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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    {SOLVED} How to make a momentary push button that exit games and take me back to game menu ?

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    push buttonretropiepsxscriptnewbie
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    • mituM
      mitu Global Moderator @O.M.A.A
      last edited by

      @O-M-A-A said in How to make a momentary push button that exit games and take me back to game menu ?:

      would it be fine if u get access to my computed and try it yourself as maybe the way I'm doing it is wrong.

      Can't do that, I'm sorry.

      O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • O
        O.M.A.A @mitu
        last edited by

        @mitu it is okay thank you for your patient,

        I will just summarized what I did so u will have an idea maybe of the mistake I did, when I installed the retropie image, I basically run the link to the script (shudown.py) and this made the power button to work.

        Then I open it with notepad++ and I modified it to install the exit emu button.

        lastly, I downloaded ur file (multi_switch.sh) and executed the command u provided it me.

        for now pins are 3+4 for the exit emu button and 5+6 for the power button.

        mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mituM
          mitu Global Moderator @O.M.A.A
          last edited by mitu

          @O-M-A-A said in How to make a momentary push button that exit games and take me back to game menu ?:

          for now pins are 3+4 for the exit emu button and 5+6 for the power button.

          I edited the post - try putting the reset pins (brown/red) on the original position and change the GPIO number from 3 to 33 (or just copy the edited script).

          O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • O
            O.M.A.A @mitu
            last edited by

            @mitu I put the 2 wires back to the same position and I edited the file from 3 to 33, but didn't work

            cyperghostC O 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • cyperghostC
              cyperghost @O.M.A.A
              last edited by

              @O-M-A-A Please remeber to do a restart after every change!

              O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • O
                O.M.A.A @O.M.A.A
                last edited by

                @mitu

                Yeah, I do that with every change

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

                  I'll try to pull up my Pi to see how the reset button wires are wired on mine, it uses GPIO3, but I'm not sure where the other PIN is connected so that it generates the push event. It might take a while, though, I don't have it at hand right now.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • cyperghostC
                    cyperghost @O.M.A.A
                    last edited by cyperghost

                    @O-M-A-A
                    As I counted PIN connection on your picture it is likely your wiring is tied to PIN26 instead of 33?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • O
                      O.M.A.A @cyperghost
                      last edited by

                      @cyperghost I'm sure it is here :
                      1213134.png

                      @mitu thank you, I rly appreciate what u guys r doing.

                      cyperghostC O mituM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • cyperghostC
                        cyperghost @O.M.A.A
                        last edited by cyperghost

                        @O-M-A-A And if you look to the python code, what do you see? There is PIN33 used for input. Which is obviously not used in your setup? Please change the GPIOinit and buttonState2 to 26

                        Please use the script that @mitu posted!
                        Because he also used the BCM Pin layout as setting which makes things a lot easier to hook up.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • O
                          O.M.A.A @O.M.A.A
                          last edited by

                          @mitu @cyperghost
                          I'm not concerned much on the power button, as I'm planning to install a micro usb click button like this one:

                          61jgjiVkgtL.SL1500.jpg

                          So I can remove the push button pins on gpio 3 and install the exit emu button instead.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • mituM
                            mitu Global Moderator @O.M.A.A
                            last edited by mitu

                            @O-M-A-A The numbering can be done in 2 ways

                            • pin number (1 - 40) - the inner numbers in your picture.
                            • so called Board/BCM (?) numbers - the outer labels in your picture.

                            If you look at how your wiring picture looks like, you see that the power wires are using pins 5 and 6, not GPIO5 and GPIO6. The numbers in your script are the PIN numbers, not the GPIO (outer) labels.

                            cyperghostC O 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • cyperghostC
                              cyperghost @mitu
                              last edited by cyperghost

                              @mitu You surly already know this website ;) https://pinout.xyz/#
                              Maybe this will help @O-M-A-A, too

                              @O-M-A-A

                              Can use it in GPIO 3 instead of the power button ? and remove the power button wires as I don't need it.

                              The GPIO is a bit special one. It let's the Raspberry recover/restart from deep sleep mode. So it's very common in use for power off/power on events.
                              Do use this switch cable to full cut power from the Pie - after Powerdown. But never cut power by force

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • O
                                O.M.A.A @mitu
                                last edited by

                                @mitu @cyperghost
                                the exit emu button is on pins 25 and 26 which GPIO 7 I was using

                                Can use it in GPIO 3 instead of the power button ? and remove the power button wires as I don't need it.

                                mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • mituM
                                  mitu Global Moderator @O.M.A.A
                                  last edited by

                                  @O-M-A-A said in How to make a momentary push button that exit games and take me back to game menu ?:

                                  Can use it in GPIO 3 instead of the power button ? and remove the power button wires as I don't need it.

                                  You do need it, because that switch that you want to buy will not shut down properly your PI (i.e. will not run the shutdown command), it will merely cut down the power.

                                  O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • O
                                    O.M.A.A @mitu
                                    last edited by

                                    @mitu I see, so what to do now

                                    cyperghostC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • cyperghostC
                                      cyperghost @O.M.A.A
                                      last edited by cyperghost

                                      @O-M-A-A Hope I tranlated correct

                                      "bite together and pull through the cheeks"

                                      You are close to finish this!

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • O
                                        O.M.A.A
                                        last edited by O.M.A.A

                                        @mitu @cyperghost yeah, thank you.

                                        it looks awesome, everything is working except the 1 button which is not a big deal, I will search for my problem. thanks guys a lot for your help and patience. I'm rly grateful for the time u spent it with a newbie ;D.

                                        O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • O
                                          O.M.A.A @O.M.A.A
                                          last edited by

                                          @cyperghost @mitu
                                          I was thinking, I have tried the button with every pins, one of these pins executed the letter H on the keyboard, and I was able to make the button as hotkey.
                                          is it possible to make this key also perform the start button, so when pressed will function as a start and hotkey which will exit the emulator ;D.

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

                                            I just tried on by PCB and the reset button is wired on PIN3, with the other one wired to a GND pin.

                                            Here's a little script you could run (python <script.py>) to check a PIN for a momentary press

                                            #!/usr/bin/python
                                            import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
                                            import time
                                            import subprocess
                                            
                                            pinNo = 3
                                            GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BOARD)
                                            GPIO.setup(pinNo, GPIO.IN)
                                            
                                            while True:
                                                #grab the current button state
                                                buttonState2 = GPIO.input(pinNo)
                                            
                                                if not buttonState2:
                                                    # Reset emulator
                                                    print "pressed " + str(pinNo)
                                            

                                            You can test various pins for button press by replacing changing pinNo to your desired Pin number.

                                            The original script I posted can probably be simplified as

                                            #!/usr/bin/python
                                            import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
                                            import time
                                            import subprocess
                                            
                                            GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BOARD)
                                            
                                            shutdownPin=5
                                            resetPin=3
                                            
                                            GPIO.setup(shutdownPin, GPIO.IN)
                                            GPIO.setup(resetPin, GPIO.IN)
                                            
                                            oldButtonState1 = True
                                            
                                            while True:
                                                #grab the current button state
                                                buttonState1 = GPIO.input(shutdownPin)
                                                buttonState2 = GPIO.input(resetPin)
                                            
                                                # check to see if button has been pushed
                                                if buttonState1 != oldButtonState1 and buttonState1 == False:
                                                    # shutdown
                                                    subprocess.call("shutdown -h now", shell=True,
                                                      stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
                                                    oldButtonState1 = buttonState1
                                                
                                                if not buttonState2:
                                                    # Reset emulator
                                                    print "Reset pressed"
                                                    subprocess.call("/home/pi/scripts/multi_switch.sh --es-closeemu", shell=True,
                                                      stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
                                            
                                                time.sleep(.3)       
                                            
                                            O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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