The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!
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Would there be any chance at all for Mesen to be included amont the NES emulator options? I don't expect the HD packs to run smoothly, but maybe the emulator itself can now run smoothly. Gotta love that bisqwit NTSC filter, and it is the most accurate NES emulator nowadays.
Also, I read on twitter that byuu might be interested in seeing how well bsnes 107 might run here. If any of the Retropie devs could contact him and work something out it would be awesome. I mean BSNES is amazing, but he has recently made lots of progress on Neogeo Pocket and Sega CD emulation, and both those systems deserve more emulator love. :)
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@retropi19 They don’t deliver the Pis in anti static bags anymore. The little paper like sheet below the board apparently protects it in a similar way. They did the same at least on the Pi 3 B+.
I will receive a 4GB version on Monday. I only really wanted/needed a 2GB version, but it appeared the 4GB was going to be delivered sooner, so I ordered one of each. Good call, since the 4GB got delivered earlier, at least from this supplier.
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@Jste84 Im fine with that. I am just curious whats in the way of running everything, what is needed to do so and where to get updates...
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@mick said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@Jste84 Im fine with that. I am just curious whats in the way of running everything, what is needed to do so and where to get updates...
Don't mean to sound like I'm getting at you... However...
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Nothing is "in the way" it's different hardware, with an updated os, which hasn't been out very long. The Devs explained they hadn't received a pi4 in advance of its release, so we need to give them time to get a pi and do the necessary.
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A number of changes to coding of the retropie image and the emulators used.
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This site, look for updated images, once it's there, download it.
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@mick If you're just a regular user, then you'll have to wait for a new RetroPie version that will support the new Pi4 to try out and install.
It's probably going to be announced on retropie.org.uk, so keep an eye on the project's web page to get updates. -
Hopefully, I’ll be able to get RetroArch running tomorrow under DRM/KMS. I’ll try to run a couple of quick frame rate tests on SNES and N64. Also, I’ll try my best to verify whether the open source GPU driver indeed cuts one frame of latency compared to previous Pis with the closed source BCM GPU driver.
EDIT: I intend to perform these tests with Raspbian Buster Lite.
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@Brunnis also check with the libretro guys, a user already started doing benchmarks with the RPI4:
https://www.libretro.com/index.php/retroarch-runahead-and-raspberry-pi-4-the-results-are-in/Currently that was done using the Desktop, but in coming days he said would benchmark without Xorg (pure console).
The most important news is that looks like the RPI4 can handle run-ahead now.
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@hhromic A good friend of mine sent that link to me this morning. I can't wait for the devs to get an image worked out for it!
I guess I'll be building at least one more retropie...
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LOTS of tests (not by me!) comparing Pi 3 vs Pi 4 (scroll left and up in the Google spreadsheet if you don't see anything):
https://www.reddit.com/r/RetroPie/comments/c7j150/emulation_on_the_raspberry_pi_4_vs_rpi_3/
Performance increase on 8/16 bit systems is huge, as expected:
- snes9x2010: +148%
- Mesen: +210%
Nintendo 64 is a more meager ~69% faster. Probably GPU related in some way. Will be interesting to see if there are some specific things to optimize here.
Anyway, the large performance increase probably means that you can use video_max_swapchain_images=2 and video_threaded=false on 8/16 bit games. If the open source GPU driver has one frame less input lag than the old closed source one, which it at least did on the Pi 3 back in 2016, the resulting input lag is roughly -2.5 frames compared to a current default RetroPie installation. That's a noticeable difference.
Nothing's confirmed until tested, though.
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@Brunnis said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
Nintendo 64 is a more meager ~69% faster. Probably GPU related in some way.
It should be. As noted by someone else here, the GLES2 implementation in N64 emulator was holding it back. Do the developers need to change anything on the emulator, to use GLES3 then? Or does it use it automatically and the GLES3 implementation is not optimal too?
@dankcushions said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!: (quote shortened)
this is HUGE news I think. it should mean fullspeed and accurate emulation for:
- n64
- dreamcast
- saturn
all of these required GLES 3.x for full support. GLES 2.x was always holding pi3 back, for the most part.
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i'd be fairly surprised if someone has mupen64plus standalone + gliden64 working with proper GLES 3.x pathways on the pi4 quite yet. i don't believe anyone has it working without segfaults yet. i assume those benches are with libretro mupen64plus (next?) and are probably not using gliden64, or maybe gliden64 with gles2 paths. i don't know. i think it will take some weeks before any real conclusions can be drawn for n64, so i would ignore those numbers for now.
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@dankcushions said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
i assume those benches are with libretro mupen64plus (next?)
This is what I was wondering as well. If it's the old libretro core that hasn't been updated in years then the test is not really that useful.
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@quicksilver said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@dankcushions said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
i assume those benches are with libretro mupen64plus (next?)
This is what I was wondering as well. If it's the old libretro core that hasn't been updated in years then the test is not really that useful.
On reddit he said that it was with both lr-mupen64plus and lr-mupen64plus-next without much of a difference... for whatever it's worth.
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My 4GB Pi is sitting idle now at the Raspbian terminal (running Buster Lite, so no desktop) at a rather toasty 61 C. The Pi is in the official case with the lid off and room temp is maybe 24 C. Looking forward to the planned firmware improvements that are supposed to lower the temp.
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@Brunnis I somewhere read the heat issue is only with the 4gb version? That would explain why someone else did not the issue on his 2gb. I cannot say where I read it and if it have substance, but do you think this is possible?? As I know besides the RAM, everything else is 100% the same.
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@hooperre I think its too early to judge any of these results until we know that the emulators are fully optimized. Plus, standalone mupen64plus runs with significantly less overhead than the libretro cores so im much more interested in seeing an optimized build of mupen64plus.
@Brunnis said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
Looking forward to the planned firmware improvements that are supposed to lower the temp.
I heard it should reduce temps by 3-5C. But even with that improvement its still a fairly warm idle temp.
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@thelostsoul said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@Brunnis I somewhere read the heat issue is only with the 4gb version? That would explain why someone else did not the issue on his 2gb. I cannot say where I read it and if it have substance, but do you think this is possible?? As I know besides the RAM, everything else is 100% the same.
I actually work as a hardware engineer and I don't really see how that could be the case. Board power consumption increase? Sure. SoC temperature increase? Doubtful. Just sitting idle, the memory bus is hardly exercised at all. The more likely case here is that some chips simply run cooler than others, i.e. natural variance in chip quality. That could definitely account for several degrees.
@quicksilver said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@hooperre I think its too early to judge any of these results until we know that the emulators are fully optimized. Plus, standalone mupen64plus runs with significantly less overhead than the libretro cores so im much more interested in seeing an optimized build of mupen64plus.
@Brunnis said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
Looking forward to the planned firmware improvements that are supposed to lower the temp.
I heard it should reduce temps by 3-5C. But even with that improvement its still a fairly warm idle temp.
Yep, that's for the VLI chip firmware upgrade. Apparently they're also trying other stuff as well.
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@quicksilver Oh, absolutely. Just passing along the information that he did say he was using both cores.
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@hooperre said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@quicksilver said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@dankcushions said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
i assume those benches are with libretro mupen64plus (next?)
This is what I was wondering as well. If it's the old libretro core that hasn't been updated in years then the test is not really that useful.
On reddit he said that it was with both lr-mupen64plus and lr-mupen64plus-next without much of a difference... for whatever it's worth.
unfortunately it's a bit academic until we're sure we're building with the right flags, and that all the features of the GPU are being used. plus the -next core is a bit of an unknown quantity at the moment if we don't have standalone to compare - retropie has been using standalone for years.
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@dankcushions said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
@hiulit said in The new Raspberry Pi 4 is here!!:
VideoCore VI graphics, supporting OpenGL ES 3.x
this is HUGE news I think.
Yes, It's the absolute best news about the Pi4 !!! We've had to deal with so many (not really but kinda broken) wrappers until now...
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