a gamelist.xml cleaner tool
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@sano Awesome, so what exactly does this do? Will it just delete the images from the downloaded_images folder, or create a new clean folder like Meleu's script?
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@thewinterdojer It's really quick and dirty, so if you don't understand it, you should wait for @meleu to add this feature in his script in a cleaner manner ;)
For this reason I didn't put the bash header, and commented the rm line.
It was just a proof of concept to help @meleu (but I think he will come with a cleverer solution anyway).Basically, after @meleu script, all games listed in gamelist.xml files are existing games.
This script just browse the downloaded_images folder for each system, and verify that the images are used in the corresponding gamelist.xml file.
If an image is not used, it prints "deleting image" (and delete it only if the rm line is uncommented). -
@sano Gotcha, I understand the concept of how it works, but I don't understand how to tell Linux that. Good stuff.
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Awww sweet, I've always hated the ES logs telling me how games are missing... and NOW "THEY SHALL BE GONE". :D
Considering im always looking for means of saving space, that other scripts to clean up images sounds great.
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@sano thanks for the inspiration. It really helps! ;-)
I'll implement that when I have a chance. -
@meleu said in a gamelist.xml cleaner tool:
@sano thanks for the inspiration. It really helps! ;-)
According to you bash skills, I don't think it's the truth ;)
Nevertheless, I had fun forgetting work for 10min, and doing a bash script for pleasure. -
This is really cool! Good work, guys!
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Suggestion:
Script should clean up all related items to the file (As @Sano has suggested with his images deletion).
Change default behavior to:
- Copy gamelist.xml to gameslist<DATE>.xml
- Modify the gamelist.xml file directly
- Move all images/video's into a sub-folder "Unused"
New Option: -r (remove)
Removes any files in the Unused folder (If supplied during the initial scan, does not move files to Unused, just deletes them)The default behavior would mean if you have 15 systems, you have no work to do, but you still have the "backup" file.
The new option means if you are confident or don't care, after running the cleanup script a user would have nothing to do.Thoughts:
- Do people cross link images/movies for 1 system to the same game in another system or folder? If so, the script would need to check for ANY/ALL occurrences or references to the image/movie.
- If a user provides this new -r option, should a backup of gameslist.xml be created at all?
- Perhaps create multiple other shell scripts for the separate functions, and a master script that calls them.
A) gamelist-cleanup-master.sh - orchestrates the cleanup process by calling all sub-scripts and passing in parameters
B) gamelist-cleaner.sh - Does what is has always done.
C) downloaded-images-cleaner.sh - Would remove un-linked images and movies if no reference is found in any of the XML files
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@kaltinril oh, I forgot this tool on my TODO list. :-)
Will try to improve it next week. I'm currently pretty busy.
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@meleu I ended up manually going through my SNES folder and deleting the unused images. Took a few days, I'm gonna go ahead and patiently wait for you to do the other ones haha. It's not a space issue or anything, I'm just a perfectionist and don't want any unnecessary files on my machine.
Thanks for all the other tools, and really no rush. Real life takes precedent to our Pi's :)
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Going to clone and edit it and then send a pull request.
You can accept whatever you want, or reject it all :)
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I've got the -r working. I also added -a for "all" so that I can just type this:
./gamelist-cleaner.sh -a -rand it cleaned up all folders and replaces the gamelist.xml instead of creating the -clean version.
https://github.com/kaltinril/share
I want to do some more testing before I submit a pull request.
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@kaltinril you can submit a PR and then we can discuss about the code on github. ;-)
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@meleu Submitted.
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Is this ready to be used?
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@thewinterdojer I didn't tested but I merged his script. You can find it here:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/meleu/share/master/images-cleaner.sh@Kaltinril added a
-t
option to just test and not actually delete anything. It's a cool feature. -
@meleu Awesome. I will give this a try when I get home. Thanks a bunch!
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This worked perfectly, thank you. I deleted 826 images across 6 systems, all duplicates :)
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The gamelist-cleaner.sh by @Kaltinril seems to be the newer one. Maybe this could be mergeded into the one by @meleu?
Is the images-cleaner.sh by @meleu already usable?
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I an trying to use this to clean up the images of games that i have removed and all i get is errors. the comman im using is
./images-cleaner.sh -t -g /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/nes -i /home/pi/RetroPie/roms/nes/images
when it ends all i get is error could not find gamelist for system but i know the gamelist.xml is in that folder and the images are in the images folder.
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