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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    Is there a Noob guide for reading Roms off of NAS ?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Help and Support
    helphow to read rom
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    • markyh444M
      markyh444 @Rickt1962
      last edited by

      @Rickt1962 just searched the forum here for NAS and found this https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/2870/running-roms-from-a-network-share

      In it, it also mentions that they added a section to the wiki for configuring this too...

      Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
      Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
      Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
      https://markyh444.wordpress.com

      R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • SkittleBrau79S
        SkittleBrau79
        last edited by

        @Rickt1962 Glad to see this post. I'm having the exact same problems and I've gone through that guide step-by-step. Not sure what I'm doing wrong but I also have a WD Cloud Drive that i'm trying to get to act as my /roms directory.

        markyh444M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • markyh444M
          markyh444 @SkittleBrau79
          last edited by

          @SkittleBrau79 @Rickt1962 Was the info in the link I posted or the guide in the wiki not sufficient for a WD NAS? I've not done this myself, but I'd assume if it's just mapping a network share and that's how the WD drive does it, it shouldn't be any different. I've worked in IT for 13 years, so unless the WD has some random proprietary way of doing it, I can't see what issue could arise.

          Are either of you getting errors when following the guides that have already been documented?

          Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
          Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
          Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
          https://markyh444.wordpress.com

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • mattrixkM
            mattrixk @Rickt1962
            last edited by

            @Rickt1962, @SkittleBrau79: I have a WD 3TB NAS. I followed this guide a few months ago when I set mine up. It wasn't the most simple to understand, but I got there without too much hassle (and this was before I really knew anything about Linux).

            My ES themes: MetaPixel | Spare | Io | Indent

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            • R
              Rickt1962 @markyh444
              last edited by

              @markyh444 Yes I found that guide on my search but couldn't follow it. Using Windows Putty I SSH into my Pi following the Wiki option 2

              //10.0.0.60/Storage/ROMs /home/pi/RetroPie cifs username=Username,password=Password,nounix,noserverino

              Followed and came up with this

              osmc@osmc:~$ sudo nano /opt/retropie/configs/all/autostart.sh
              osmc@osmc:~$ cd
              osmc@osmc:~$ mkdir RetroPie-Save
              osmc@osmc:~$ sudo nano /opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch.cfg
              osmc@osmc:~$ sudo /opt/retropie/supplementary/scraper/scraper -scrape_all -thumb_only -workers 4
              sudo: /opt/retropie/supplementary/scraper/scraper: command not found
              osmc@osmc:~$ cd
              osmc@osmc:~$ mkdir RetroPie-Save
              mkdir: cannot create directory 'RetroPie-Save': File exists
              osmc@osmc:~$ sudo nano /opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch.cfg
              osmc@osmc:~$ sudo /opt/retropie/supplementary/scraper/scraper -scrape_all -thumb_only -workers 4
              sudo: /opt/retropie/supplementary/scraper/scraper: command not found
              osmc@osmc:~$ osmc@osmc:~$ sudo nano /opt/retropie/configs/all/autostart.sh
              -bash: osmc@osmc:~$: command not found

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              • SkittleBrau79S
                SkittleBrau79
                last edited by

                @markyh444 The guide is helpful and the instructions make sense, but for whatever reason when i reboot RetroPie i had no systems at all. This at least tells me that it recognized my changes from the default directories but can't find the roms.

                I'll try it again when I get home from work tonight.

                markyh444M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • markyh444M
                  markyh444 @SkittleBrau79
                  last edited by

                  @SkittleBrau79 Do you not need to add a pause in the boot so that the network connection comes up before ES and so can see the path to the ROMs?

                  Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
                  Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
                  Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
                  https://markyh444.wordpress.com

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • R
                    Rickt1962
                    last edited by

                    Silly question why doesn't Retropie have Network game location built into its shell ?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • SkittleBrau79S
                      SkittleBrau79
                      last edited by

                      I was able to get it working!

                      As we probably all assumed it was the way the NAS was configured as opposed to the Pi or the guide. Thanks for your help @Rickt1962 @mattrixk @markyh444

                      markyh444M R 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • markyh444M
                        markyh444 @SkittleBrau79
                        last edited by

                        @SkittleBrau79 glad you got it going. Would you be able to share what you did so if anyone else has the same issue they know?

                        As I said, I've not done this myself but am intrigued as to how the WD is configured as compared to normal network shares.

                        Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
                        Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
                        Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
                        https://markyh444.wordpress.com

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • R
                          Rickt1962 @SkittleBrau79
                          last edited by Rickt1962

                          @SkittleBrau79 How did you find the path to your file ?
                          That seems to be my problem my NAS is at 10.0.0.60 with another Hard Drive plugged into it called XBMC_3_Drive with no login or password

                          //192.168.1.10/Storage/ROMs /home/pi/RetroPie cifs username=Username,password=Password,nounix,

                          so I changed it to this but it doesn't see it

                          //10.0.0.60/XBMC_3_Drive/Storage/ROMs /home/pi/RetroPie cifs username=Username,password=Password,nounix,

                          osmc@osmc:~$ sudo nano /etc/fstab
                          osmc@osmc:~$ sudo mount -a
                          Retrying with upper case share name
                          mount error(6): No such device or address
                          Refer to the mount.cifs(8) manual page (e.g. man mount.cifs)
                          osmc@osmc:~$

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                          • SkittleBrau79S
                            SkittleBrau79
                            last edited by

                            For me I kept thinking it was an issue with the path, but it was actually a matter of credentials. WD likes to use an email address for the username, which was all I needed to change in my autostart.sh file. Everything else is as described in the guide that @markyh444 posted.

                            So to be clear, this is the page in the WD UI where a user is defined...
                            0_1487575149567_WD.jpg

                            My first instinct was to use "User Name" and password for the credentials, but it's actually "Email" and password that should be added to the autostart.sh file.

                            markyh444M R mattrixkM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • markyh444M
                              markyh444 @SkittleBrau79
                              last edited by

                              @SkittleBrau79 That's an interesting quirk. Hope this discovery helps other owners of WD NAS devices in future.

                              Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
                              Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
                              Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
                              https://markyh444.wordpress.com

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • R
                                Rickt1962 @SkittleBrau79
                                last edited by Rickt1962

                                @SkittleBrau79 said in Is there a Noob guide for reading Roms off of NAS ?:

                                For me I kept thinking it was an issue with the path, but it was actually a matter of credentials. WD likes to use an email address for the username, which was all I needed to change in my autostart.sh file. Everything else is as described in the guide that @markyh444 posted.

                                So to be clear, this is the page in the WD UI where a user is defined...
                                0_1487575149567_WD.jpg

                                My first instinct was to use "User Name" and password for the credentials, but it's actually "Email" and password that should be added to the autostart.sh file.

                                Very interesting ! But why is Retropie singled out ? When my OSMC on Pi needs no username and password to access all my media

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • mattrixkM
                                  mattrixk @SkittleBrau79
                                  last edited by

                                  @SkittleBrau79 I don't recall having to do any of that when I set up my WD NAS (but it was months ago and my memory isn't great).

                                  My ES themes: MetaPixel | Spare | Io | Indent

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • SkittleBrau79S
                                    SkittleBrau79
                                    last edited by

                                    @mattrixk

                                    Not sure, but it sure confused me. The User Name is actually the person's Western Digital username... not their username to access the drive. The Email address is their username for that.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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