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    Installation of Mamedev MAME

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    mamemamedev
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    • G
      George
      last edited by

      BTW: If you want to take a look at the script so far, please do. Feedback is welcome.

      https://github.com/GeorgeMcMullen/RetroPie-Setup/blob/master/scriptmodules/emulators/mame.sh

      - George

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      • G
        George
        last edited by

        A note for future reference. I wanted to check how SDL2 was compiled for RetroPie, as ChoccyHobNob's page indicates that Raspbian Stretch comes with a version that doesn't perform well with MAME (2-3 fps). After a little digging, I found RetroPie-Setup has a scriptmodule for SDL2, located at:

        https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Setup/blob/master/scriptmodules/supplementary/sdl2.sh

        This references RetroPie's own SDL mirror, which includes a build script to configure and compile SDL2, located at:

        https://github.com/RetroPie/SDL-mirror/blob/rpi-2.0.8/build-scripts/raspberrypi-buildbot.sh

        The "configure" statement is very close to ChoccyHobNob's configure statement, disabling almost all of the same things (pulseaudio, esd, video-mir, video-wayland). This is true except for video-opengl.

        I imagine that there are other packages out there that require OpenGL. I have not yet tested if there is a specific difference in performance when OpenGL is enabled in SDL vs. not. But I don't expect a massive boost in performance, which would then create the quandary of what version of SDL2 to use or if it's even possible to have two versions of SDL2 installed.

        I'll add more if I find any reasonable difference.

        - George

        mituM BuZzB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mituM
          mitu Global Moderator @George
          last edited by

          @george said in Installation of Mamedev MAME:

          This references RetroPie's own SDL mirror, which includes a build script to configure and compile SDL2, located at:

          If your scriptmodule runs from a RetroPie installation, I think you can always assume the RetroPie 2.0.8 (at the moment) version is installed and available you shouldn't add anything in your script to handle the installation. I think that OpenGL is not disabled for x86, you can test that if you're using this platform.

          BuZzB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • BuZzB
            BuZz administrators @George
            last edited by

            @george said in Installation of Mamedev MAME:

            This references RetroPie's own SDL mirror, which includes a build script to configure and compile SDL2, located at:

            https://github.com/RetroPie/SDL-mirror/blob/rpi-2.0.8/build-scripts/raspberrypi-buildbot.sh

            We don't use this script for building SDL2.

            To help us help you - please make sure you read the sticky topics before posting - https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

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            • BuZzB
              BuZz administrators @mitu
              last edited by

              @mitu said in Installation of Mamedev MAME:

              If your scriptmodule runs from a RetroPie installation, I think you can always assume the RetroPie 2.0.8 (at the moment) version is installed and available you shouldn't add anything in your script to handle the installation. I think that OpenGL is not disabled for x86, you can test that if you're using this platform.

              Yep. So long as sdl2-dev is included as a dependency the retropie SDL2 will be installed.

              To help us help you - please make sure you read the sticky topics before posting - https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

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              • G
                George
                last edited by

                Hello all,

                Just wanted to give a bit of an update. My script module for MAMEdev MAME has been coming along nicely. I've hammered out all the dependencies, the appropriate amount of swap space, the new high score plug-in, updated for v0.203, and tested on a fresh RetroPie installation. It's looking very good.

                I'd love to get some feedback on it and talk next steps. Here is the script:

                https://github.com/GeorgeMcMullen/RetroPie-Setup/blob/master/scriptmodules/emulators/mame.sh

                I did not include an "Install Binary" option this time, as per the comment by @BuZz . But if you're willing to host the binary, I'd be more than happy to update the script accordingly. Compilation time was 2 days, 10 hours on a Raspberry Pi 3. So I imagine it might be helpful.

                Thanks again,

                • George
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                • mituM
                  mitu Global Moderator
                  last edited by

                  The binary install will be automatically detected at runtime by the setup script if it's going to be hosted by the RetroPie archive server, so you don't have to provide anything extra in the script.
                  Is there a reason for excluding x86 as a platform (with the !x11 flag) ?

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                  • G
                    George
                    last edited by

                    Thanks @mitu ,

                    I didn't realize that about binary installations. Pretty cool!

                    With regards to the rp_module_flags, I couldn't find much documentation on it besides how it was compared to the current platform in order to determine whether to display / hide a script module in the RetroPie Setup, so I checked out other scripts. Here are my notes:

                    • !x11 is referenced in the mame4all script, which also correlates to what I've read about MAME/SDL performing poorly when compiled with X11 support (at least on the Pi)
                    • list itemI saw some scripts with an !x86 flag, which I do not use, since this should run fine on X86 platforms.
                    • Please correct me if !x11 will in addition cripple X86 availability.
                    • !mali is referenced by both advmame and mame4all, which indicated to me overall poor performance or untestability on Mali based platforms. I don't have an ODroid to test it.
                    • Other scripts use !kms, but I did not include that as I thought that X86 might have kernel mode switching capability.

                    Let me know if you have any suggestions on better rp_module_flags.

                    Thanks again for the feedback and guidance.

                    - George

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                    • mituM
                      mitu Global Moderator
                      last edited by

                      Normal Linux distros on the PC are running RetroPia via X.org, not using the framebuffer (like the Pi or other SBCs), so the x11 flag is automatically added to them. Using !x11 will make the scriptmodule not be available to them. See here for the flags added to any x86 installation.

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                      • G
                        George
                        last edited by

                        Thanks for the clarification @mitu. I've updated the script to remove !x11. Let me know if you see anything else. I'll be continuing to test in the mean time.

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                        • mituM
                          mitu Global Moderator
                          last edited by mitu

                          I've tested the build on Ubuntu (x86_64) and - ironically - it crashes with not enough memory :).

                          [...]
                          as: out of memory allocating 4064 bytes after a total of 84123648 bytes
                          {standard input}: Assembler messages:
                          {standard input}:734193: Fatal error: can't close ../../../../linux_gcc/obj/x64/Release/src/emu/emumem.o: Memory exhausted
                          emu.make:1143: recipe for target '../../../../linux_gcc/obj/x64/Release/src/emu/emumem.o' failed
                          make[2]: *** [../../../../linux_gcc/obj/x64/Release/src/emu/emumem.o] Error 2
                          

                          The system I'm testing had 4Gb RAM, I'm trying right now with more RAM added (6Gb) and see if it gets through.

                          EDIT: Seems 6 Gb makes the compilation go further and succeeds. The installation fails though, because the exe name is mame64 instead of mame:

                          
                          Building driver list...
                          35435 driver(s) found
                          Compiling generated/mame/mame/drivlist.cpp...
                          Linking mame64...
                          Removing additional swap
                          ~/RetroPie-Setup
                          Could not successfully build mame - MAME emulator (/home/pi/RetroPie-Setup/tmp/build/mame/mame not found).
                          

                          I guess you could move the exe beforehand, just to simplify the install and configure procedure, or have different paths when a x86_64 binary is produced.

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                          • G
                            George
                            last edited by

                            Thanks @mitu,

                            I'll try to do a compilation with a smaller amount of memory and see what might help. I actually thought that the rpSwap function might be doing something there, but perhaps that is only used on Raspberry Pis? (Does rp stand for Raspberry Pi or RetroPie?)

                            Are there any built in functions that can tell what platform the script is being run on, which may help facilitate looking for mame64 vs mame? Alternatively, I'll check to see if the makefile itself will have an option on naming the executable.

                            - George

                            mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • mituM
                              mitu Global Moderator @George
                              last edited by mitu

                              @George said in Installation of Mamedev MAME:

                              Thanks @mitu,

                              I'll try to do a compilation with a smaller amount of memory and see what might help. I actually thought that the rpSwap function might be doing something there, but perhaps that is only used on Raspberry Pis? (Does rp stand for Raspberry Pi or RetroPie?)

                              rp is for RetroPie, but the way the swap adding works is that ensures you have at least the amount of RAM you request, it doesn't just get added on top.

                              Are there any built in functions that can tell what platform the script is being run on, which may help facilitate looking for mame64 vs mame? Alternatively, I'll check to see if the makefile itself will have an option on naming the executable.

                              I think there's a flag added to check for 32 vs 64 bit (see here). You can have an additional method (_get_mamedev_name) that would output the correct filename, so you can re-use it in the various methods of the scriptmodule (configure, install - to add it to the md_ret_files). For instance, the mame2003-plus module is identical with the mame2003, it's only the library name (the libretro core) that's different, so the other methods are re-used.

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                              • G
                                George
                                last edited by

                                Cool.

                                I did a test on a system with 2gb of memory and used rpSwap 8192 and everything compiled fine (took over a day to compile though). Any thoughts on having separate rpSwap amounts based on x86 (8192) vs. Pi (2048)? I feel 8192M on a Pi is a bit much, taking a considerable amount of space on an SD card, but I don't have any evidence to say whether it would be more than what most people have available or if too much swap is detrimental on these systems. I haven't pushed my updates to GitHub yet.

                                Thanks for the pointer on isPlatform. I'll look to use that to distinguish mame64 vs. mame. I looked at the mame makefile, but it looks like the TARGET parameter gets overridden deep in a sub-makefile that seems to be generated somehow.

                                In other news, I attempted to load the binary, which was compiled on a Raspberry Pi 3, onto a Raspberry Pi 0 and got an "Illegal instruction" error when trying to run it. That's new to me, since I've done this before on the previous version of RetroPie/Raspbian without a problem. Any thoughts on what might cause the issue? I'm currently attempting to compile on the Raspberry Pi 0 to see if I can narrow down the issue. It will probably take ...some... time though before it is complete.

                                Thanks!

                                - George

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                                • mituM
                                  mitu Global Moderator
                                  last edited by mitu

                                  I think you can add the swap based on the platform - 6/8Gb on an x86 and 2Gb otherwise. Also, regarding the exe name, I think it's best to not fiddle/hack the build system just for the name, you can just move or rename the file after the compilation or just keep the different names.
                                  For the Pi 0 not running the Pi3 binary - I think it's normal since they have different CPUs (ARM6-Z vs ARM7-A) and the CFLAGS used during compilation target either the Pi1/0 or Pi2/3 (via -mcpu, see here).

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                                  • G
                                    George
                                    last edited by

                                    Thanks for the pointers.

                                    I'm thinking I'll add a few checks for x86 and x64 and set swap and rename the executable accordingly. So far, that seems to be the most straightforward way to do it.

                                    On the Pi 0 end, I'm doing some compile tests to see how things go. I'm really just looking at compile-ability and run-ability. Performance-wise, the Pi 0 does not do very well with recent versions of MAME.

                                    Side question: Is there any way to have the scriptmodule pick up where it gets left off? For example, if a compilation fails, I can go back and fix an error, but the next time the script runs, compilation will start from scratch. So far, the only thing I've been able to workaround is make a backup copy of the build directory and then put it back after the download step finishes.

                                    mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • mituM
                                      mitu Global Moderator @George
                                      last edited by mitu

                                      @George said in Installation of Mamedev MAME:

                                      On the Pi 0 end, I'm doing some compile tests to see how things go. I'm really just looking at compile-ability and run-ability. Performance-wise, the Pi 0 does not do very well with recent versions of MAME.

                                      You might as well disable it, waiting for 4 days to compile then finding out it's not really up to par it's not so user friendly.

                                      Side question: Is there any way to have the scriptmodule pick up where it gets left off? For example, if a compilation fails, I can go back and fix an error, but the next time the script runs, compilation will start from scratch. So far, the only thing I've been able to workaround is make a backup copy of the build directory and then put it back after the download step finishes.

                                      You can invoke different stages of the scriptmodule workflow through retropie_packages.sh:

                                      sudo ./retropie_packages.sh mame sources # to download sources and apply patches
                                      sudo ./retropie_packages.sh mame build # to compile the package
                                      sudo ./retropie_packages.sh mame configure # to configure the package
                                      sudo ./retropie_packages.sh mame clean # to clean up/wipe build folder
                                      [.. etc..]
                                      

                                      Make sure the build_mame function doesn't run 'make clean' and you should be able to resume compilation by using the build command for the package.

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                                      • G
                                        George
                                        last edited by

                                        Oh wow. Thank you for the workflow info! That is invaluable! (Guess I should have asked before!)

                                        Also, good point on disabling for Pi 0. I'll probably do that unless I find some games actually work well on it. ChoccyHobNob had some benchmarks done on a Pi B+. I'll try to replicate without overclocking. If nothing works, then it will be disabled.

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                                        • G
                                          George
                                          last edited by

                                          Just wanted to let folks know that I have not abandoned this. In fact, I've just been continuing my tests. One of these tests has been to try a fresh install and compile on a Raspberry Pi Zero. The compilation step has taken over a month SO FAR. There may be something wrong with my SD card, but I have not seen any other issues, so I've just let it run. Hopefully it will finish soon and I can test out the binary which is expected to be very slow.

                                          I'll update my Github with the latest scriptmodule once I've done some more tests. Thanks for the patience!

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                                          • G
                                            George
                                            last edited by

                                            MAME is finally linking on my Raspberry Pi Zero. It's taken around 51 days so far. Haha!

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