ensuring ES gracefully finish and save metadata in every system shutdown
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@meleu Yes...
Then we can set a trigger to this transistor GPIOBut what happens then? Will be a "second" shutdown performed? Because the triggered transistor will act as button press and call the regular shutdown script. Therefore I made a difference between software and hardware based actions ;) What's your opinion about?
What happens if you press shutdown button in ES? Then also a es-shutdown will be generated and the killes script will be triggered ;)
So you see it's a challenging game ;) And you see why the script from yesterday is so endless long. So yes, we need a to differ between shutdown and reboot and what initiated it? software or hardware.
The easiest solution seems to just to edit the
emulationstation.sh
and set the calls here but that's far away from generic solution.But as final note:
Personally it's not my responsibility to offer scripts here and to satisfy someones setup. It's an encouragement to learn something new and to share this knowledge for free as volunteer. Furthermore: I see this as interaction between enthusiasts to make a great development even better.
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@cyperghost @meleu You guys are amazing! I really appreciate the work you put into this.
You guys have already vastly improved the button-triggered shutdown by re-writing the script to ensureES saves metadata. That alone is a very nice improvement. However, there has always been an unrelated problem with the Mausberry circuit: it simply ignores software shutdowns/reboots. In order for it to cut power it requires a physical button press. The fact that it ignores a reboot is fine--might even be designed that way. But software shutdown puts the circuit into a locked state and does not cut power.
For me, the goal was to fix a locking Mausberry circuit on soft shutdown. @meleu's service idea not only simplified the Mausberry script allowing us to revert back to the original version, but it also fixed the ES metadata problem for EVERY CIRCUIT OR SHUTDOWN SOLUTION. I love this because it takes the solution public, so to speak. It works no matter how you are triggering your shutdown.
Of course, it also gave me a place to insert something specific--a GPIO call to trigger my transistor. Doing so, now eliminates the Mausberry lockup problem. It does it at the expense of rebooting (make all reboots lead to poweroff), but this is a good compromise in my opinion.
If I could wrap that call inside a conditional to some system-level indicator to detect a shutdown (and ignore a reboot) my transistor trigger would be perfect.
@cyperghost's idea goes a long way toward detecting reboots from ES, but what about a reboot from the RetroPie config menus? What about SSH and a sudo reboot issued from commandline?
I love the ideas here. This puzzle has been a real challenge to enjoy! Thanks for all of the input.
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OUTDATED: Take a look to this code piece
but what about a reboot from the RetroPie config menus? What about SSH and a sudo reboot issued from commandline?
That's the issue I was working on. As long as you set a GPIO command in the
killes.sh
script as long it is triggered on every reboot and shutdown. A reboot is important... Just to test scripts and to test interaction.So my bad workaround I would suggest is. Edit the
/opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation/emulationstation.sh
and add something likerm -f /tmp/es-shutdown && touch /dev/shm/es-shutdown
and then in
killes.sh
[[ -f /dev/shm/es-shutdown ]] && trigger GPIO
That's the easiest way without installing additional services, but will work only for ES or you need to remember to add file
es-sysrestart
to location that needs to be detected and then perform a reboot.Of course, it also gave me a place to insert something specific--a GPIO call to trigger my transistor. Doing so, now eliminates the Mausberry lockup problem. It does it at the expense of rebooting (make all reboots lead to poweroff), but this is a good compromise in my opinion.
Yes this solution is so far the best one - indeed!
If I could wrap that call inside a conditional to some system-level indicator to detect a shutdown (and ignore a reboot) my transistor trigger would be perfect.
That's my hope... Afaik reboot and poweroff use different runlevels to terminate programs. If there is a chance to detect runlevel for poweroff (0) or to detect runlevel for reboot (6) then there is a generel solution available.
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The
runcommand.sh
script changed a bit 3 days ago and users that are uptodate maybe are facing those issues with metadata not being saved when powering off while there's an emulator running.I'm already taking a look at it. Wait a little. ;-)
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UPDATE
I've updated the
killes.sh
script in the OP. The issue I talked about in the post above seems to be fixed.Let me know if you guys find some problem.
Cheers!
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Thanks for your awesome shutdown script. It works fantastic! :D
I only have 2 minor suggestions for improvement:
#1 I think it would be better if you add a "sudo" to "chmod a+x /etc/killes.sh" because some people will encouter a "permission denied error" without the sudo command.
#2 In the commented code in your 2nd post is a tiny error: "ExecStop=/home/pi/bin/killes.sh" hast to be replaced by "ExecStop=/etc/killes.sh" ;)
Regards!
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I'm using a Nespi Case with a mosfet switch mod and this works excellent for shutting down the system or using the reset button to do a full reset of the system. Currently however I am trying to get the reset button to just go back to the emulation station from a game but it is not saving the data. Is there any way to cannablize part of your method to save the game data and patch it into the code the maker of the mod I'm using provided? My current solution is to have retroarch save the game every few seconds which can't be very healthy for my sd card.
Sorry if the answer is obvious, I am a complete noob at python. (code below)
#!/usr/bin/python
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
import os, timeGPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM)
GPIO.setup(23, GPIO.IN, pull_up_down=GPIO.PUD_UP) #Reset switch
GPIO.setup(24, GPIO.IN, pull_up_down=GPIO.PUD_UP) #Power switch
GPIO.setup(25, GPIO.OUT) #ON control
GPIO.output(25, GPIO.HIGH)def exitEmulator(channel):
print('exitEmulator')
pids = [pid for pid in os.listdir('/proc') if pid.isdigit()]for pid in pids: try: commandpath = open(os.path.join('/proc', pid, 'cmdline'), 'rb').read() if commandpath[0:24] == '/opt/retropie/emulators/': os.system('kill -QUIT %s' % pid) print('kill -QUIT %s' % pid) except IOError: continue
GPIO.add_event_detect(23, GPIO.FALLING, callback=exitEmulator, bouncetime=500)
while True:
if (GPIO.input(24)):
time.sleep(0.25)
else:
print ("Shutting down...")
os.system("sudo shutdown -h now")
break -
I would suggest to use Network Control Interface to take a savestate and properly quit Retroarch.
See here : https://buildbot.libretro.com/.docs/tech/network-control-interface/
Edit : yes I'm fond of this feature since I discovered it :) -
The reset button I have on my case is currently being controlled by the script I posted. How would I integrate the Network Control Interface with it?
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@mafu it looks like, you would need to enable the option in retroarch.cfg, then insert a command such as
echo -n "SAVE_STATE" | nc -u -w1 127.0.0.1 55355
before your kill command which would tell retroarch to save the game. Of course, this is limited to retroarch emulators only. If you were, for example, running AdvanceMAME, it would probably generate an error. -
I think we're talking past one another, I can't find any information on echo in python. I gave it a shot and put it in the script anyway but it just crashed the console instead of safe shutdown of the power button and did nothing when using the reset.
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@mafu Sorry, I am not a python expert either, but what about borrowing the example from the script's working shutdown command and doing this:
os.system("echo -n "SAVE_STATE" | nc -u -w1 127.0.0.1 55355")
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That was an excellent idea carver01 (I facepalmed a little when I saw it for not thinking of it myself). It works partially but only on save states, not ingame save data (games that have their own dedicated save feature).
Whats frustrating is when using the OP's solution and just shutting the system down with the power button it will
- Exit the game.
- pause at the game selection screen (I assume this is where the "sleep 5" comes into play).
- And then shut down.
What I need is a way to get it to stop at step 2 and still save the game's data(save files, save states, etc) when pressing the reset button. As it is now it goes back to the game selection screen but does not save any data.
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Hey guys
Anyone having problems with systemd refusing to load with no ExecStart line in the service?
--
pi@retropie:~ $ dmesg | grep killes
[ 2.660196] systemd[1]: killes.service lacks ExecStart setting. Refusing.
[ 2.679020] systemd[1]: Cannot add dependency job for unit killes.service, ignoring: Unit killes.service failed to load: Invalid argument. See system logs and 'systemctl status killes.service' for details.I pulled the logs from systemctl status killes.service but it just says invalid args.
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@mafu Could you precise what you mean by "save the game data" ?
Is it that .srm files are not correctly written to the sd when retroarch is exited with the script ?It seems to me very difficult to script game saves beyond the savestates as explained above, because each game is quite specific about it's own saves (different menu, number of save slots, use of savepoints...)
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@mafu said in ensuring ES gracefully finish and save metadata in every system shutdown:
That was an excellent idea carver01
Glad I can help, marfu.
If your script is still shutting down, why not remove the line from the script that does the shutdown? Seems easy enough.
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I am having the same issue as Zobilla
dmesg | grep killes
[ 1.936038] systemd[1]: killes.service lacks ExecStart setting. Refusing.
[ 1.962910] systemd[1]: Cannot add dependency job for unit killes.service, ignoring: Unit killes.service failed to load: Invalid argument. See system logs and 'systemctl status killes.service' for details.systemctl status killes.service
â killes.service - Kill EmulationStation
Loaded: error (Reason: Invalid argument)
Active: inactive (dead)won't run for me.
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systemd --version
systemd 215
+PAM +AUDIT +SELINUX +IMA +SYSVINIT +LIBCRYPTSETUP +GCRYPT +ACL +XZ -SECCOMP -APPARMOR -
@meleu Can you link this posting in your first posting please?
@caver01 This will solve the software shutdown issue with the mausberry, without modifications on meleu's script and editing/opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation/emulationstation.sh
and reboots can also be performed now ;) This is a generic solution and works in every state!How to perform a software shutdown with the Mausberry and the diode/transistor hack?
NOTE: This does only work on momentary switches!
1. Prerequisites
You need to solder a diode (1N400x type 1N4001 or 1N4002) or a transistor (NPN-Type, 2N3904, BC547 or BC337) to the Mausberry on/off switch.
For the diode: Connect it between a GPIO and the mausberry button ground.
The transistors needs to soldered between ground and positive to the switch and the base line is connected to the GPIO (maybe you need a resistor to control current flow)Therefore I strongly recommand the DIODE hack!
Don't be afraid the Raspberry is in both ways protected against current backdraws! Use the diode or the right direction as shown in the box above....
GPIO MAUSBERRY from Pie DIODE switch ground O---------------->|----------------O 1N4002
2. Software part
- Create
gpio-shutoff
withsudo nano /lib/systemd/system-shutdown/gpio-shutoff
- Enter code from box below
- Make the script executable with
sudo chmod +x /lib/systemd/system-shutdown/gpio-shutoff
GPIO16 (or PIN 36 ) is just an example here and is my real setup
#!/bin/sh # Perform Software Shutdown with Mausberry switch # cyperghost for retropie.org.uk # This is the GPIO pinconnected to the diode or transistor GPIOpinDIODE=16 if [ "$1" = "poweroff" ]; then echo $GPIOpinDIODE > /sys/class/gpio/export echo out > /sys/class/gpio/gpio$GPIOpinDIODE/direction echo 1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio$GPIOpinDIODE/value sleep 0.5 echo 0 > /sys/class/gpio/gpio$GPIOpinDIODE/value sleep 0.5 fi
3. Why are you doing this?
The Mausberry gots a little design issue. If you performing a software shutdown (maybe via ES > Shutdown system or via SSHsudo poweroff
) the PI will shut down but the Mausberry will stay active (LED is on). Furthermore it won't respond to a power button press anymore - it's stuck! So you have to switch it off completly by removing your wall plug or by resetting the Mausberry.The diode or transistor just simulates a button press and the Mausberry will properly shutdown ;)
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