Getting the rom name and emulator
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@cyperghost
"$@"
is all the parameters. eg it expands to"$1" "$2" "$3"
(for any parameters that exist) so it will pass all the parameters on to the python scripthttps://stackoverflow.com/questions/4824590/propagate-all-arguments-in-a-bash-shell-script#4824637
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@BuZz
@cyperghost
either of you know why i would have to powercycle my entire raspberry pi to get the "Pimoroni Unicorn Hat" to work more than once i.e. it screws up and lighting is random after one scroll through? -
@daveyman123 no idea.
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@cyperghost said in Getting the rom name and emulator:
@buzz I call a python programm with $@ within runcommand. What will be the result and how does the python script "knows" how many arguments are given.
So if
$1 - the system (eg: atari2600, nes, snes, megadrive, fba, etc).
$2 - the emulator (eg: lr-stella, lr-fceumm, lr-picodrive, pifba, etc).
$3 - the full path to the rom file.
$4 - the full command line used to launch the emulatorcan I just use
romfile=$3
variable within python and I get my romfile even by using $@?I'm not comfortable with python at all, I only learned it to tweak the joy2key tool and never used it again. But I think the answer for your question can be found here: https://docs.python.org/2/library/sys.html#sys.argv
Maybe this example can answer too:
[PROMPT] $ cat args.py #!/usr/bin/python import sys print '\nnumber of arguments:' print len(sys.argv) print '\nhere are the given arguments:' for arg in sys.argv: print arg print '\nhere is the third argument:' print sys.argv[3] [PROMPT] $ ./args.py one two three number of arguments: 4 here is the given arguments: ./args.py one two three here is the third argument: three [PROMPT] $ ./args.py catch errors number of arguments: 3 here is the given arguments: ./args.py catch errors here is the third argument: Traceback (most recent call last): File "./args.py", line 13, in <module> print sys.argv[3] IndexError: list index out of range
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@meleu That's it
Thank you -
Would you know why something about launching a game stops my unicorn hat from functioning?
If I launch a game and immediately back out it will continue to scroll through the rom on the unicorn hat.
However,
if the game actually launches the unicorn hat stops.
would there be something interfering with the PINS from retropie?I have the python script running in the background but no difference.
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@daveyman123 That isn't hard
nano /opt/retropie/configs/all/runcommand-onstart.sh
- Add your script for ex
/home/pi/RetroPie/loop.sh $1 &
That's it
code example
loop.sh
make loop executable bychmod +x loop.sh
#!/bin/bash counter=0 while [ $counter -lt 10 ]; do echo The counter is $counter echo "The romsystem is $1" >> /tmp/counter.log let counter=counter+1 sleep 5 done
That's it ... now in
tmp/counter.log
is 10 times written "The romsystem is ....."
As the ROM is loaded in foreground the bash example in background is logging the system. -
@cyperghost
almost done writing it up
if this works youre a genius! -
@daveyman123 can you tell me WTF is an unicorn hat?
I want to believe that you are not talking about this:
@cyperghost I remember that you said you didn't learn programming in a "formal" way. But I would like to make you care more about the importance of indentation.
Please, I don't want to sound like the smart guy teaching you the right way to code. If your code works for you, then it's fine. But I know that you like to share code with the community (giving and receiving contributions), and for this purpose indentation is a basic requirement. ;-)
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More like this I think : https://shop.pimoroni.com/products/unicorn-hat
But yours is way more fun :D -
@sano said in Getting the rom name and emulator:
But yours is way more fun
haha! both models are kinda psychodelic! :D
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@cyperghost
here is the python script. I think its reading the log just fine.from UHScroll import * import sys import time import os import unicornhat as unicorn infile = r"/tmp/counter.log" #print len(sys.argv) #emulator_name = $1 #emulator_name = os.environ["$1"] #emulator_name = os.path.basename(os.path.normpath(sys.argv[3])) with open(infile) as f: f = f.readlines() for line in f: rom_name = line unicorn_scroll(rom_name,'white',255,0.2)`
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and here is the loop bash script
#!/bin/bash counter=0 while [ $counter -lt 10 ]; do echo The counter is $counter echo "$3" >> /tmp/counter.log let counter=counter+1 sleep 5 sudo python /opt/retropie/configs/all/onstart2.py sleep 5 done
and here is the startup script (runcommand-onstart.sh)
/home/pi/RetroPie/loop.sh $1 & sudo python onstart2.py "$1" &
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@meleu A Unicorn Hat seem to be a LED grid of 8x8. So it can be used/abused as simple display. As far as I understood this
Yes the code is of course messy and unclean ... it's just an example that a bash file can run in the background by wrinting a logging file. I don't have an code editor so everything is written in nano. I'm thankfull for every tip and I appreciate your way you tell me do and what is better not done!
@daveyman123 Thanks for your comment but please don't call me genius for writing a simple bash script. There are others that do programming as profession. I do it just for hobby and still make lot of errors ... like missing indentation or not using remarks for this.
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its just my way of sayin i appreciate the help
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@cyperghost said in Getting the rom name and emulator:
A Unicorn Hat seem to be a LED grid of 8x8. So it can be used/abused as simple display. As far as I understood this
@cyperghost said in Getting the rom name and emulator:
A Unicorn Hat seem to be a LED grid of 8x8. So it can be used/abused as simple display. As far as I understood this
I am coming to believe this is not how it works. However I am unsure and should probably do some research. :)
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@daveyman123 No no :)
The loop.sh was just intended as an example how to call a bash or python script.
for theloop.sh
. You used the way and read out a logfile ... this isn't neccesary.Your pyhton script should use the argument given via sys.argv[1]
so the runcommand-onstart.sh should only containsudo python onstart2.py "$1" &
why do you use sudo? Can't you use the regular user? sudo commands are often responsible for unwanted effects (locked file access)
Keep in mind ... now the process python is running endless in background. You can end it by sending a exitcode to the script or by killing the python process.
Sorry I don't know how the Unicorn device works and what can be done by coding. I think you have to do some research ... the magic of the background is the
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sign@meleu
Is there a better way to end a process running in background? -
@daveyman123
Well there could be a method that should work.You write the $3 argument to a file on
runcommand-onstart.sh
echo $3 > /home/pi/unicorn.txt sudo python onstart2.py &
Open the file
/home/pi/unicorn.txt
in python for every loop and dispaly the string from written file to your programThen on
runcommand-onend.sh
echo "killterm" > /home/pi/unicorn.txt
you write on killterm to the same file as on
runcommand-onstart.sh
Within python you analyse the content ofunicorn.txt
if it's not "killterm" then the unicorn flys, if it's killterm the python program endsBUT THAT'S A MESSY STYLE!!!
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@cyperghost
I use sudo because it wont run otherwise
lol its ok that your code is sloppy im a newbie and cant tell the differenceas for the python script. I think the problem lies in something to do with RetroPie being an experimental OS for the unicorn.
here is my code in the python script
from UHScroll import * import sys import time import os import unicornhat as unicorn rom_name = os.path.basename(os.path.normpath(sys.argv[3])) unicorn_scroll(rom_name,'white',255,0.2)
this produces the result of freezing half way through writing "GOLDENEYE". e.g it prints "GOLDEN" then freezes.
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@cyperghost said in Getting the rom name and emulator:
Is there a better way to end a process running in background?
My favorites are using pgrep/pkill.
@daveyman123 I'm confused about this unicorn stuff. Can you explain what exactly you want to do and what info you need from runcommand?
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