EmulationStation mod
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@lilbud said in EmulationStation mod:
Work on the theme.xml and restart ES everytime I made a Change
Instead of restarting ES each time to see any changes you made to your theme, you can just switch to another theme and then back to your WIP theme. It should be a lot faster than restarting ES.
... Unless I completely misunderstood what you were saying...
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Okay, total noob question, but is there a step by step on how to get this set up on a PC?
- I have a windows PC with a portable version of ES. Can I set it up on that?
- Or I can set up Linux Mint on a virtual machine, but then I need instructions on how to install ES on there, as well as installing your Grid View mod.
Can anyone help me out with this? I want to update my themes to work with Grid View, but I need to be able to do it on my PC because I don't really have access to my Pi for the length of time I would need (it's mainly my media center).
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@mattrixk I actually haven't compiled a windows build yet. I tried yesterday but I would get a ton of compilation errors that other people are apparently having on upstream as well. I'll let you know when I get a windows build up and running.
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I'm updating the database schema to use all of the fields in es_systems.cfg. So including the few I've added, the systems table now has the following fields, with example data:
- name (snes)
- fullname (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)
- path (/home/retropie/RetroPie/roms/snes
- extension (.bin .sfc .fig .zip...)
- command (/opt/retropie/supplementary/runcommand/runcommand.sh 0 SYS snes %ROM%)
- platform (snes) used for scraping
- theme (snes)
- developer (Nintendo)
- release_date (August 23, 1991)
- description (The SNES was the successor to the wildly successful SNES. Using a 16 bit blah, blah, blah)
The three fields I thought to add are in bold. If anyone has any other suggestions for the systems table or the database in general, let me know. Obviously, the leaner the database the better, but if adding features doesn't cost too much, great.
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@jacobfk20
I'm okay with it not working for Windows, but I could do with some instructions on how to get both regular ES and your Grid View Mod working on a Linux virtual machine (I've found some instructions on how to get Linux Mint 16 running on a VM, and it looks pretty straight forward) if you have the time.@jdoolin
Maybe a path to a system image? Either a picture of the console, or of the controller like in Carbon theme? It's not really essential as they can be added pretty easily in the theme.xml with anextra="true"
tag, but I just thought I'd put it out there. -
@mattrixk This is from memory, so here goes nothing...
When I was taking photos for this thread initially I did it on ElementaryOS running on an old pc. I compiled on there but on linux its vary simple. On first it should create a .emulationstation directory with an es_systems.cfg in your home folder (may be hidden) it will have a example system in there (nes) and a location to put roms. put roms in that folder (will have to create those folders most likely) Once you have that it should boot like on the pi, but you'll only have NES. It won't run any roms, but you can at least test themes on there.To compile:
Just download the zip of my Gridview fork https://github.com/jacobfk20/EmulationStation/tree/Gridview
and follow the directions for "building" in the readme below. (Linux Mint is a debian/ubuntu)Just copy and paste the commands it says to do into terminal and it does the rest for you.
If you need more help with any of this then I will be glad to help. (except getting a emulator running)
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Another update, this time on the XML gamelist to SQLite3 database conversion tool.
Right now it's a python program using all default libraries and takes the following steps.
1 - Opens a database at ~/.emulationstation/es.db
2a - Checks for ~/.emulationstation/es_systems.cfg and opens it if it exists if not,
2b - Checks for /etc/emulationstation/es_systems.cfg and opens it. In either case if there is a parse error the program exits gracefully
3 - Parses the es_systems.cfg file and adds all entries to the SQLite database
4 - For each system it finds it reads ~/.emulationstation/gamelists/<system name>/gamelist.xml, then adds those games to the databaseI think all it needs is a little more error checking and some useful reporting, but otherwise it looks solid to me.
Now, am I correct that the gamelists could also exist in the respective rom paths as well? If so, where is that option found? I should be able to read the config and see where to look for gamelists.
And what else could I be missing?
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Thanks @jacobfk20. I'll hopefully have a chance to get this running this weekend some time. I'll post back with results.
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Oh I forgot to ask for something! * gets down on knees and begs* Can we have a clock? A clock would be so amazing. I dug out an old "grid dreams" mockup I did. Reminded me about wanting a clock in ES. Keep in mind, it was March when I did this mockup.
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And just for S&G, my take on Material, by Lilbud
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@Rookervik said in EmulationStation mod:
Oh I forgot to ask for something! * gets down on knees and begs* Can we have a clock? A clock would be so amazing. I dug out an old "grid dreams" mockup I did. Reminded me about wanting a clock in ES. Keep in mind, it was March when I did this mockup.
is it the mehstation?! I think I underrated it...
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@Rookervik Nice mockups :) The Pi doesn't have an RTC so the clock may just annoy people if they don't connect their pi to the internet to keep the time correct. But to be honest I was thinking not too long ago as I was looking at ES and just thinking "Man, I wish there was a clock." lol
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@jdoolin I dont know if it is a good idea to add some form of checksum for the source files to the db, so only changed files need to be parsed.
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@jacobfk20 Sorry mate, but I need some help still.
I managed to set up an ubuntu virtual machine, and I got RetroPie set up on it by following this guide, but now I can't get your Mod to work.
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I downloaded the latest version from your google drive and then went into
/opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation
. I had to change the permissions before it would let me make any changes within the folder, but I figured out how to do that withchown
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So I made a back up of the
emulationstation
file within/opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation
, then I copied your file over it. Now when I try to run it I get:
/opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation.sh: 6: /opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation.sh: /opt/retropie/supplementary/emulationstation: Permission denied
Do you know what this means or how to get around it? I tried changing permissions back to root, but that didn't change anything. When I moved the backup file back into place (overwriting your file) ES started working again without a problem.
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@mattrixk How do you run emulationstation? What command do you type?
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@jacobfk20 I just type
emulationstation
in the terminal.That works with the default file, or double clicking it also starts ES. I also use
emulationstation --windowed --resolution 1280 720
so it opens in a windowed view.However when I try
emulationstation
in terminal with your file in place, I get the error listed above. If I try double clicking the file, it asks me what program I want to use to open it.I'm a linux noob, so I'm probably missing a simple step.
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my Emulationstation file may not be set as an executable. Try doing from terminal:
- chmod +x emulationstation
while in the same directory as my es file.
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@jacobfk20 I did that, then ran
emulationstation
again and I got the following error:/opt/retropie/supplemental/emulationstation/emulationstation: 1: /opt/retropie/supplemental/emulationstation/emulationstation: Syntax error: word unexpected (expecting ")")
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@mattrixk That's a new one. May need to talk over some pm.
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@jacobfk20 Hooray, I'm good at breaking things in weird ways.
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