Asking for retropie login on boot? (after update)
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@paffley Thanks for confirmation - it's the
systemd
OS package upgrade that is causing this. -
@mitu thanks for letting me know :)
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Im having the same problem. What can I do for fixing it?
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@BuZz This reminds me of something reported here a few months ago... Too bad they didn't take your case into account.
Here is the simpliest way to fix this:
- at command prompt, type
sudo raspi-config
- select option 3 in menu (Boot Options)
- select option B1 (Desktopp/CLI)
- select option B2 (Console Autologin)
Then Ok, exit all the way and restart.
- at command prompt, type
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@sano said in Asking for retropie login on boot? (after update):
@BuZz This reminds me of something reported here a few months ago... Too bad they didn't take your case into account.
Here is the simpliest way to fix this:
- at command prompt, type
sudo raspi-config
- select option 3 in menu (Boot Options)
- select option B1 (Desktopp/CLI)
- select option B2 (Console Autologin)
Then Ok, exit all the way and restart.
Thank you. Exactly what I was looking for. :)
- at command prompt, type
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@sano
How did you get to the prompt to enter the command? It just times out after improper password entry? -
@billmet68
You have to login with the pi user of course, either with a keyboard on the RPi or through ssh :) -
I added a comment to my previous bug report and opened an issue against raspi-config - https://github.com/RPi-Distro/raspi-config/issues/81 - maybe a Raspbian developer will notice.
@mitu - I would prefer this to be fixed upstream that workaround this in RetroPie so will see what happens.
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@sano said in Asking for retropie login on boot? (after update):
@BuZz This reminds me of something reported here a few months ago... Too bad they didn't take your case into account.
Here is the simpliest way to fix this:
- at command prompt, type
sudo raspi-config
- select option 3 in menu (Boot Options)
- select option B1 (Desktopp/CLI)
- select option B2 (Console Autologin)
Then Ok, exit all the way and restart.
This worked for me. Thank you very much!
- at command prompt, type
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So has this been fixed? Or should I still avoid updating for now?
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@redbatman I don't think it's fixed, but the workaround is pretty simple, so you don't have to refrain from updating if you have to update (IMHO), provided you're aware the issue and have some basic knowledge.
This is an upstream bug of raspbian systemd and/or raspi-config packages, as said by @BuZz earlier, so technically not a retropie bug. -
@rad_schuhart is this also valid for any time the password for the pi account is changed?
(Just reset the autologin, and all is well)
the plus side is that you have a less guessable SSH login on your network. -
@particle said in Asking for retropie login on boot? (after update):
@rad_schuhart is this also valid for any time the password for the pi account is changed?
No, changing the password doesn't impact the autologin part.
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@mitu That's what I was hoping. Thanks for the verification
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SOLVED!!!
At least in my case...
I had the same issue and (I had this issue also in the past) the only thing I´ve done was:
RetroPie-Setup -> Configuration/Tools -> Autostart -> Start Emulationstation at boot
I guess this re-enables it. It worked for me.
Hopefully for you guys too! -
@billmet68 type this:
login: pi
password: raspberry
Then do this:
at command prompt, type sudo raspi-config
select option 3 in menu (Boot Options)
select option B1 (Desktopp/CLI)
select option B2 (Console Autologin) -
@vokitak This does not work. When I enter the login and password given it just says login incorrect and goes back to asking for my login again. How do you get to the point where you can type in a command again?
Better still, has anyone found a username and password default that actually works?
Feeling quite depressed by all this, which I am only trying to set up because this was a birthday present for my 11-year-old child. GRRRRRR!
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@jrm said in Asking for retropie login on boot? (after update):
Better still, has anyone found a username and password default that actually works?
That's the default user/password for Raspbian - it has been since the beginning, when the Pi was released. If it doesn't work, then maybe you changed it - in this case there's nothing we can do about it.
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Default Instructions for pi: (Unless you have changed the default user/pass on your pi)
*Keyboard required
login: pi
password: raspberry (this does not move the curser but is actually inputting the password when you type)Press Enter on keyboard
Emulation Station will now boot up
Now go to: RetroPie-Setup -> Configuration/Tools -> Autostart -> Start Emulationstation at boot
Exit Retropie-Setup
……………………..
You will have to repeat the above with every update (for now). -
Hi, what about this:
i Used the new berryboot version 20180929 with a stock retropie 4.4 image,i did a full system update(apt-get upgrade)
And after i did a reboot and before it does the reboot it got stuck with this message:
systemd[1]: caught <ABRT.>, dumped core as pid 7450.
systemd[1]: Freezing execution.any suggestions?
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