Mupen64plus Input Bot Save

An input driver for mupen64plus that consumes from a python web server

Project README

mupen64plus-input-bot

An input driver for mupen64plus that consumes a JSON response from a web server. Intended for use with my TensorKart project that trains an AI using TensorFlow to play the classic N64 title MarioKart 64.

Building

make all

The project uses essentially a copy and paste of the Makefile from the regular input plugin for mupen64plus with the SDL dependencies removed. It includes flags to link libjson-c, which it assumes has been installed into /usr/lib and /usr/include. You can get this library on Ubuntu by installing the following packages (or if you prefer, you can build the latest from source here):

libjson-c2
libjson-c-dev

Note that all builds expect the mupen64plus-core source code to be available in the same directory.

eg.

src \
  mupen64plus-core \
    ...
  mupen64plus-input-bot \
    ...

There is a Makefile argument (APIDIR) to specify this directory path if you prefer.

Installing

After building, run sudo make install to copy the driver to the default location.

/usr/local/lib/mupen64plus/mupen64plus-input-bot.so

Installing the driver to a standard system location allows downstream applications to configure mupen64plus automatically (for example the mupen64plus OpenAI gym)

Usage

mupen64plus --input /usr/local/lib/mupen64plus/mupen64plus-input-bot.so MarioKart64.z64

By default, the driver specifies the HTTP server as localhost:8082 with a single controller connected. This can be overridden per controller via configuration.

Configuration

Parameters can be specified via the Mupen64plus config file, or via command line switches (--set). There are currently three values which can be configured:

Parameter Description
plugged deterimines whether or not the controller is connected (values: 0 or 1)
host the hostname of the controller server (max length: 256 chars)
port the port for the controller server (type: int)

Mupen64plus config file:

# Default unix path:
# ~/.config/mupen64plus/mupen64plus.cfg

# [...]

[Input-Bot-Control0]

plugged = "1"
host = "contr_srv_1.example.com"
port = "8082"

[Input-Bot-Control1]

plugged = "1"
host = "contr_srv_1.example.com"
port = "8083"

[Input-Bot-Control2]

plugged = "1"
host = "contr_srv_2.example.com"
port = "8084"

[Input-Bot-Control3]

plugged = "0"
host = "contr_srv_2.example.com"
port = "8085"

# [...]

Command line:

mupen64plus                                                    \
  --input /usr/local/lib/mupen64plus/mupen64plus-input-bot.so  \
                                                               \
  --set Input-Bot-Control0[plugged]=1                          \
  --set Input-Bot-Control0[host]=contr_srv_1.example.com       \
  --set Input-Bot-Control0[port]=8082                          \
                                                               \
  --set Input-Bot-Control1[plugged]=1                          \
  --set Input-Bot-Control1[host]=contr_srv_1.example.com       \
  --set Input-Bot-Control1[port]=8083                          \
                                                               \
  MarioKart64.z64

Protocol

This driver supports all 4 controllers. When it issues requests for the controller data, it makes a GET request to the path of the controller index (0-3). This allows server implementations to handle requests for each of the 4 controllers. Alternatively, separate web servers could be used for each controller (see the Configuration section above for details).

Example requests:

GET /0 HTTP/1.1
GET /1 HTTP/1.1
GET /2 HTTP/1.1
GET /3 HTTP/1.1

The plugin attempts to deserialize the web response as a JSON object. It expects the JSON object to contain properties that represent each of the controller button states (as integers). If any buttons are not included in the response, their values will default to 0.

Example JSON response:

{
  "START_BUTTON": 0,
  "U_CBUTTON": 0,
  "L_DPAD": 0,
  "A_BUTTON": 1,
  "B_BUTTON": 0,
  "X_AXIS": -80,
  "L_CBUTTON": 0,
  "R_CBUTTON": 0,
  "R_TRIG": 0,
  "R_DPAD": 0,
  "D_CBUTTON": 0,
  "Z_TRIG": 0,
  "Y_AXIS": 80,
  "L_TRIG": 0,
  "U_DPAD": 0,
  "D_DPAD": 0
}

Testing

An example server is included in /test/server.py. This file is a minimal example that allows you to hard code the joystick input. This example is intended to be extracted into a program that determines the appropriate input somehow.

Future Work / Ideas

  • controller.c could be refactored into smaller functions
  • I'm sure my c code can be optimized and improved
  • This plugin might be useful for implementing network play with mupen64plus

Contributing

Open a PR! I'm friendly I promise :)

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Mupen64plus Input Bot" Project. README Source: kevinhughes27/mupen64plus-input-bot
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