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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] Variables with runcommand-onstart.sh

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    runcommandscriptingbash
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    • BuZzB
      BuZz administrators @meleu
      last edited by BuZz

      @meleu said in Variables with runcommand-onstart.sh:

      @obsidianspider maybe this line can give you what you need:

      img=$(ls -1 "/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/${system}/${rom_bn}-image".* | head -1)
      

      [EDIT: the command is "ls dash one", not "ls dash el". ;-)]
      [EDIT2: use double quotes to avoid problems with roms with spaces in file name.]

      ls will throw an error if there is no matching filename - you can redirect stderr or alternatively use find img="$(find "/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/${system}" -type f -name "${rom_bn}-image.*" | head -1)"

      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

      obsidianspiderO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • obsidianspiderO
        obsidianspider @BuZz
        last edited by

        @BuZz Thanks! I updated the script to use find

        📷 @obsidianspider

        meleuM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • meleuM
          meleu @obsidianspider
          last edited by

          @obsidianspider Your updated script with comments is really cool to share with others the bash tricks.

          I only would like to share two tips with you:

          1. The use of [[ ... ]] is preferred over [ ... ] or test ...; it reduces errors as no pathname expansion or word splitting takes place between [[ and ]] (I learned it in RetroPie Shell Style Guide)
          2. The common practice to check if a string is empty is to use [[ -z "$string" ]].
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          • meleuM
            meleu @obsidianspider
            last edited by

            @obsidianspider
            Oh! I look more carefully: This line is wrong:

            img=$(find "/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/${system}/${rom_bn}-image".* | head -1)
            

            What BuZz suggested is:

            img="$(find "/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/${system}" -type f -name "${rom_bn}-image.*" | head -1)"
            
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            obsidianspiderO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • obsidianspiderO
              obsidianspider @meleu
              last edited by

              @meleu

              Thanks for all the help, I've updated the script with the suggestions you gave.

              I'm learning a LOT from this community and I want to share what I've learned so someone else can make something even better with their own project. The comments help because a lot of the examples you see online don't explain what a particular thing is doing, they just say "do this" but not why you should do that.

              Now that I've got the screen working and finding images properly the next step is a pushbutton to control a script that toggles the backlight…

              📷 @obsidianspider

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • R
                robertybob
                last edited by

                Looks interesting! We've had a Pi in a Gameboy, now we need someone to create their own DS-like console with the artwork displayed on the second screen (!)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • meleuM
                  meleu
                  last edited by

                  Hey guys! Just sharing a find trick I've learned today...

                  Using this:

                  find /directory -type f -name "filename.*" -print -quit
                  

                  Is better than use this:

                  find /directory -type f -name "filename.*" | head -1
                  

                  Benefit: the -quit makes find exit immediately after the first match. Well, if we want the first match only, there's no need to let the find keep looking for files after the first match.
                  OBS.: when using -quit you have to use -print, otherwise the find won't print the file name.

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                  • meleuM
                    meleu
                    last edited by

                    Here is a proof:

                    $ time find /usr -type f -print -quit
                    /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ar.exe
                    
                    real    0m0.266s
                    user    0m0.000s
                    sys     0m0.140s
                    
                    $ time find /usr -type f | head -1
                    /usr/i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ar.exe
                    
                    real    0m2.093s
                    user    0m0.140s
                    sys     0m0.403s
                    

                    (Yeah, I'm not using an actual Linux system. It's Cygwin running on Windows. But the test is valid anyway.)

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                    • obsidianspiderO
                      obsidianspider
                      last edited by

                      Nice find! I'm away on a business trip for the next two weeks and had to leave my Pi at home so I am hoping to find a way to mess with some scripts while it's inaccessible.

                      I have Googled emulating a Pi in a VM but it doesn't seem like anyone's done that, just approximated things with installing Debian.

                      📷 @obsidianspider

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Nathan1031982N
                        Nathan1031982
                        last edited by

                        @obsidianspider
                        This is right up my ally. I actually want to do something similar to this, but with something like a 20x2 LCD to just display the system and game title.
                        However, I might want to get an OLED screen for displaying the information.
                        I might ask you for some help setting up my own script..
                        My only thing is that I will then need to make a custom case to hold the Pi, as well as the screen and keep it all clean.

                        meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • meleuM
                          meleu @Nathan1031982
                          last edited by

                          @Nathan1031982 The script he posted above gives a good direction to your script.
                          The runcommand wiki can give some inspiration too: https://github.com/retropie/retropie-setup/wiki/runcommand#runcommand-onstart-and-runcommand-onend-scripts

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                          • F
                            Finch106
                            last edited by Finch106

                            This is a very old topic, but I wanted to throw my script in so you can edit it to your liking. I don't have an Adafruit display, so I had to do some tinkering but you've all done the heavy lifting. Here are the minor edits for using a 3.5" display with fbi. Make sure you have the system.jpg images in the correct system rom folders.:

                            # /opt/retropie/configs/all/runcommand-onstart.sh
                            
                            # get the full path filename of the ROM
                            rom=$3
                            
                            # rom_bn receives $rom excluding everything from the first char to the last slash '/'
                            rom_bn="${rom##*/}"
                            
                            # rom_bn receives $rom_bn excluding everything from the last char to the first dot '.'
                            rom_bn="${rom_bn%.*}"
                            
                            # get the system name
                            system=$1
                            
                            # set the image file to the first result matching the ROM name - accounts for various possible file extensions
                            img="$(find "/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/${system}" -type f -name "${rom_bn}-image.*" | head -1)"
                            
                            # check to see if there was a file found (length of the file name not zero), if not, use an image based on system
                            if [[ -z "${img}" ]];
                            then
                               img="/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/$system/$system.jpg"
                            fi
                            
                            # run the python script to display the image
                            sudo fbi -T 2 -d /dev/fb1 -noverbose -a "$img"
                            
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