Announcing Pegasus Frontend
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Hey there @tronkyfran do you have any themes available for Pegasus? I'd love to try it/them out!
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@geekob Sadly, not yet, I have one "test drive" with an amstrad only theme but its not really ready for release. Im kind of slow making my art and, on top of that, I have to fight with my inability programming, hehe!!
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The good news: keyboard layout changing is almost done, I'll still need to fix some UI issues and make tests. The keys can also be queried in the themes, so it's no longer necessary to hardcode certain combinations.
The bad news: it is not possible at the moment to use keys other than the arrows for navigation. They're hardcoded in some lower level code and would require digging deeper to fix that.
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@fluffypillow
Changing the keyboard keys was all I've been waiting on to make the switch. Can't wait! -
@tronkyfran how about a teaser shot of how your upcoming theme will look like? :) Loved your ES theme and I'm still using your art as launch images for every system I use.
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I didn't even know I needed this in my life. Really like the "Netflix" Style theme from way early on in post.
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@andershp there was a preview in the theme thread although maybe @tronkyfran is working on something different.
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@ectoone Well, Im changing the background(wasnt very good) and remaking some cover art, at the end its a lot of work, but when its finished I suppose the rest of the systems will be easier.
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All right, the controls configuration is now online!
- It is now possible to change which keyboard keys do what (see Settings → Controls)
- Furthermore, it is also possible to change what the gamepad buttons do (ie. you can swap A/B now)
- The registered keys can now be queried in themes using
api.keys
(documentation later), so it's no longer necessary to hardcode the defaults - As mentioned previously, the default keys for opening the details and filters panel have been changed to I and F (but now they can be changed). Navigation is fixed to the arrow keys/dpad due to technical reasons.
- The the gamepad layout screen have been moved under Settings. (In turn, the theme selector will likely move out to a full menu in the future.)
- The settings file have been slightly changed, data source settings will reset (sorry!)
- Updated the key handling in every part of the code. If something doesn't work as intended, please report!
- Minor menu improvements, fixes and memory optimizations
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Keep up the good work. Glad to see the custom key binding options :)
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Ok, the new theme Api functions are now documented on the reference page.
As for the next week(s), the plan is to change the asset searching to option #3 as discussed previously (unless there's a strong argument against that) and make some scripts to help with the conversion. Then finally start making themes.
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@fluffypillow is option #3 the one where all files are stored in separate folders?
If so, I really like that but is that compatible with EmulationStation? I tried to use this method some time ago but I wasn't able to get it to work properly. The gamelist either showed all the subfolders (which added an extra step to launch a game) or, when set to parse gamelist only, nothing showed up at all. -
@ectoone Yes, that's the one. The layout would then look something like this:
- roms/ - game1.zip - game2.zip - media/ - game1/ - box_front.png - screenshot.png - game2/ - box_front.png - screenshot.png
So that would be the new
media
dir based asset searching. As for the ES2 module, the main source of assets is the<image>
, etc. tags from the gamelist.xml. In addition, Pegasus also looks for assets with known suffixes under~/.emulationstation/downloaded_images/
, like in themedia
dir currently. This searching will continue to work... is what I wanted to write, but now that you mention it, as this is something ES itself doesn't even do and the layout is changing on Pegasus' side, I guess this searching could be removed actually? Some people did use this feature though ( @Darksavior ?), perhaps a customizable media-dir-path option could be added to the collections file instead. -
@fluffypillow Your layout might work. When I tried it, I also had the Roms in the corresponding subfolders and apparently ES is not capable to directly access those files.
I have to see if your layout is easy to manage or if I keep my current layout with subfolders for each media type within the rom directory. Although I currently prefer my layout because I can easily switch image paths by renaming the folders instead of editing the gamelist.xml. -
@fluffypillow My setup is to use as much scraped art as I can from ES for backwards compatibility with ES. I did add the logo and screenshot art that's pegasus exclusive to go in the ES folders
/opt/retropie/configs/all/emulationstation/downloaded_images/
I faintly remember the logo/screenshot art default was the roms folder which is in my usb stick. I prefer to have all my scraped art together which is on my microsd.
I also remember what a pain in the butt it was to scrape or add the art manually. I hope pegasus can have a scraper of its own in the future. Another step to get away from ES.
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hi @fluffypillow! I'm still amazed by the progress and functionalities you keep adding on a very regular basis ;) If you don't mind I have 4 additional feedbacks I'd like to share.
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I'm doing a lot of testing these days with adding/removing multiple roms as well as refreshing images/video/metadata. I couldn't find an easier way but to reboot the Pi every time I want to add a new rom or whenever I change my "gamelist.xml" with more/less data. Any chance to see a "restart Pegasus" item or even better a "refresh roms/metadata" item in the menu?
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since you added the key binding and metadata directories stuff I can see a mouse cursor on top left corner of Pegasus UI. Definitely not an issue just a minor annoyance as I'm using Pegasus only with a controller. If you could implement an option to show/(auto)hide the cursor that would be great.
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I've made some stability testing as my Pi is on 24/7/365 (poor thing!). Pegasus proved excellent on that matter. Not a single crash in more than 2 weeks with some precautions. It seems that the more videos (previews of games) Pegasus plays the slower the UI behaves. By slower I mean that after playing several dozens of videos then the UI stops responding for few seconds (when moving to another game boxart) and then it goes back to normal speed. I've also experienced one crash after I left Pegasus on the default system (Amiga in my case) playing back a preview over and over again. After some time (I can't be precise) but it should be around 12-14h perhaps the Pi crashed completely. I had to hard reset. So basically anytime I reboot the Pi I take care to not let the UI playing back a video. I go to the Retropie section where there's no video or go to some game without preview and then everything goes absolutely ok. All to say that to restrict the number of time a video could play would help a lot to improve stability.
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Also but this might be related to Pi hardware itself it seems that previews of mp4 video with high profile (+high bitrate) in 60fps do make playback to stutter. Should I decide to re-encode the video with lower profile and bitrate playback is smooth.
If I've missed something or done something wrong please keep me honest. Thank you once again for this amazing frontend.
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@EctoOne @Darksavior then for now I'll leave the ES2
downloaded_images
as it currently, and change only themedia
dir searching. We'll see how that turns out then.@Darksavior Actually I did play with the idea of making a scraper, but then started working on Pegasus :) Some kind of external scraper support will likely be added in the future though.
- Yes, a reload function is planned, but that will require some more work on the whole data loading. It'll certainly come in some form in the future.
- Hm, a cursor should only appear if the OS detects a plugged in mouse device. Perhaps some controllers are also detected as having mouse components (eg. the DS4's touch pad)? You can list the connected devices with
ls -l /dev/input/by-id
in the terminal, see if there's anything funny there. Other than that, defining the environmental variableQT_QPA_EGLFS_HIDECURSOR
can also hide the cursor (eg. addexport QT_QPA_EGLFS_HIDECURSOR=1
to~/.bashrc
or to the top of/opt/retropie/configs/all/autostart.sh
). [Side note, does RetroPie load.bashrc
on start?]
3-4. Thanks for the detailed testing! I think the video-related issues are caused by GStreamer, the playback backend used on Linux (at least, that tend to produce warnings during playback). I'm afraid I can't do too much about that other than waiting for upstream improvements, but playback limiting could be indeed added as a workaround. I wonder if there's any other GStreamer-using video player available for the Pi (Banshee? Parole?), so we could see if the issue happens there too.
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@fluffypillow Would it be possible to add an option to ignore subfolders for certain systems?
Then a folder layout like this would be possible without the need to enter the subfolders:/system /game1 game1.zip (or whatever rom extension) game1.xml (contains the basic metadata for that particular game) boxart.jpg thumb.jpg logo.png video.mp4 /game2 game2.zip game2.xml boxart.jpg thumb.jpg logo.png video.mp4
Again, this is an available option in Kodi when you link an movie folder to your database. I currently don't want that for any paths, just to hide subfolders for certain systems (if they are not declared in the gamelist).
Since I currently don't know how gamelists are created by Pegasus, I use ES as example to make one. That's why I want to have the xml files in the rom folder so that they can be combined by a script or directly with Pegasus (whatever is possible) . So whenever you remove/add a game by adding its folder you can re-run the script to rebuild/clean the gamelist. Only downside would be to loose information forlastplayed
andplaycount
(but I personally don't care for those anyway).A simple xml would then look like this:
<game> <path>./game1/game1.zip</path> <name>game1</name> <desc>game1 description</desc> <image>./game1/folder.jpg</image> <marquee>./game1/logo.png</marquee> <video>./game1/video.mp4</video> <thumbnail>./game1/game1.jpg</thumbnail> <rating>0</rating> <releasedate>19910101T000000</releasedate> <developer>someone</developer> <publisher>someone else</publisher> <genre>pewpew</genre> </game>
Setting up new files would then require only to change the paths and the file name of the rom.
This it a suggestion for easier game management and not necessarily for media paths.
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@ectoone So if I understand correctly, you'd like to keep the one game = one directory setup, and generate the gamelist-equivalent for Pegasus with a script, right? This is possible; first you'd create a
collections.txt
file under/system/
(in your example above):collection: My Games extension: zip launch: myemulator "{file.path}"
Then you'd have a
metadata.txt
(or whatever you'd like to call it) in each of your game directories, like this:file: $CWD/game1.zip title: Game 1 description: The #1 of Games assets.boxFront: $CWD/boxart.jpg assets.video: $CWD/video.mp4 rating: 99% release: 1991-01-01 developer: Someone publisher: Someone Else Ltd. genre: pewpew
Then you'd run a script that goes through these small metadata files, replaces a piece of text with with the path to the game directory and merges the results together into a
/system/metadata.txt
file. Something like this:#! /bin/bash rm metadata.txt for i in $(find $(pwd) -name metadata.txt); do sed "s|\$CWD|$(dirname $i)|g" $i >> metadata.txt echo >> metadata.txt done
In this example I've used
$CWD
as something that will be replaced with the file's path. You can use whatever you want, or, if you're good with regex, you could actually use just a dot too and tweak the command accordingly.(The file format itself is documented here.)
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