Building Amiberry with SDL2
Compile SDL2 from source Dimitris Panokostas edited this page on Feb 11 · 12 revisions Pages 25 Getting Started
First Installation Kickstart ROMs (BIOS) Enabling IPF support (Optional) F.A.Q. Version History
Compiling from source
Compile Development Branch Compile SDL2 Compile for Tinker board
Loading Amiga Programs
Loading from Disks (ADF) Using HardDrives (HDF and Folders) WHDLoad auto-booting WHDBooter with RetroPie WHDBooter F.A.Q.
Inputs & Controls
Setting up Input Controllers Setting up Keyboard Controllers RetroArch Commands Customising Controls
Clone this wiki locally
If you want to run the SDL2 version on the Raspberry Pi, you currently need to compile SDL2 from source in order to get support for launching full screen applications from the console. The version bundled with Stretch is not compiled with support for the "kmsdrm" backend, so it only works under X11.
Important note: It's recommended that you use the "fkms" video driver on the RPI, to be able to use both the "KMSDRM" backend and "Dispmanx" at the same time. If you're still using the Legacy driver, it's probably better to stick to the SDL1 + Dispmanx version. If you have the full KMS Driver activated instead, then you cannot use any Dispmanx target since that is disabled with that video driver automatically. Follow these steps to download, compile and install SDL2 from source:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade
(Minimal requirements)
sudo apt-get install libfreetype6-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libgles2-mesa-dev libgbm-dev libudev-dev libasound2-dev liblzma-dev git build-essential
(...or for the full list of requirements, also add the below)
sudo apt-get install gir1.2-ibus-1.0 libdbus-1-dev libegl1-mesa-dev libibus-1.0-5 libibus-1.0-dev libice-dev libsm-dev libsndio-dev libwayland-bin libwayland-dev libxi-dev libxinerama-dev libxkbcommon-dev libxrandr-dev libxss-dev libxt-dev libxv-dev x11proto-randr-dev x11proto-scrnsaver-dev x11proto-video-dev x11proto-xinerama-dev
cd ~
wget https://www.libsdl.org/release/SDL2-2.0.7.tar.gz
tar zxvf SDL2-2.0.7.tar.gz
cd SDL2-2.0.7
./configure --disable-video-rpi --enable-video-kmsdrm; make -j $(nproc --all); sudo make install Next, we need SDL2_image:
cd ~
wget https://www.libsdl.org/projects/SDL_image/release/SDL2_image-2.0.2.tar.gz
tar zxvf SDL2_image-2.0.2.tar.gz
cd SDL2_image-2.0.2 && mkdir build && cd build
../configure
make -j $(nproc --all)
sudo make install ...and SDL2_ttf:
cd ~
wget https://www.libsdl.org/projects/SDL_ttf/release/SDL2_ttf-2.0.14.tar.gz
tar zxvf SDL2_ttf-2.0.14.tar.gz
cd SDL2_ttf-2.0.14 && mkdir build && cd build
../configure
make -j $(nproc --all)
sudo make install
Amiga emulator for the Raspberry Pi and other ARM SoC
Warning: this branch is where Development takes place. It may be unstable, crash, not work from time to time - If you're looking for the latest "stable" version, please use the master branch for now. Compiling SDL2
If you want to run the SDL2 version, you currently need to compile SDL2 from source on the Raspberry Pi, to get support for launching full screen applications from the console. The version bundled with Stretch is not compiled with support for the "rpi" driver, so it only works under X11.
Follow these steps to download, compile and install SDL2 from source:
https://github.com/midwan/amiberry/wiki/Compile-SDL2-from-source
With SDL2 installed, you can proceed to install Amiberry as follows: Pre-requisites
Install the following packages:
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev libflac-dev libmpg123-dev libpng-dev libmpeg2-4-dev
Compiling Amiberry
Clone this repo:
cd ~ git clone https://github.com/midwan/amiberry cd amiberry
The default platform is currently "rpi3", so for Raspberry Pi 3 (SDL1) you can just type:
make all
For Raspberry Pi 2 (SDL1):
make all PLATFORM=rpi2
For Raspberry Pi 1/Zero (SDL1):
make all PLATFORM=rpi1
And for the SDL2 versions, you can use the following:
make all PLATFORM=rpi3-sdl2
Or for Raspberry Pi 2 (SDL2):
make all PLATFORM=rpi2-sdl2
Or for Raspberry Pi 1/Zero (SDL2):
make all PLATFORM=rpi1-sdl2
You can check the Makefile for a full list of supported platforms!
Enabling IPF support
Dimitris Panokostas edited this page on Feb 11 · 1 revision
Amiberry provides support for IPF images since v2.13. In order to do this, Amiberry needs an external library (capsimg).
Follow these steps to build that library:
Go in the directory where you have cloned the amiberry sources, then type:
sudo apt-get install autoconf (if you don't have it already)
git submodule update --init (this will populate and update the capsimg submodule included)
cd capsimg
./bootstrap
./configure
make -j 4
If all went well, you should have a library file compiled in the current directory:
capsimg.so
Copy or move the file above into the same directory your amiberry binary is located, so it can open it on startup.
E.g. if you're running RetroPie: sudo cp capsimg.so /opt/retropie/emulators/amiberry/
Start the emulator and try to load IPF images as disks (either from the Quickstart or the Floppy panels).