Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color
-
@francemsr i have done this many times. Even tested it three times today with the same results as the many many times i tried before.
-
@francemsr i made a video as proof.
-
@edmaul69 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
@francemsr i made a video as proof.
I'm using MacOS7.5.5 installed from scratch by me. I don't know what you have done in your system and which parameters you're using on basilisik configuration file. Again, if you see the screenshots at the end of this thread you will see the result:
http://www.retropie-italia.it/viewtopic.php?f=61&p=4695 -
@francemsr im using 8.1 but it did it on 7.5 as well. In earlier thread comments in this thread or the other one when i was setting this up it was stated to do it the same way i mention for the same reason. But at any case for the tutorial it should be mentioned to change it to b&w so others dont have the same issue me and others have had and not know why and never get it working because of that. B&w will guarantee it works for them.
-
@edmaul69 and @FranceMSR: thank you both for the input. I added the info to my post at nr. 137. I included as mucht info as possible there. I made a choice to make it not as short as possible but as complete as possible.
-
@edmaul69 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
@francemsr ...B&w will guarantee it works for them.
If I use B&W Basilisk crashes...
What I can guarantee is that if you follow this guide for installing MacOS:
http://www.retropie-italia.it/viewtopic.php?f=61&t=752then my step for playing 256 colors game:
http://www.retropie-italia.it/viewtopic.php?f=61&t=753
https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/1049/macintosh-basilisk-ii-8-bit-color/171it ALWAYS works ;-)
P.S.: compile Basilisk from source code, don't use binary version
-
@francemsr i do have it installed from source. Are you changing it to 16 color b&w?
-
@edmaul69 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
@francemsr i do have it installed from source. Are you changing it to 16 color b&w?
No, never used 16 B&W mode because in this way Basilisk crashes
-
Hi. So I tried both ways - changing the dispmanx and the
displaycolordepth 8
both before and after changing the same option on MacOS. I couldn't get either to work and I tried on multiple occasions.So I tried @FranceMSR's guide on the the Retropie Italia website for installing the Macintosh system and then I installed POP2 using his other guide. This did work and POP2 works fine and it does seem to work every time. Thanks.
However, I've got 2 questions please.
First, every time I start up the Mac emulator I get the warning about the floppy disk. Is there a way of stopping this?
Second, is there a way of starting POP2 automatically from the emulationstation menu please eg by altering the
emulators.cfg
file or altering thebasiliskii.cfg
file? At the moment, I have to start the Mac emulator and click a couple of times in the MacOS disk before I can start up POP2. Thanks. -
@spud11 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
Hi. So I tried both ways - changing the dispmanx and the
displaycolordepth 8
both before and after changing the same option on MacOS. I couldn't get either to work and I tried on multiple occasions.So I tried @FranceMSR's guide on the the Retropie Italia website for installing the Macintosh system and then I installed POP2 using his other guide. This did work and POP2 works fine and it does seem to work every time. Thanks.
That's strange, because other than the Italian guide making it's own disk image the guide here in post 137 is, AFAIK, the same procedure. Maybe the disk images from the "PoP Macintosh Total Pack" are set to 256 color which is making them crash...?
-
@spud11 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
So I tried @FranceMSR's guide on the the Retropie Italia website for installing the Macintosh system and then I installed POP2 using his other guide. This did work and POP2 works fine and it does seem to work every time. Thanks.
I'm glad that you found the guides helpful ;-)
Thanks for your feedback, maybe now other guys will try to follow those step :-)
The guides are here:
http://www.retropie-italia.it/viewtopic.php?f=61&t=752
http://www.retropie-italia.it/viewtopic.php?f=61&t=753 -
@meneer-jansen @FranceMSR I added the
oldgames
image (disk02.img
on which POP2 appears) to theemulators.cfg
, so that I could start up POP2 from that ready made disk I'm using (and which I suspect most people are using).That works too, so I suspect the difference in reliability is actually something to do with the installation of the MacOS. Starting from scratch using @FranceMSR's guide seems to be the most reliable way of getting POP2 working avoiding the Black Screen of Death.
Also, I switched the Pi off overnight and started it up again this morning. That seems to have removed the floppy disk issue I was having. When I started up Basilisk this morning, it rebuilt the Mac emulator on startup, so all is good at that end.
I'm still not sure, however, how to get POP2 to start automatically from the retropie/emulationstation menu. I'm still having to click once or twice in the MacOS to start POP2 manually after the emulator starts.
-
@meneer-jansen There are in fact quite a few differences in the
basiliskii.cfg
between the 2 processes of setup:Retropie Italia's version is:
rom /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh/color_classic.rom #disk /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh/DiskTools_MacOS8.image #disk /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh/InstallationDisk disk /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh/MacOS753.img disk /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh/Stuff-it_Expander55.dsk extfs /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/macintosh displaycolordepth 8 seriala /dev/ttyS0 serialb /dev/ttyS1 udptunnel false udpport 6066 bootdrive 0 bootdriver 0 ramsize 33554432 frameskip 0 modelid 5 cpu 4 fpu true nocdrom false nosound false noclipconversion false nogui false jit false jitfpu false jitdebug false jitcachesize 0 jitlazyflush false jitinline false keyboardtype 5 keycodes false mousewheelmode 1 mousewheellines 3 dsp /dev/dsp mixer /dev/mixer ignoresegv true idlewait true
The "normal" Retropie version is as follows:
displaycolordepth 8 extfs / seriala /dev/ttyS0 serialb /dev/ttyS1 udptunnel false udpport 6066 bootdrive 0 bootdriver 0 ramsize 8388608 frameskip 6 modelid 5 cpu 3 fpu false nocdrom false nosound false noclipconversion false nogui false jit false jitfpu false jitdebug false jitcachesize 0 jitlazyflush false jitinline false keyboardtype 5 keycodes false mousewheelmode 1 mousewheellines 3 dsp /dev/dsp mixer /dev/mixer ignoresegv false idlewait true
The cpu, frameskip and the ramsize are different.
-
Pay attention that during installation modelid is 14 but at the final step modelid is 5. You posted a wrong configuration files, that is not the same of RetroPie Italia Forum ;-)
-
@francemsr which mac is modelid5? I use a quadra900.rom so the modelid i use is 20. I used 14 as well seems to function the same.
Edit: found it is a macintosh se
-
@francemsr Okay, thanks. I've changed that now. The only things different are the cpu, frameskip and ramsize. Is it likely any of them would make any difference at all?
-
@spud11 said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
@francemsr Okay, thanks. I've changed that now. The only things different are the cpu, frameskip and ramsize. Is it likely any of them would make any difference at all?
-
I Changed the procedure in post 137 to include the frameskip setting to 0 (did that myself already but forgot to put it in post 137). PoP2 rus much more "fluently" that way.
-
What the CPU setting does is not explained in the official documentation here. Just like the "displaycolordepth" setting it might be a recently added setting that is still undocumented. On my system it is (still) set to "5"
-
My RAM size is set to 8 MB (i.e. 8388608). Don't think it'll make much difference though. PoP2 still runs kinda slow and the background music runs at 60 BPM (1 beat per second). Oh, well.
-
My model ID is set to 5 and I work w/ MacOS 8. The official help file says that one must set it to 14 for MacOS 8. Did that just now and I don't notice any difference.
-
-
@meneer-jansen said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
- I Changed the procedure in post 137...
I don't understand why you continuously change your post when the correct procedure is this :D
You have to install your own system! Don't use a pre-made disk ;-) -
The problem may be that there are so many variables involved in any particular install, that no one set of instructions is going to be completely accurate for all users. I've noticed a few particulars on all sides that I haven't found to be the case with my own install and some things that worked for me, didn't for others here. Perhaps ironing out 8-bit color in BasiliskII on the Pi just isn't possible with any absolute certainty.
-
@francemsr said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
@meneer-jansen said in Macintosh (Basilisk II) 8-bit Color:
- I Changed the procedure in post 137...
I don't understand why you continuously change your post when the correct procedure is this :D
You have to install your own system! Don't use a pre-made disk ;-)To make your own disk there is already a procedure on the internet: https://emaculation.com/doku.php/basiliskii_linux_setup .
I'm updating siad procedure to help others. If it is not appreciated or if people want to learn Italian first and then go to an Italian forum to follow another procedure, well, that's just silly. The problem is NOT pre-made disks, because in the past I made my own disk w/ MacOS 7 etc. which is very much work and very complicated (see link above, that's where everybody here got their procedure from!). Didn't work either against the "8-bit problem". Because the problem lies NOT in the virtual hard disk used by BasiliskII, troll. Constantly referring to Italian forums and complicated procedures to make your own 1 GB disk is not the solution. If my efforts are not appreciated, well, TRFM and FU then. Sod it.
Bye. :-(
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.