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Installing retropie on debian barebones
Installing retropie on debian barebones




installing retropie on debian barebones

It should only have 'gamecon_gpio_rpi' without the 'map' part, which is to be written to the. Recent versions of Linux don't accept these parameters inside the 'modules' file. Use Ctrl+X to exit, press Y and Enter to save the changes.because I only wired one N64 controller (type 6) to the first available (on a Raspberry Pi 2) GPIO pin.) You are now inside the 'nano' editor and can adjust the mapping according to your controller type and wiring (my nf file looks like this: From the console ( ~ $ ), type cd /etc/modprobe.d.Now, to correctly (on RetroPie 3.6) configure gamecon: I know that's a lot of reboots but I didn't want to risk damaging Raspbian (and start over from a blank SD because I'm not a Linux guru) :/Īnother thing I like to do is use the 'Quit EmulationStation' option to return to the command line in case some of its files (like the games' metadata) need to be modified (like by the scraper) and won't be locked by the running program. Install (finally!) the GPIO/DB9 gamecon drivers and accept the offer to configure it for two SNES controllers (even if you want to use other controllers).Binary based installation (in RetroPie-Setup) and reboot.Reboot ( sudo reboot is the command you can type directly into the Pi's console or remotely through Putty).Update the RetroPie-Setup script and reboot.Update raspi-config ( A0 in advanced options) and reboot.

installing retropie on debian barebones

  • After booting from the SD for the first time, launch RetroPie-Setup, look for option 3 12 and upgrade Raspbian (you need the latest version of your system before installing the latest gamecon driver developed for it - logical, right?) and reboot.
  • ​I took the following steps before downloading the gamecon GPIO driver:






    Installing retropie on debian barebones