I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4 [Now with an Install Guide!]
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@thesnackist Good points! I still think I'll include the controls chart, but I'll just omit block, run, dash, and re-label ABCXYZ to their generic labels rather than specifically calling them Light Kick, Strong Punch, etc., since that's what Elecbyte's own documentation does.
I also agree that it would be a good idea to include some mention of "for more information, see also: MUGEN's documentation on bla-bla-bla", maybe links to both Elecbyte's documentation and IKEMEN GO's documentation in specific as well.
Oh, and good luck on the Raspbian update!
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I submitted my documentation as a PR on Github; obviously not to be merged until IKEMEN GO itself is added over on the RetroPie-Setup repository. You can read the current draft here!
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@superfromnd Dope!! This is a solid enough introduction to cover the most common questions - how do I add characters I downloaded, how do I add stages, what do I need to edit, etc.. Really impressed!! You've boiled the complexities of this engine down to something simple and easy to understand.
EDIT: Until the RetroPie devs approve the pull/commit request, is there a way to use the git command to add the proposed script module to our own setups?
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@thesnackist I don't think that Git has any command to pull a single file and place it in a specific directory, but since I'm using Github, it's pretty easy to just
wget
the scriptmodule file from my fork and download it to the appropriate place:# Downloads the scriptmodule to the scriptmodules/ports folder # You may need to change the directory if you're using # a different location for scriptmodules # Note that this will become obsolete if the PR is merged sudo wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SuperFromND/RetroPie-Setup/master/scriptmodules/ports/ikemen-go.sh -P /home/pi/RetroPie-Setup/scriptmodules/ports/
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@superfromnd after some tinkering I got... somewhere :/
when I try to build ikemen-go it can't find a bunch of the packages
let me try to figure out how to export the log... my network doesn't like SSH so I can't just grab it easily
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@thesnackist Quick question while you're trying to fetch that log, just a hunch: have you tried updating RetroPie-Setup before running the script?
RetroPie recently updated their scripts to use a new command for downloading source-archives which my script uses; this command isn't in the version of RetroPie-Setup that's included with new installs via the image on RetroPie's site yet (it will be whenever the next version of RetroPie releases, but for right now you'll need to update RetroPie-Setup first).
If that's not the problem and it's instead Golang that's having problems fetching packages... that's a bit more of a problem, but given you mentioned your network not liking SSH it's plausible it might also be having problems trying to fetch the Golang packages needed to compile IKEMEN GO.
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@superfromnd I will give it a try, but I am also running a no longer supported Stretch-based image so... not sure Setup is updating anymore
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@thesnackist That's probably the cause then; I admittedly have only tested this on Buster-based images, so it's possible that some of the packages required don't exist on Stretch's package pool.
After digging through the 50MB behemoth that is Raspbian Stretch's package list in text format, it seems like all the packages themselves are present... but the version of Golang itself is only version 1.7, which is pretty darn old. I have no idea what the oldest version of Golang that can still compile IKEMEN GO is, but if Gacel's advice from a few dozen posts ago was any indication, having a version this old might be a problem. (For the record, Buster uses Golang 1.11; still pretty old, but it's known to at least be "good enough" for compiling IKEMEN GO.)
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@superfromnd was hoping to avoid having to make a fresh distro (sigh) but it maybe be unavoidable at this point
I just hate having to reset up my reset/shutdown button script and whatever the hell I had to do to get pico-8 running
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@superfromnd hello again so I just tested your newest script on pi 4 fresh retropie os. Worked good.
Gonna experiment in converting a mugen over.
How would you add a anither ikemen for example ikemen go then mk vs capcom .
Also why use ports instead of a custom "system"? Just wondering . -
@superfromnd after letting ikemen run and walk away came back to errors cant exit . Had to reboot.
Error traceback
A few times mainly
External/script/mainlua/ -
@troopaking I mainly set it as a port for the sake of simplicity when installing stuff. It should be entirely possible to set it up in a way to allow for multiple fullgames to be installed (IKEMEN lets you pass a motif, which can contain a character and stage list among other things, using this command:)
./Ikemen_GO -r path/to/motif/system.def
@thesnackist said in I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4:
I just hate having to reset up my reset/shutdown button script and whatever the hell I had to do to get pico-8 running
Aye, indeed it's a bit of a pain to upgrade if you've got a fairly-customized setup. I've had to re-install my custom scriptmodules and ports multiple times, so I understand the pain.
@troopaking said in I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4:
Error traceback
A few times mainly
External/script/mainlua/I'm gonna need a bit more info than that (
external/script/main.lua
is just the main logic for the engine, and doesn't really tell anything about what exactly went wrong. I was getting crashes briefly during the demo if an opponent managed to K.O. someone, but apparently that's a known bug and is planned to be fixed soon.) -
@superfromnd oh the demo error is probably what happened .
It was running demo . -
So I didn't really bring it up before, but I was having some odd issues with inputs, but only with my specific controller (a Rock Candy Xbox 360 pad). Turns out that wasn't an IKEMEN bug at all, but rather a driver issue. Simply updating
xpad
(the default driver in RetroPie for controllers) allows you to fully use and remap the controller correctly!(Oh, quick side note; don't try to compile IKEMEN GO right this moment at the time of this post; some commits that shouldn't have been pushed yet were pushed, and as a result the game crashes on startup due to the game trying to read a nonexistent parameter in
save/config.json
; this should be fixed shortly after this post's publication!) -
@superfromnd said in I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4:
this should be fixed shortly after this post's publication!
Okay so uh, clearly it hasn't haha. At the very least, I figured out the cause and a temporary, if extremely clunky, workaround: pop open the file
/home/pi/RetroPie/ports/ikemen-go/external/script/options.lua
and find this line:if itemname == 'gamespeed' then return config.GameSpeed .. '%' end
and change it to this:
if itemname == 'gamespeed' then return '100%' end
Note that, as you can probably see, doing this will break the "Game Speed" option in the options menu.
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UPDATE: Glad to report this is no longer the case! The game now works when compiling from source once again. :)
@superfromnd said in [I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4]
(Oh, quick side note; don't try to compile IKEMEN GO right this moment at the time of this post; some commits that shouldn't have been pushed yet were pushed, and as a result the game crashes on startup due to the game trying to read a nonexistent parameter in
save/config.json
; this should be fixed shortly after this post's publication!) -
Hey, so I want to get this for my RetroPie console, but how do I get it to work? Do I just download it from the Ports section from the online menu?
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@mrrussellgro said in I.K.E.M.E.N GO on Raspberry Pi 4:
Hey, so I want to get this for my RetroPie console, but how do I get it to work? Do I just download it from the Ports section from the online menu?
It's not currently included in RetroPie, so you'll have to manually add it to the Ports section in RetroPie's setup menu in order to install it. Here's a guide on how to do that:
What You'll Need
- Some form of FTP client. I use and highly recommend WinSCP, though I've also heard Cyberduck is pretty good.
- This .sh file. If you see the script's text but don't get prompted for a download (which is the case in Chrome), just press Ctrl + S to save it as a file.
Installation
- If you haven't already done so, update RetroPie-Setup to the latest version and enable SSH.
- Using your FTP client, connect to your Raspberry Pi.
- Navigate to the directory
/home/pi/RetroPie-Setup/scriptmodules/ports
. In WinSCP, you can simply copy-and-paste the above text into the address bar and it will take you straight to it. You should see a bunch of.sh
files. - Drag and drop
ikemen-go.sh
into this directory. - Once that's done being transferred, now you can start RetroPie-Setup and navigate over to Ports and, if you did this correctly, IKEMEN GO should be installable from there.
Installation should take somewhere between 15 to 30 minutes on a fresh image.
Usage notes / documentation pertaining to IKEMEN GO are currently available here. -
@superfromnd So I followed your steps, though I used a USB transfer to my Pi, but it won't launch the game. Anything I'm doing wrong?
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@mrrussellgro A few things might have gone wrong!
- Are you running on a Pi 4?
- Are you using a Buster-based version of RetroPie (4.6 or later)?
- Check the file
/dev/shm/runcommand.log
for any errors or issues.
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