646 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
646 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
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GUIDE TO CONFIGURING GNUBOY
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[ P A R T I ]
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OVERVIEW
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There are two major ways of configuring the way gnuboy behaves at
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runtime: setting the values of variables, and binding commands to keys
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and joystick buttons. Each can be done either on the command line, or
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from a config (rc) file.
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If you don't want to read all this detailed info, look at the sample
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rc files provided, then browse back through this file to clarify
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anything that seems confusing. You might also skip down to Part II if
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you're already familiar with the syntax of gnuboy rc files and such;
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the second part explains the configurable variables which you can play
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with.
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WHAT HAPPENS AT STARTUP
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When gnuboy is started, it first processes gnuboy.rc, the primary
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configuration file. On *nix systems, gnuboy will initially look for
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its rc files in ~/.gnuboy, or if that fails, the present working
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directory. On DOS and Windows, the current directory will be searched
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first, followed by the directory containing the gnuboy executable.
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After finishing with gnuboy.rc, gnuboy next looks for an rc file with
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the same base name as the rom to be loaded. For example, if the name
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of the rom is mygame.gb, gnuboy will process mygame.rc, if it exists.
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This allows you to configure different preferences on a per-rom
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basis. The locations searched for the rom-specific rc file are the
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same as those searched for gnuboy.rc, unless gnuboy.rc has changed the
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search path (see below for more info).
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Finally, options on the command line are processed. The command line
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will override any settings in the auto-loaded rc files. This is a good
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place for options that you just want to use occasionally, but not on a
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regular basis.
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After all of the above is finished, gnuboy loads the rom and starts
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emulation.
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RC FILES
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The rc files gnuboy uses are plain text files, with one command on
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each line. Lines that start with # are treated as comments, that is to
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say they are ignored, and blank lines are ignored as well.
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There are three major types of commands.
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RC FILES -- SETTING VARIABLES
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First of all, there is the "set" command, which is used for setting
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the values of variables. For example,
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set scale 2
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will set the screen scaling factor to 2. If you need to include a
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space in the value of a variable, you can do something like this:
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set savename "I like spaces in my filenames"
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and then your save files will be named something like:
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I like spaces in my filenames.sav
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I like spaces in my filenames.000
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I like spaces in my filenames.001
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I like spaces in my filenames.002
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etc.
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Finally, some variables allow multiple numbers to be given. For
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example, to set the video mode to 640x480, 16bpp, you might do
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something like this:
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set vmode 640 480 16
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Observe that each number is separate, and there are no quotation marks
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used.
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RC FILES -- KEYBINDINGS
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Next, we have commands that deal with key and joystick bindings. These
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are fairly simple.
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The "unbindall" command removes all existing keybindings -- be
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careful! -- and its main use is for people who want to redefine their
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keyboard controls entirely and throw away the defaults. Be warned that
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if you unbind the quit key and don't bind a new key for quitting, you
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may be unable to exit gnuboy cleanly!
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The "unbind" command is similar, but it only unbinds one key at a
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time. For example, to unbind the "space" key, use this command:
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unbind space
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See below for a list of key names to use with unbind.
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Now we get to the main useful keybinding command: "bind". For example,
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if you want the "tab" key to perform the Gameboy "select" button
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function, use the following bind command:
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bind tab +select
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The significance of the + sign will be explained below. As with the
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"set" command, quotation marks can be used with bind if the command
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needs to contain spaces.
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KEY NAMES FOR BINDINGS
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When using the bind and unbind commands, you need to tell gnuboy which
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key you wish to affect. Most of the keys that correspond to a
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character you can type can just be referenced by that character. For
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example, the alphabetical keys are bound by the lowercase letter they
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represent, and the numeral keys (on the main keyboard, not the numeric
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keypad) can be bound by their numeral. Other keys require a name. Some
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are really obvious:
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shift, ctrl, alt, up, down, right, left
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enter, tab, space, home, end, esc, pause
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f1, f2, f3, f4, f5, f6, f7, f8, f9, f10, f11, f12
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Others are a bit less obvious but still should make sense. Some of
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these can also be referenced by other names; read the source file
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keytable.c for a full list:
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bs Backspace
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ins Insert
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del Delete
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prior Page Up
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next Page Down
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caps Caps Lock
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numlock Num Lock
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scroll Scroll Lock
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minus - or _
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equals = or +
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tilde ` or ~
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slash / or ?
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bslash \ or |
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semi ; or :
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quote ' or "
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The numeric keypad is referenced as follows
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num0-num9 Numeral keys 0-9 (on keypad)
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numplus Numeric keypad +
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numminus Numeric keypad -
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nummul Numeric keypad *
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numdiv Numeric keypad /
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numdot Numeric keypad .
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numenter Numeric keypad Enter key
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Joystick buttons and directions also have names for binding, and they
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are bound just like ordinary keys. Their names are as follows:
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joyup Joystick up
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joydown Joystick down
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joyleft Joystick left
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joyright Joystick right
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joy0-joy15 Joystick buttons
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The way joystick buttons are numbered varies from one joystick to
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another. Experiment to find the names that are right for the buttons
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you want to use.
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RC FILES -- THE SOURCE COMMAND
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The "source" command simply causes gnuboy to process another rc file
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before resuming processing of the current one. It is useful for
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splitting up your config into multiple parts, perhaps one file
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auto-generated by a front-end and another hand-customized. Use of this
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command is very simple:
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source myfile.rc
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will perform all the commands in myfile.rc. Note that the source
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command also provides a method for binding multiple commands to a
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single key. For example, simply
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bind f1 "source f1stuff.rc"
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and then f1stuff.rc will be run whenever you press F1.
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RC FILES -- ACTION COMMANDS
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Finally, we have rc commands that perform actions. These commands are
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probably only useful when bound to a key, and might cause unexpected
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behavior or even crashes if used by themselves in an rc file loaded at
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startup.
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First of all, the "quit" command should be obvious. It simply exits
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the emulator. If the rom that's loaded uses battery backed save ram or
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realtime clock, these files will automatically be saved at exit.
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The "reset" command should also be fairly obvious. It acts as a reset
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button, restarting execution of the loaded rom at the beginning, as if
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you turned the Gameboy power off and back on.
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Slightly more interesting are the "savestate" and "loadstate"
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commands. These are used for saving and resuming "saved state" files,
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which allow you to save the exact status of the emulation environment
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and restore it later, effectively letting you "save game" at any point
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in any game. If a number is specified after either of those commands,
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the indicated save slot number is used. Otherwise, the slot set in the
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"saveslot" variable will be used. See the information on variables
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below for more info.
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Most importantly, we have the action commands that control the
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emulated Gameboy input pad. They are described below:
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COMMANDS THAT BEGIN WITH A PLUS SIGN
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Normally, gnuboy only performs the command bound to a key when the key
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is pressed; nothing happens when it is released. But for some things,
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particularly the Gameboy pad buttons, it's important for something to
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happen when the bound key is released. This is the purpose of commands
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that begin with a + sign. When a key is released, gnuboy checks to see
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if the bound command begins with +, and if so, it changes the + to -
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and performs the resulting command. This causes the Gameboy pad
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buttons to go back to their normal state when the keys bound to them
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are released.
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The Gameboy pad commands, which should be self-explanatory, are as
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follows:
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+a, +b, +start, +select, +up, +down, +left, +right
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If you're at all familiar with Quake's config system, this should all
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be clear.
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THE GNUBOY COMMAND LINE
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Additional rc files to process, variable settings, and keybindings can
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be specified on the command line when gnuboy is run.
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Processing an extra config file is simple:
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gnuboy --source myfile.rc game.gb
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Specifying an extra rc file on the command line like this is
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especially useful for frontends, which may want to put all the options
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they set in one rc file so they don't have to pass a super-long
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command line to gnuboy.
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Binding keys is also pretty simple. Just use something like:
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gnuboy --bind tab +select game.gb
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Setting variables is where things get a bit more complicated. For
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on/off (boolean) settings, you can just do something like
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gnuboy --no-sound game.gb
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to turn a variable (sound) off, i.e. set it to 0. Likewise, boolean
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variables can be turned on via something like
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gnuboy --rgb332 game.gb
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which turns the "rgb332" variable on (see below for information on
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what it does).
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For other variables where you actually want to set a number or a
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string, use this form:
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gnuboy --savename=mygame2 game.gb
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Finally, for variables with multiple numbers to be set, you can
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separate them by commas as follows:
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gnuboy --vmode=512,384,32
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to avoid having to quote the spaces.
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[ P A R T I I ]
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GUIDE TO CONFIGURABLE VARIABLES
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What follows is a detailed explanation of most of the configuration
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variables available for your tweaking. They are organized by what part
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of gnuboy's behavior they affect -- graphics, sound, emulation, and so
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on.
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Some variables may or may not be available depending on how gnuboy was
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built. For example, if you built gnuboy on a system without sound
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support, some variables related to sound may not exist for you, and
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attempts to set them will be silently ignored. In most cases, it's
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noted in the documentation when variables might not be available.
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Also, there are a few highly system-specific variables, such as names
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of devices to use for video and sound on *nix systems. These are
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listed separately at the end, and it should go without saying that
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they will not be available on all builds of gnuboy.
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VIDEO AND GRAPHICS SETTINGS
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Since this is everyone's favorite thing to customize, video seems a
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good place to start.
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SCREEN SCALING
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There are a number of variables that control how gnuboy scales the
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display. The most basic is the "scale" option, which is just the
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factor to scale by. For example
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set scale 2
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will double the size of the display. Set the scale factor to 1 for no
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scaling.
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There are two ways gnuboy can go about doing scaling. The preferable
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way is to use your computer's graphics hardware to do all the work.
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This cuts down on the amount of CPU time consumed and provides
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filtering to smooth out the blocky pixels, but it's not available on
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all systems. The other way is for gnuboy to scale the screen itself.
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Normally gnuboy will choose hardware scaling automatically if it's
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available, but if you want to force it on or off, you can set the
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option "yuv" (for hardware YUV-colorspace scaling) to 1 or 0. Yes,
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this option is poorly named, and is likely to change in future
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versions of gnuboy.
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On one display platform, Linux fbcon, it's possible to disable the
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interpolation filter in the hardware scaling. To do this, set the
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variable "yuvinterp" to 0. Some users who like a crisper display may
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prefer this setting, especially on video cards that make the picture
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look "muddy" when they scale it. Unfortunately SDL does not seem to
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provide such an option, so interpolation is always enabled on the SDL
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based ports.
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When hardware scaling is disabled or not available, gnuboy will do its
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own scaling. However, the scale factor is limited to 1, 2, 3, or 4.
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Also, when performing its own scaling, gnuboy defaults to leaving some
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scanlines blank. This saves a lot of CPU time and allows gnuboy to run
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full speed on slower systems. You can configure what portion gets
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filled in with the "density" variable. For example.
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set scale 4
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set density 4
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will give you 4x scaling with no blank scanlines. Keep in mind that a
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fairly fast computer (at least 400 MHz or so on x86, or something
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comparable on other types of CPUs) is required to run fullspeed with
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this setting. In general, "density" is the number of lines that get
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filled in, so set it the same as "scale" if you want everything filled
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in, or lower if you need more speed.
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VIDEO MODE
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The variable for setting the desired video mode is called "vmode", and
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it's made up of three parts: width, height, and bits-per-pixel. For
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example, to set 640x480x16bpp mode, use
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set vmode 640 480 16
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By default gnuboy will enable hardware scaling and try to scale to the
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entire screen size if a video mode at least 320x288 is specified. If
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you don't want this behavior, set the "yuv" option (see above) to 0.
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Also, if you're setting the "scale" variable to do scaling, you
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probably don't need to use the "vmode" option, since gnuboy will
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try to automatically pick a mode that fits the scale. It's there in
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case you need it, though.
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Note that the DOS port is not yet capable of auto-choosing a video
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mode, so if you want anything but the default 320x200x8bpp you'll have
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to set "vmode" yourself. Also, not all ports are capable of all modes.
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Experiment to find what works for you. Video mode selection is a
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little bit messy and confusing at this time, and we hope to improve it
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a good deal in the future.
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FULLSCREEN VIDEO
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Some versions of gnuboy provide both fullscreen and windowed
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operation. The variable "fullscreen" can be set to 1 or 0 to enable or
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disable fullscreen mode. Also, the variable "altenter" can be set to
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enable or disable switching between fullscreen and windowed mode at
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runtime with the Alt+Enter key combination. Unfortunately, this does
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not yet work on Windows; we hope to fix this limitation in the
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future.
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DMG PALETTE SELECTION
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gnuboy allows you to set the palette used for grayscale when running
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DMG (original mono Gameboy) roms. There are four variables for this
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purpose, allowing the background, window, and both sprite palettes to
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be colored differently. Each one is made up of four numbers, the color
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to use for each shade of gray, from lightest to darkest. Colors are
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represented as 24bit numbers, with red in the low (rightmost) places
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and blue in the upper (leftmost) places. Although you could specify
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colors in decimal (base 10) if you really wanted, they'd be very
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difficult to read, so it's preferable to use hex (base 16).
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For example, to set the background to shades of white, the window to
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shades of red, and the sprite palettes to shades of green and blue,
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you could use:
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set dmg_bgp 0xffffff 0xaaaaaa 0x555555 0x000000
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set dmg_wndp 0x0000ff 0x0000aa 0x000055 0x000000
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set dmg_obp0 0x00ff00 0x00aa00 0x005500 0x000000
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set dmg_obp1 0xff0000 0xaa0000 0x550000 0x000000
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This will of course look rather ugly, but it does the job illustrating
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how you set various colors.
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For more extensive examples, see the sample file palette.rc included
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with gnuboy, which provides a number of sample palettes to try.
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RGB MODE WITH ONLY 256 COLORS
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Normally when run in 256-color (8bpp) modes, gnuboy will dynamically
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allocate colors in the palette as they're needed. However, on the
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Gameboy Color, it's possible to have well over 1000 colors on the
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screen at a time, and in games that make use of these "hicolor"
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tricks, gnuboy will run out of colors and things will look bad.
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If you prefer, you can set the "rgb332" variable:
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set rgb332 1
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This tells gnuboy that instead of using 256-color mode as a
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palette-based mode, you want it to setup a static palette and pretend
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8bpp is just a really low quality "truecolor" mode, with only 3 bits
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of precision in red and green, and only 2 bits of precision in blue.
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In general this will make most games look worse, since colors have to
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be approximated fairly poorly and since smooth color gradients are not
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possible, but it will make "hicolor" Gameboy Color games look a good
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deal better. Also, rgb332 mode should run slightly faster since it
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avoids the overhead in dynamic palette allocation.
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If you have to run at 8bpp mode, try it with and without this option
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and see which way you like better. Of course, the better solution, if
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at all possible, is to use 16bpp or higher mode, but that may run too
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slowly on older computers.
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COLOR FILTERING
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Optionally, gnuboy can filter screen colors to make them look more
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washed out or faded like on a real GBC. To enable this feature,
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set colorfilter 1
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By default, gnuboy will not apply the filter when running DMG (mono)
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games, since many of the sample palettes are already designed to
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immitate a Gameboy LCD. If you would like to have the filter also take
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effect when running in DMG mode,
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set filterdmg 1
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You can also customize the filter parameters to get different color
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effects from the default ones. See the sample file filters.rc for
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examples.
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SPRITE SORTING
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Normally sprites are sorted and prioritized according to their x
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coordinate when in DMG mode. However, this takes a little bit of extra
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cpu time, and it's not needed by most DMG games, so it can be disabled
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as follows:
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set sprsort 0
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Note that although sprite sorting was disabled in previous releases
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because it was not working properly, it now works great, so unless you
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really need to maximize performance, you should probably leave it
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enabled.
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SOUND OPTIONS
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Fortunately sound is a lot simpler than video. At this time, there are
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no fancy interpolation or filtering options, only your basic audio
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parameters.
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To enable or disable sound, set the "sound" variable to 1 or 0. By
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default, it's enabled.
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To enable or disable stereo sound, set the "stereo" variable to 1 or
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0. It defaults to 1 on most ports, but since stereo sometimes fails
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to work properly on DOS, it's disabled by default on the DOS port.
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Disabling stereo in no way improves performance, so it should only be
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done if stereo mode causes a problem on your computer.
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To set the audio sampling rate, use the "samplerate" variable. The
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default is 44100 Hz. Setting this lower can improve performance. For
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example, if you have a really slow computer, you might use:
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set samplerate 8000
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Keep in mind that this will sound really really bad.
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FILESYSTEM OPTIONS
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There are a good deal of options that affect where and how files are
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saved and loaded by gnuboy. First, there's "rcpath", which specifies
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where gnuboy searches for rc files. The default depends on your
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operating system; see the beginning of this file for details.
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The search path for rc files can contain multiple directories.
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Normally, the list is separated by colons (:), but on DOS and Windows
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the colon is used for drive letters, so semicolon (;) must be used
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instead. Here are some examples, first for *nix:
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set rcpath "/home/laguna/.gnuboy:/usr/local/etc/gnuboy"
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set rcpath "."
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and for DOS/Windows:
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set rcpath "c:/gnuboy;."
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set rcpath "c:/Program Files/Gnuboy"
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If you really insist on using backslashes on DOS or Windows, you'll
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have to double them up, since the backslash normally means "treat the
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next character literally." For example,
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set rcpath "c:\\gnuboy"
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This is untested, and your milage may vary. I recommend just using
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forward slashes and keeping things simple.
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SAVE RELATED OPTIONS
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These are all fairly simple, so I'll just list them quickly, then give
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a couple examples.
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savedir - directory to store saved games (SRAM and savestates) in
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savename - base filename to use for saves
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saveslot - which savestate slot to use
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forcebatt - always save SRAM even on carts that don't have battery
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nobatt - never save SRAM
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syncrtc - resync the realtime clock for elapsed time when loading
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The "savename" variable is particularly useful if you wish to have
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more than one save associated with a particular rom. Just do something
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like:
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gnuboy --savename=mygame2 mygame.gb
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and the save files will be called mygame2.sav, mygame2.000, etc rather
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than just mygame.sav, etc.
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The "saveslot" variable is normally just changed by keybindings, so
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you can pick a savestate slot while you're playing a game. However, if
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you for example prefer that the default slot at startup be 1 rather
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than 0, you can use:
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set saveslot 1
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The "forcebatt" and "nobatt" options are fairly self-explanatory and
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not very useful, except perhaps for debugging or use with corrupted
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roms.
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The "syncrtc" option needs a bit of explanation. Some roms, notably
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Pokemon ones and Harvest Moon, use a realtime clock to keep track of
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the time of day even when they're not running. Since gnuboy is just an
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emulator, it can't work like a real cartridge and make things like
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this keep happening while the emulator is not running. However, it can
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resync the Gameboy realtime clock based on your computer's clock when
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it starts. This is what the "syncrtc" option does. By default it's
|
|
enabled. If you disable it, then no time will seem to have elapsed
|
|
between when you exit the emulator once and when you start it again
|
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the next time.
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JOYSTICK OPTIONS
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So far there is just one joystick option, "joy", used to enable or
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disable joystick support.
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DEBUGGING OPTIONS
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These probably won't be useful to most people, but if you're trying to
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debug a homebrew game you're writing or fix a bug in gnuboy they might
|
|
be of help:
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The "trace" variable, if enabled, dumps a full execution trace to
|
|
stdout. Be prepared for at least 20 megs of logs to look through at
|
|
minimum, and more like 150 megs if you want enough to find anything
|
|
useful. Redirecting stdout to a file is a must!
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The "sprdebug" variable is used to see how many sprites are visible
|
|
per line. Try it and see!
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PLATFORM-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
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On certain *nix systems, you may need to specify device nodes to use
|
|
if the defaults don't work:
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oss_device - Open Sound System "DSP" device
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fb_device - Video framebuffer device
|
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joy_device - Joystick device
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The Linux fbcon version of gnuboy does not support the "vmode" option
|
|
yet, but it can set the mode for you by running the "fbset" program,
|
|
if you have it. Just set the "fb_mode" variable to the exact name of
|
|
the mode you want in /etc/fb.modes. For example,
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set fb_mode 640x480-90
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|
You can also override the default color depth with the "fb_depth"
|
|
variable.
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|
The DOS port of gnuboy has support for real console system gamepads
|
|
via the "Directpad Pro" (DPP) connector. To enable this feature, set
|
|
"dpp" to 1, set "dpp_port" to the IO port number the pad is connected
|
|
to (e.g. 0x378 -- be sure to prefix it with 0x for hex!!), and set
|
|
"dpp_pad" to the number of the pad you want to use. This code has not
|
|
been heavily tested, so it may or may not work for you. Be sure to get
|
|
the port number right or bad things may happen!
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CONCLUSION
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Well, that's about it for configuration. Hopefully this document
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|
clears up a lot of the confusion about what you can and can't
|
|
configure in gnuboy yet, and how you go about doing it. Again, check
|
|
the sample.rc, palette.rc, and classic.rc files for lots of examples
|
|
of how rc files work.
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As always, more info will come as time passes on. Keep on the lookout
|
|
for new releases and more features. Thank you for flying gnuboy and
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have a nice day.
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- Laguna
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