Versatile C++ game scraper: Skyscraper
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@analoghero I'll consider it. It's definitely not a bad idea, I just have to make sure it makes sense for Skyscraper as a whole and that the implementation in the code doesn't bloat it. :S
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@dorkvader Those are awesome man.
Any chance you could hook me up with your templates for those? I'd love to make 3D boxart for all of the Xtras I've been making. The only template I have though makes every game look like a generic DVD case. It still looks good, but it's miles away from what you're showing here.
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@used2berx Sure thing. I'm finishing the Vectrex spines tonight and will be happy to zip my template and or/completed images (spine and boxes) or both. The system has about 25 officially released titles and I've more than tripled that with public domain homebrews. I'm also doing that with all the home consoles from the Golden Era o' Video Games. Just email me.
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@dorkvader Thanks man. That would be great. :)
Not sure where to find your email though?
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Can someone help me in installing Skyscraper to RetroPie on Ubuntu? muldjord mention that install is exactly the same as is on the PI. I have done the steps listed in the GitHub and I am getting this error:
$ wget -q -O - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/muldjord/skyscraper/master/update_skyscraper.sh | bash
bash: line 3: curl: command not found
--- Fetching Skyscraper v. ---
--2018-09-03 22:34:48-- https://github.com/muldjord/skyscraper/archive/.tar.gz
Resolving github.com (github.com)... 192.30.253.113, 192.30.253.112
Connecting to github.com (github.com)|192.30.253.113|:443... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 404 Not Found
2018-09-03 22:34:48 ERROR 404: Not Found.I am assuming that I should also install this in the RetroPie folder?
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@easye9inches said in Versatile C++ game scraper: Skyscraper:
I am assuming that I should also install this in the RetroPie folder?
No, you can run it from anywhere you have write access. You need to install
curl
and then re-run the installationsudo apt-get -y install curl
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@mitu said in Versatile C++ game scraper: Skyscraper:
@easye9inches said in Versatile C++ game scraper: Skyscraper:
I am assuming that I should also install this in the RetroPie folder?
No, you can run it from anywhere you have write access. You need to install
curl
and then re-run the installationsudo apt-get -y install curl
Thanks! got it installed
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Do I have to edit the config file if all my roms are on a external HDD? Because nothing is scraping because it is the default home/pi/roms setting. Id rather scrape my games on the external for backup purpose, and than transfer them over to the pi.
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Skyscraper version 2.7.3 released: https://github.com/muldjord/skyscraper
- Improved image cropping to now also crop black borders, but only for screenshots (Thank you to 'chipsnblip' for suggesting this)
- Made 'import' base folder configurable in config.ini
- Fixed bug in 'import' scraping module that caused dummy titles to be saved to localdb when scraping media resources
- Changed 'curl' to 'wget' in update_skyscraper.sh script to avoid curl requirement
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@easye9inches Please read the output of '--help' and also check out the options in '~/.skyscraper/config.ini.example'. What you want to do is easy to setup.
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@used2berx Sorry, I thought my email was in my profile. Does it not appear?
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@dorkvader I didn't see it anywhere. Just see the @ symbol and your name. If you actually see mine, you can just send me an email though. I'm not sure what my profile looks like to other people either. :)
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@muldjord Thanks for the awesome tool!
So, I’ve run into an issue scraping my collection with screenscraper.fr as the source. My ROMs are all compressed as individual 7z files (to save space), however Skyscraper is trying to match the SHA1/MD5s of the 7z files themselves, instead of the ROM they contain. Obviously this won’t wok, so it’s failing to match anything.
Most other tools will actually uncompress the file and get the hash of the resulting file(s), or even pull the hash out of the header for supported formats (ZIP files have CRC hashes stored in the header for each file in the archive; 7z stores MD5 hashes in the header).
Can this be implemented in Skyscraper? I belive the libarchive library has support for 7z, so it shouldn’t be hard to implement. Alternatively, Skyscraper could call the external 7z binary with the “7z h” option and read the hashes from stdin (this is a very hacky way to do it, but would be easy to implement).
Thanks for all the great work!
Edit: If this is too much work, how about adding a command line option to override the SHA1 and MD5 for individual ROMs? That way I could wrap Skyscraper in a custom Python script that would traverse a directory and for each file decompress it, generate SHA1 and MD5 hashes then call Skyscraper. Here’s some Python like pseudocode to illustrate:
#!/bin/pseudocode for file in “/path/to/compressed/roms”: run(“7z e file --stdout”) rom = run.STDIN rom_md5 = hash.MD5(rom) rom_sha1 = hash.SHA1(rom) run(“Skyscraper -s screenscraper -p snes -sha1 rom_sha1 -md5 rom_md5 file”) done
I could write a working script that does the above in basically no time. The script shouldn’t add more than 1 second per ROM to the scraping times (compared to running Skyscraper by itself on uncompressed files), which I could live with.
So yeah, if adding native compression isn’t a priority, adding hash override options would be an acceptable alternative I could live with. :)
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EDIT: I just thought about the obvious solution to the below mentioned issues. I can just decompress to ram.
@timb Yes, this has been requested quite a few times actually. If I did this, it would be implemented with an '--unpack' option that would enable the decompression functionality. And it would work on zip and 7z files. The only issue I see is the bashing I would be doing on the SD card. Unpacking each rom to a temporary file and subsequently deleting the rom again, sometimes thousands of times in a row... That's just a very bad idea if you want to keep your SD card alive for more than a few weeks. SD cards don't spread around its writes like an SSD does. So this is a real concern.
With that said, I could add it, and make sure to put up a red warning text when using it. At least people would be aware of the issue and can't blame me when their setup goes up in smoke. ;)
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@used2berx OK, my email is now visible in my profile. You just have to enable it to be seen in through profile edit. It's like the snake was at my feet ready to strike, but all be damned if I could see it. I did finish the Vectrex box art, btw.
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Yes, decompressing to ram is the way to go. That’s what the pseudocode in my last post essentially did. (It ran 7z with the —stdout option, which of course decompresses to stdout, which is read with a pipe into the pseudocode process as a data object so it never touches the SD card.) I use this method with a Python script I wrote that sorts and verifies ROMs. Obviously you won’t have to worry about piping from an external process, since you can just use libarchive (or another library) to implement the decompression natively, but decompressing into memory is the way to go.
That said, decompressing to a temp file can still work if you have to. Simply do it to /dev/shm, which is on a tmpfs (ramdisk). Or do it to /tmp with a warning that includes instructions on how to enable mounting /tmp as tmpfs (it’s a single systemctl enable command). Obviously both of these options are Linux specific, but you could always implement fall back code for other platforms if you’re worried about that sort of thing.
As a side note, I’m not super concerned about wearing out an SD card. Modern cards have wear leveling algorithms built into their controllers, just like SSDs, so they should be fairly robust. If they do wear out, they’re cheap and plentiful. I do embedded development (hardware and software) for a living and have never seen an SD card die from wear. (That said, for datalogging applications I started using the F2FS filesystem instead of ext4 last year; I’ve been so pleased with it I’ve started using it on most of the embedded Linux systems I work with, including all my personal SBCs. It’s a log-structured file system designed specifically for NAND flash storage helps reduce wear, increase speed and improved reliability, especially when it comes to a lot of small read-modify-write operations.)
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Thank you for the detailed suggestions. They all make sense to me. I think I'll go with libarchive, it's relatively simple to write a wrapper for it. I'll figure something out. My main concern with using libarchive is that it complicates the installation as it would obviously require libarchive as a dependency. Might not seem like a big deal, but I absolutely despise build systems such as autotools and cmake and try to avoid them at all costs. So I'll try to see if I can make it work in a simple manner with Qt's qmake instead. Might not be as robust, but at least I won't have to spend the next 2 weeks pulling my hair out of my scalp while fighting the unbelievably overcomplicated has-to-do-everything-to-the-point-that-only-absolute-experts-get-it-build systems. Oh yeah, we better check for that fortran compiler, that's important.
EDIT: You know what, I'll look into just using Qt's QProcess and use 7z to stdout which is returned to my QProcess.
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Most distros have libarchive available as a package (Debian/Raspbian: apt install libarchive libarchive-dev), so can’t you just dynamically link to the library the package installs?
I can’t see how that would be any worse than the dependency of having to install 7z (p7zip) and it would work much, much better than reading 7z’s STDOUT. (I’ve written a few she’ll scripts around p7zip. While it is stable, it’s very clear that it’s a Linux console application written by a Windows developer, which it was! I had to write a lot of “logic code” around it in order to get it to behave like a normal *nix shell utility.)
I’ve been slowly converting my hundreds of utility shell scripts into Python and of those about a dozen call p7zip, however I’ve been going back and rewriting them to use PyArchive (which is a Python module for libarchive) instead. The ones I’ve done so far ended up much simpler than calling 7z as a subprocesses (one script went from 50 lines to 15).
If it were me, I’d go with a native libarchive implementation. (I actually thought about making an attempt at implementing it, but I don’t really do much work with C++, so it would end up more like C and be sort of hacky.)
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It's on master now in a quick first draft. Please try it out if you get the time. The option is '--unpack'. It will unpack and checksum a single file inside a 7z or zip file. If more than 1 file is found inside the compressed file, it falls back to doing the checksum calculation from the base file. Let me know how it goes if you do check it out.
EDIT: I could dynamically link. The issue here is that I'd just add it manually to the flags without knowing actual locations for the specific system. If for some reason that doesn't exist/work on the system, it breaks the compilation. And I do not want to get into that territory. I'm ok with the current solution. If the user doesn't have p7zip, it just doesn't work. It still compiles fine. I'll add some error checking aswell.
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Wow, that was fast! Okay, I’ll download it tonight and do my best to break it! :D
I’m just thinking out loud here; as an alternative in case the 7zip solution ends up not working reliably for some reason: As for dynamically linking, you could always just let the user pass the location of the library (—with-libarchive=/use/local/include) to the linker. Then just use a define or something around any code that uses the library, so it doesn’t compile if the location isn’t provided. It wouldn’t be hard to add some logic to the setup shell script either that searches for libarchive and informs the user if it can’t be found. (Using a normal makefile based build system anyway; I’m not sure about the build system Qt uses.) It’s not ideal, and sort of hacky, but would be straight forward to do.
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