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    Mausberry Shutdown Script Doesn't Save Metadata

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    mausberry
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    • meleuM
      meleu @cyperghost
      last edited by meleu

      @cyperghost I think I've found it!

      The option is autosave_interval. Look here: https://github.com/libretro/RetroArch/blob/master/retroarch.cfg#L785

      300 should be a good value. 300 seconds = 5 minutes

      EDIT: via menu it's Settings -> Saving -> SaveRAM Autosave Interval.

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      • lostlessL
        lostless @meleu
        last edited by

        @meleu that's it. I did some testing a while ago and it only writes a new file if it's been changed. So 10 seconds works good for me.

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        • hansolo77H
          hansolo77
          last edited by

          Good stuff! So just to clarify, that's saving the nonvolatile RAM right? Not creating a Save State? Because of RetroAchievments, I typically just leave my RetroArch in Hardcore mode, which disables Saves States and Cheats.

          Sorry about last night and my headache. I wasn't fully following the discussion between @cyperghost and @meleu. When I get a chance, I will try it with the command:

          pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
          

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          lostlessL 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • lostlessL
            lostless @hansolo77
            last edited by

            @hansolo77 yes just the sram. Not savestates. By default the sram stays in RAM until you exit. This just checks the sram every x seconds and sees if there is a change. If so, it writes to disk.

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            • hansolo77H
              hansolo77
              last edited by

              That added line to the script seems to break the script. I added the 1.3 changes (using the original pkill retroarch > /dev/null 2>&1 bit), then I changed it to the pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)". For some reason now, whenever I press the power button nothing happens. At first I thought it was because the pkill command was nested inside the if statement. When I SSH'd into the system and checked top, ES was no longer running when RetroArch was. So the new additions to the script weren't getting picked up. I moved it (as a test) outside if functions. Still nothing happened. I've experimented with doing sudo reboot from the SSH terminal as well as via ES shutdown (from the menu). In both cases, the power button still doesn't work. I can, however, power the system on from a complete power plug pull via the button, so I know the switch is still good. You sure that's the right command?

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              • hansolo77H
                hansolo77
                last edited by hansolo77

                OK, further "looking around"... the original script (v1.2) wasn't working either. So I went back to the unedited v0.0 (the one Mausberry has you install). That one didn't work either! So I checked out the install script, and saw they're adding a line to rc.local. I'm not sure what that file is, but when I edited it, it had 2 instances of the script path /etc/switch.sh in there. I took one out and rebooted. Now the original script is working right. Gonna try putting in the new changes and see if that was my problem.

                EDIT Still a no-go on that 1.3 edit. :(

                EDIT 2 Facepalm - I think it might be a file properties issue now... I rechecked the Mausberry install script and noticed they're doing a chmod +777 on the script prior to rebooting. Since I already had a working script, I moved it to a backup file before making changes. I saved the changes to a new file and renamed it to be what it should be. But I suspect the +777 isn't there. So I added that bit in the terminal and just rebooted. The system now shuts down correctly (using the 1.2 script). Now testing 1.3.

                EDIT 3 Ha! That was the trick. But it's not saving the metadata. It might be that it's not giving it enough time to return to ES before cutting the power... When I hit the button, it turns off the emulator, and I see the RunCommand box (haven't set up the launching images yet). At the bottom of the screen there is a line that says "Terminated", then the system turns off..

                EDIT 4 I don't think this script in it's current form works well. I tried adding a second to the sleep timer. Then tried to test the script just as is before actually launching a game. The script launches, but the system never shuts down. ES closes, but that's it. I don't know if it's getting hung up on the sleep or what. But the only way I can recover is by pulling the plug. With the 2 added (v1.3) lines # commented out, the system fully powers down again. I think there needs to be additional lines of code to include an if/then/else. IF emulator is running, THEN kill and wait, ELSE shutdown ES. But will that even execute if an emulator isn't running? Would it need to read out as "IF emulator, THEN kill emulator and wait, THEN kill ES.. ELSE kill ES"?

                PS - I'm done for the night. :)

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                • cyperghostC
                  cyperghost
                  last edited by cyperghost

                  So I think it we should provide and maintain v1.2 only!
                  Get the version for Mausberry circuits shutdowns from here

                  Thank @hansolo77 for testing this
                  This script will properly shutdown ES and saves it's metadata if you press power button on your mausberry circuit!

                  • Metadata is needed to save scraped games, favorites and last played record upon next reboot
                  • This script will work if your are in EmulationsStation
                  • This script will not properly save metadata if you shutdown during gameplay or if your RPi is locked (So return to ES by pressing start+select on your gampad and then shutdown!)
                  # End Emulationstation if condition of running binary is true
                  # v1.0 07/21/17 by cyperghost - Inital run 
                  # v1.1 07/22/17 - Added chown command to set right user permission for creating es-shutdown
                  # v1.2 07/23/17 - Some small improvments, easier to maintain, removed echo, removed else branch 
                  # greetings @pjft for his famous favorits and @meleu for the RegEx sniplet 
                  espid=$( pgrep -f "/opt/retropie/supplementary/.*/emulationstation([^.]|$)" ) # detect PID of ES binary only
                  if [ "$espid" ]; then                                                         # Condition: PID is not equal 0 or empty then use ES shutdown
                     touch /tmp/es-shutdown && chown pi:pi /tmp/es-shutdown                     #v1.1 Change file permission of es-shutdown to user:group pi:pi
                     kill $espid                                                                #v1.2 use kill@detected PID - easier to maintain now!
                     exit
                  fi
                  # End Emulationstation if condition of running binary is true
                  
                  cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • cyperghostC
                    cyperghost @cyperghost
                    last edited by cyperghost

                    EXPERIMENTAL!!!

                    Converted from @meleu to kill all emulators
                    It worked (saved recently used games) for me in SSH but I've no chance to test >> lack of mausberry!

                    # End Emulationstation if condition of running binary is true (Shotgun-version - no support!)
                    # v1.0 07/21/17 by cyperghost - Inital run 
                    # v1.1 07/22/17 - Added chown command to set right user permission for creating es-shutdown
                    # v1.2 07/23/17 - Some small improvments, easier to maintain, removed echo, removed else branch 
                    # v1.4 07/25/17 - Shotgun method to terminate all launchs by runcommand (not maintained, use v1.2 for support)
                    # greetings @pjft for his famous favorits and @meleu for the RegEx sniplet 
                    espid=$( pgrep -f "/opt/retropie/supplementary/.*/emulationstation([^.]|$)" ) # detect PID of ES binary only
                    if [ "$espid" ]; then  
                    
                    #### Experimental part ####
                    IFS=" "
                    set – $( sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info ) > /dev/null 2>&1
                    pkill $2 && sleep 4                                                           # v1.4 Sleeptimer to give ES chance to save XML filestate (untestested)
                    #### Experimental part ####
                     
                       touch /tmp/es-shutdown && chown pi:pi /tmp/es-shutdown                     # v1.1 Change file permission of es-shutdown to user:group pi:pi
                       kill $espid                                                                # v1.2 use kill@detected PID - easier to maintain now!
                    exit
                    fi
                    
                    meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • meleuM
                      meleu @cyperghost
                      last edited by meleu

                      @cyperghost some notes

                      • the indentation can be improved :)
                      • the default IFS is space, tab and newline. I think there's no need to set it as space
                      • I'm not getting the reason why you are messing with the set command (unnecessary complexity)...

                      the suggested command doesn't work for you?

                      pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
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                      • cyperghostC
                        cyperghost @meleu
                        last edited by cyperghost

                        @meleu yes
                        pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)" Does not work. So you need to extract just binary call... I tested with retroarch, glide64 and zdoom. All were prober working by set-command

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                        • meleuM
                          meleu @cyperghost
                          last edited by

                          @cyperghost said in Mausberry Shutdown Script Doesn't Save Metadata:

                          @meleu yes
                          pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)" Does not work.

                          weird. I'm not able to test on my actual RetroPie, but look the test I've made:

                          [PROMPT]$ sleep 1000 &
                          [1] 8648
                          [PROMPT]$ cat test.info
                          1st line
                          2nd line
                          3rd line
                          sleep 1000
                          bla
                          bla
                          bla
                          
                          [PROMPT]$ pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p test.info)"
                          [1]+  Terminated              sleep 1000
                          

                          But I noticed an issue when the file to look for the 4th line doesn't exist... then my suggestion is to use this

                          [[ -f /dev/shm/runcommand.info ]] && pkill -f "$(sed -n 4p /dev/shm/runcommand.info)"
                          

                          Can you test it on a real RetroPie setup?

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                          • cyperghostC
                            cyperghost @meleu
                            last edited by cyperghost

                            @meleu Not now ... Have to work :)
                            Cya mate!

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                            • meleuM
                              meleu @cyperghost
                              last edited by

                              @cyperghost I found the problem: that line from runcommand.info has some double quotes wich is confusing the pkill. Here's my current solution:

                              rcinfo=/dev/shm/runcommand.info
                              [[ -f "$rcinfo" ]] && pkill -f -9 "$(sed -n 4p "$rcinfo" | cut -d' ' -f1)"
                              

                              I tested on my retropie here and it seems to work. Please test it when you have a chance.

                              Cheers!

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                              • hansolo77H
                                hansolo77
                                last edited by

                                You guys are just talking gibberish again. For somebody who's unfamiliar with all of this, I'm completely lost. RetroPie is only my 2nd ever Pi project, and really only my first exposure to the scripting side of it. I'm eager to learn, but throwing out seemingly random lines of code without reference or instruction on where to place it doesn't help me any. :) No biggie, I'll get there. I'm just totally unfamiliar with the commands. set sed, IFS.. totally new to me. I only just learned about top like 4 days ago. ^_^

                                So tomorrow after work, would you rather I test @cyperghost's v1.4 or replace that section with @meleu's? Or would it be better to just wait and let ya'll hash it out some more?

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                                • meleuM
                                  meleu @hansolo77
                                  last edited by

                                  @hansolo77 haha... sorry for the nerdy stuff. :)

                                  my suggestion is to try this:

                                  espid=$(pgrep -f "/opt/retropie/supplementary/.*/emulationstation([^.]|$)")
                                  if [ "$espid" ]; then
                                      [[ -f "/dev/shm/runcommand.info" ]] \
                                      && pkill -f -9 "$(sed -n 4p "/dev/shm/runcommand.info" | cut -d' ' -f1)" \
                                      && sleep 4
                                      touch /tmp/es-shutdown && chown pi:pi /tmp/es-shutdown
                                      kill $espid
                                  fi
                                  
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                                  • hansolo77H
                                    hansolo77
                                    last edited by hansolo77

                                    Ok cool. I'm going to bed soon so I will test this tomorrow when I get off work. If not right away, I'm off Thursday, so plenty of time then.

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                                    • cyperghostC
                                      cyperghost @meleu
                                      last edited by cyperghost

                                      @meleu
                                      You can even improve :)

                                      Edit runcommand-onend.sh and add

                                      sudo rm /dev/shm/runcommand.info
                                      

                                      or make PR to runcommand.sh :)
                                      Because runcommand.info isn't removed if emulator ends by start+select button :) It isn't really needed but it's a nice cleanup and definates the addition to the GPIO script you made with more sense.

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                                      • meleuM
                                        meleu @cyperghost
                                        last edited by

                                        @cyperghost it can be useful for debugging. I prefer to keep it even after the emulator has finished.

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                                        • cyperghostC
                                          cyperghost @meleu
                                          last edited by cyperghost

                                          @meleu And why do you check presence of runcommand.info in your script? Don't get me wrong but I think the filecheck only makes sense if you remove that after emulator call ends? Because you will always run the "sleep 4"-command even if you are only in ES :)

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                                          • meleuM
                                            meleu @cyperghost
                                            last edited by meleu

                                            @cyperghost because if the file doesn't exist that sed will fail and print nothing (empty string).

                                            Just for fun do the following

                                            1. save all important file you have open.
                                            2. perform this command: pkill -f ""
                                            3. cry (well, if you saved the files you don't have to cry. as I didn't saved, I cried)

                                            Explaining: using an empty string as the pattern matches "everything". And the result is pkilling every single process owned by the pkiller!

                                            I noticed it on an unpleasant way. :)

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