Changed the selectable options for EmulationStation audio mixer (called AudioDevice in EmulationStation) to be a greater range of selectable options within Linux and RPi so that it is a lot more flexible and will work with any aftermarket add-on audio cards and RPi Audio HATs. Hopefully this gives people the flexibility that they need in order to avoid the issues people have with unusual RPi audio setups. Added the ability to select the audio card as well, by surfacing the audio card under the Audio Card setting. It was previously forced to 'default' for all linux users, which was too restrictive in some instances. This change now adds flexbility to support additional Linux and RPi Audio Cards. This option will only be available on Linux (and therefore RPi) as Windows uses a different audio subsystem. CHOOSING AUDIO ON LINUX AND RPi You now select which ALSA Audio Card you want EmulationStation to use by choosing the relevant AUDIO CARD option. If your one is not listed then you can add a custom one in the es_settings.cfg file (see below). You then select which ALSA Audio Mixer Control from that Audio Card that you want EmulationStation to use, by choosing the relevant AUDIO DEVICE option. (I kept the name AUDIO DEVICE as that what EmulationStation previously used to describe an Audio Mixer.) If your mixer name is not listed then you can add a custom one in the es_settings.cfg file (see below). ADDING A CUSTOM AUDIO CARD OR AUDIO DEVICE In addition I added the ability to manually change the setting in es_settings.cfg to add anything custom that you want. This will give advanced users enough extra power that should avoid even the most strange setups. Step 1: To add a custom Audio Card, edit the "AudioCard" setting and replace the value with the name of your Audio Card. You can find this out by opening a terminal window and running 'aplay -L'. This will generate a list of Audio Cards similar to the one below: pi@raspberrypi:~ $ aplay -L null Discard all samples (playback) or generate zero samples (capture) default:CARD=sndrpijustboomd snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Default Audio Device sysdefault:CARD=sndrpijustboomd snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Default Audio Device dmix:CARD=sndrpijustboomd,DEV=0 snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Direct sample mixing device dsnoop:CARD=sndrpijustboomd,DEV=0 snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Direct sample snooping device hw:CARD=sndrpijustboomd,DEV=0 snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Direct hardware device without any conversions plughw:CARD=sndrpijustboomd,DEV=0 snd_rpi_justboom_dac, Hardware device with all software conversions Select any one of the Audio Cards listed by using the first word on the line in your AudioCard settings in the es_settings.cfg, e.g. <string name="AudioCard" value="default" /> NOTE: If the AudioCard value is not listed, please either close and reopen EmulationStation (the settings is created upon close if it doesn't exist), or add it manually to the es_settings.cfg file. Step 2: To add a custom Audio Device (mixer), edit the "AudioDevice" setting and replace the value with the name of your Audio Device. You can get a list off avilable Audio Devices on the Audio Card by opening a terminal window and running 'amixer scontrols -D <AudioCard>', where <AudioCard> is replaced with the name of your Audio Card that you found in Step 1. This command will generate a list of Audio Devices (mixers) that you can use in the AudioDevice setting in the es_settings.cfg file, e.g. pi@raspberrypi:~ $ amixer scontrols -D default Simple mixer control 'DSP Program',0 Simple mixer control 'Analogue',0 Simple mixer control 'Analogue Playback Boost',0 Simple mixer control 'Auto Mute',0 Simple mixer control 'Auto Mute Mono',0 Simple mixer control 'Auto Mute Time Left',0 Simple mixer control 'Auto Mute Time Right',0 Simple mixer control 'Clock Missing Period',0 Simple mixer control 'Deemphasis',0 Simple mixer control 'Digital',0 Simple mixer control 'Max Overclock DAC',0 Simple mixer control 'Max Overclock DSP',0 Simple mixer control 'Max Overclock PLL',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Down Emergency Rate',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Down Emergency Step',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Down Rate',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Down Step',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Up Rate',0 Simple mixer control 'Volume Ramp Up Step',0 Select any one of the Simple mixer controls listed by using the name within the quotes within the AudioDevice setting in your es_settings.cfg file, e.g. <string name="AudioDevice" value="Digital" /> Using the example above, the following two settings within the es_settings.cfg file will use the 'default' Audio Card to play sounds, and will use the 'Digital' mixer (Audio Device) to control the volume. <string name="AudioCard" value="default" /> <string name="AudioDevice" value="Digital" /> NOTE: Any custom manually used settings will be overwritten if you select any of the other options in the GUI and exit the Sound Settings window, as the Sound Settings GUI window overwrites the es_settings.cfg options when you exit the window. Fix latest package renames fonts-droid is now fonts-droid-fallback vlc-nox is now vlc-bin Fixed up whitespacing to project tab standard Had not paid enough attention and had accidentally provided whitespacing in spaces rather than the project standard of tabs. This change fixes some additional use of spaces to ensure all the code in the two files now uses tabs. Vero4k autodetection and volume mixer fix
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EmulationStation
This is a fork of EmulationStation for RetroPie. EmulationStation is a cross-platform graphical front-end for emulators with controller navigation.
Building
EmulationStation uses some C++11 code, which means you'll need to use at least g++-4.7 on Linux, or VS2010 on Windows, to compile.
EmulationStation has a few dependencies. For building, you'll need CMake, SDL2, FreeImage, FreeType, and cURL. You also should probably install the fonts-droid
package which contains fallback fonts for Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters, but ES will still work fine without it (this package is only used at run-time).
On Debian/Ubuntu: All of this be easily installed with apt-get:
sudo apt-get install libsdl2-dev libfreeimage-dev libfreetype6-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev \
libasound2-dev libgl1-mesa-dev build-essential cmake fonts-droid-fallback libvlc-dev \
libvlccore-dev vlc-bin
On Fedora: All of this be easily installed with dnf ( With rpmfusion activated) :
sudo dnf install SDL2-devel freeimage-devel freetype-devel curl-devel \
alsa-lib-devel mesa-libGL-devel cmake \
vlc-devel
Note this Repository uses a git submodule - to checkout the source and all submodules, use
git clone --recursive https://github.com/RetroPie/EmulationStation.git
or
git clone https://github.com/RetroPie/EmulationStation.git
cd EmulationStation
git submodule update --init
Then, generate and build the Makefile with CMake:
cd YourEmulationStationDirectory
cmake .
make
On the Raspberry Pi:
Complete Raspberry Pi build instructions at emulationstation.org.
On Windows:
FreeType2 (you'll need to compile)
cURL (you'll need to compile or get the pre-compiled DLL version)
(Remember to copy necessary .DLLs into the same folder as the executable: probably FreeImage.dll, freetype6.dll, SDL2.dll, libcurl.dll, and zlib1.dll. Exact list depends on if you built your libraries in "static" mode or not.)
CMake (this is used for generating the Visual Studio project)
(If you don't know how to use CMake, here are some hints: run cmake-gui and point it at your EmulationStation folder. Point the "build" directory somewhere - I use EmulationStation/build. Click configure, choose "Visual Studio [year] Project", fill in red fields as they appear and keep clicking Configure (you may need to check "Advanced"), then click Generate.)
Configuring
~/.emulationstation/es_systems.cfg:
When first run, an example systems configuration file will be created at ~/.emulationstation/es_systems.cfg
. ~
is $HOME
on Linux, and %HOMEPATH%
on Windows. This example has some comments explaining how to write the configuration file. See the "Writing an es_systems.cfg" section for more information.
Keep in mind you'll have to set up your emulator separately from EmulationStation!
~/.emulationstation/es_input.cfg: When you first start EmulationStation, you will be prompted to configure an input device. The process is thus:
-
Hold a button on the device you want to configure. This includes the keyboard.
-
Press the buttons as they appear in the list. Some inputs can be skipped by holding any button down for a few seconds (e.g. page up/page down).
-
You can review your mappings by pressing up and down, making any changes by pressing A.
-
Choose "SAVE" to save this device and close the input configuration screen.
The new configuration will be added to the ~/.emulationstation/es_input.cfg
file.
Both new and old devices can be (re)configured at any time by pressing the Start button and choosing "CONFIGURE INPUT". From here, you may unplug the device you used to open the menu and plug in a new one, if necessary. New devices will be appended to the existing input configuration file, so your old devices will remain configured.
If your controller stops working, you can delete the ~/.emulationstation/es_input.cfg
file to make the input configuration screen re-appear on next run.
You can use --help
or -h
to view a list of command-line options. Briefly outlined here:
--resolution [width] [height] - try and force a particular resolution
--gamelist-only - only display games defined in a gamelist.xml file.
--ignore-gamelist - do not parse any gamelist.xml files.
--draw-framerate - draw the framerate.
--no-exit - do not display 'exit' in the ES menu.
--debug - show the console window on Windows, do slightly more logging
--windowed - run ES in a window, works best in conjunction with --resolution [w] [h].
--vsync [1/on or 0/off] - turn vsync on or off (default is on).
--scrape - run the interactive command-line metadata scraper.
--no-splash - don't show the splash screen.
--max-vram [size] - Max VRAM to use in Mb before swapping. 0 for unlimited.
--force-kiosk - Force the UI mode to be Kiosk.
As long as ES hasn't frozen, you can always press F4 to close the application.
Writing an es_systems.cfg
Complete configuration instructions at emulationstation.org.
The es_systems.cfg
file contains the system configuration data for EmulationStation, written in XML. This tells EmulationStation what systems you have, what platform they correspond to (for scraping), and where the games are located.
ES will check two places for an es_systems.cfg file, in the following order, stopping after it finds one that works:
~/.emulationstation/es_systems.cfg
/etc/emulationstation/es_systems.cfg
The order EmulationStation displays systems reflects the order you define them in.
NOTE: A system must have at least one game present in its "path" directory, or ES will ignore it! If no valid systems are found, ES will report an error and quit!
Here's an example es_systems.cfg:
<!-- This is the EmulationStation Systems configuration file.
All systems must be contained within the <systemList> tag.-->
<systemList>
<!-- Here's an example system to get you started. -->
<system>
<!-- A short name, used internally. -->
<name>snes</name>
<!-- A "pretty" name, displayed in the menus and such. This one is optional. -->
<fullname>Super Nintendo Entertainment System</fullname>
<!-- The path to start searching for ROMs in. '~' will be expanded to $HOME or %HOMEPATH%, depending on platform.
All subdirectories (and non-recursive links) will be included. -->
<path>~/roms/snes</path>
<!-- A list of extensions to search for, delimited by any of the whitespace characters (", \r\n\t").
You MUST include the period at the start of the extension! It's also case sensitive. -->
<extension>.smc .sfc .SMC .SFC</extension>
<!-- The shell command executed when a game is selected. A few special tags are replaced if found in a command, like %ROM% (see below). -->
<command>snesemulator %ROM%</command>
<!-- This example would run the bash command "snesemulator /home/user/roms/snes/Super\ Mario\ World.sfc". -->
<!-- The platform(s) to use when scraping. You can see the full list of accepted platforms in src/PlatformIds.cpp.
It's case sensitive, but everything is lowercase. This tag is optional.
You can use multiple platforms too, delimited with any of the whitespace characters (", \r\n\t"), eg: "genesis, megadrive" -->
<platform>snes</platform>
<!-- The theme to load from the current theme set. See THEMES.md for more information.
This tag is optional; if not set, it will use the value of <name>. -->
<theme>snes</theme>
</system>
</systemList>
The following "tags" are replaced by ES in launch commands:
%ROM%
- Replaced with absolute path to the selected ROM, with most Bash special characters escaped with a backslash.
%BASENAME%
- Replaced with the "base" name of the path to the selected ROM. For example, a path of "/foo/bar.rom", this tag would be "bar". This tag is useful for setting up AdvanceMAME.
%ROM_RAW%
- Replaced with the unescaped, absolute path to the selected ROM. If your emulator is picky about paths, you might want to use this instead of %ROM%, but enclosed in quotes.
See SYSTEMS.md for some live examples in EmulationStation.
gamelist.xml
The gamelist.xml file for a system defines metadata for games, such as a name, image (like a screenshot or box art), description, release date, and rating.
If at least one game in a system has an image specified, ES will use the detailed view for that system (which displays metadata alongside the game list).
You can use ES's scraping tools to avoid creating a gamelist.xml by hand. There are two ways to run the scraper:
- If you want to scrape multiple games: press start to open the menu and choose the "SCRAPER" option. Adjust your settings and press "SCRAPE NOW".
- If you just want to scrape one game: find the game on the game list in ES and press select. Choose "EDIT THIS GAME'S METADATA" and then press the "SCRAPE" button at the bottom of the metadata editor.
You can also edit metadata within ES by using the metadata editor - just find the game you wish to edit on the gamelist, press Select, and choose "EDIT THIS GAME'S METADATA."
A command-line version of the scraper is also provided - just run emulationstation with --scrape
(currently broken).
The switch --ignore-gamelist
can be used to ignore the gamelist and force ES to use the non-detailed view.
If you're writing a tool to generate or parse gamelist.xml files, you should check out GAMELISTS.md for more detailed documentation.
Themes
By default, EmulationStation looks pretty ugly. You can fix that. If you want to know more about making your own themes (or editing existing ones), read THEMES.md!
I've put some themes up for download on my EmulationStation webpage: http://aloshi.com/emulationstation#themes
If you're using RetroPie, you should already have a nice set of themes automatically installed!
-Alec "Aloshi" Lofquist http://www.aloshi.com http://www.emulationstation.org