. I've just installed core packages on arm64 version of Pi OS. All went good but for some reason the script downgraded SDL2 package and put it on hold:

                libsdl2-2.0-0:
                  Installed: 2.26.3+1rpi
                  Candidate: 2.26.5+dfsg-1
                  Version table:
                     2.26.5+dfsg-1 500
                        500 http://deb.debian.org/debian bookworm/main arm64 Packages
                 *** 2.26.3+1rpi 100
                        100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
                

                Is the version in bookworm not suitable for use in retropie? I noticed that it's linked a bit differently:

                Version: 2.26.5+dfsg-1
                Depends: libasound2 (>= 1.0.27), libc6 (>= 2.34), libdecor-0-0 (>= 0.1.0), libdrm2 (>= 2.4.47), libgbm1 (>= 8.1~0), libpulse0 (>= 0.99.1), libsamplerate0 (>= 0.1.7), libwayland-client0 (>= 1.20.0), libwayland-cursor0 (>= 1.18), libwayland-egl1 (>= 1.18), libx11-6 (>= 2:1.2.99.901), libxcursor1 (>> 1.1.2), libxext6, libxfixes3 (>= 1:5.0), libxi6 (>= 2:1.6.99.1), libxkbcommon0 (>= 0.5.0), libxrandr2 (>= 2:1.2.99.3), libxss1
                
                Version: 2.26.3+1rpi
                Depends: libc6 (>= 2.34), libudev1, libdbus-1-3
                
                M 1 Reply Last reply 23 Mar 2024, 04:13 Reply Quote 0
                • M
                  mitu Global Moderator @rhino
                  last edited by 23 Mar 2024, 04:13

                  @rhino said in Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm Released:

                  Is the version in bookworm not suitable for use in retropie? I noticed that it's linked a bit differently:

                  On a Pi (and a few other SBC platforms) RetroPie has always compiled its own version of SDL and set the package(s) on hold to prevent overwriting.

                  R 1 Reply Last reply 23 Mar 2024, 18:29 Reply Quote 0
                  • R
                    rhino @mitu
                    last edited by 23 Mar 2024, 18:29

                    @mitu Ok that is fine but I wanted to know what's the reason for it and whether it's still valid.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply 23 Mar 2024, 19:54 Reply Quote 0
                    • M
                      mitu Global Moderator @rhino
                      last edited by mitu 23 Mar 2024, 19:54

                      @rhino said in Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm Released:

                      .. what's the reason for it and whether it's still valid.

                      The reason is we have a few SDL patches specific to RetroPie which we maintain, so we have a separate SDL package. And yes, it's still valid. We update the version of our patches along with SDL, so at some point it's not going to be an isssue when the SDL version will be bumped in our package.

                      R 1 Reply Last reply 26 Mar 2024, 20:11 Reply Quote 0
                      • R
                        rhino @mitu
                        last edited by 26 Mar 2024, 20:11

                        @mitu This is very interesting can you please elaborate what exactly is being patched in retropie version? The version number is not a problem but the fact that it's linked so differently (possibly patches themselves) is likely to cause problems with system software. E.g. mpv and VLC are no longer capable to play movies in the console with the replaced lib. Is there a solution to this?

                        M 1 Reply Last reply 26 Mar 2024, 20:53 Reply Quote 0
                        • M
                          mitu Global Moderator @rhino
                          last edited by 26 Mar 2024, 20:53

                          @rhino said in Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm Released:

                          E.g. mpv and VLC are no longer capable to play movies in the console with the replaced lib. Is there a solution to this?

                          I don't think that's an issue caused by SDL. You can find the patches included in RetroPie's SDL in the Github repository here.

                          R 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2024, 16:35 Reply Quote 0
                          • R
                            rhino @mitu
                            last edited by 27 Mar 2024, 16:35

                            @mitu Ups sorry turns out it was just me messing up my system. Both players continue to work without problems.

                            You can find the patches included in RetroPie's SDL in the Github repository here.

                            Ok so just a handful of commits at the top?

                            https://github.com/RetroPie/SDL/compare/adf31f6ec0be0f9ba562889398f71172c7941023...retropie-2.26.3

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            86 out of 86
                            • First post
                              86/86
                              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.

                              This community forum collects and processes your personal information.
                              consent.not_received