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Python script to automate the process of fetching boxart and installing PS1 games (onto your PSP/VITA/PS2/PS3)

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POPstation-FEtcher
==================
==================

POP-FE a tool to automate the process converting PSX disk images and install
them on various platforms, including:
* PSP/VITA
* PSIO
* PS2
* PS3
* Retroarch
* PS Classic

This is all LGPLv2.1

TL;DR
For Linux and windows.
Connect PSP to your Linux/Windows box via USB, then run:

  $ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto /psx/Grandia1of2.cue /psx/Grandia2of2.cue

Or create a PS3 PKG:

  $ ./pop-fe.py --ps3-pkg=Grandia.pkg /psx/Grandia1of2.ccd /psx/Grandia2of2.ccd

or ...


Enjoy.



HOW TO RUN POP-FE:
==================
Pop-fe needs to create a bunch of temporary files while it is processing the
data. So run it in a shell from the same directory that pop-fe and its
dependencies are installed.
You do not need to copy the game images to this directory.
Pop-fe can read and process the images from remote directories.


POP-FE:
=======
A utility to automate building and installing PSX games onto different
systems.
The current directory where you run this utility from needs to be writable
so that we can use it to store temporary files during the conversing process.
It supports and can convert games stored in the following types of file
formats:

.cue   : CUE file. The preferred option. The actual image file is extracted
         from the content of the cue file. If the file-name found inside the
         cue is a relative path it is assumed that the bin/img file is stored
         in the same directory as the cue file.
.ccd   : CCD file. Will be converted to a temporary CUE file before it is used.
.bin   : BIN/IMG files. In this case a temporary .cue file will be created
.img     in the local directory and used for the conversion. This cue file
         will assume that the bin/img file is just one single track of type
         MODE2/2352
.zip   : ZIP file. The ZIP file will be extracted into the local directory
         and if a .cue file is found it will be used.
.chd   : CHD file. This requires that the chdman program is installed.
.*     : Various memory card image formats.
         Memory cards are detected by file size so the extensions does not
	 matter.

The utility supports building and installing the games on various different
target platforms.
Command line arguments are:
-v                     : Verbose. Print additional information about what
		         operations are performed during the game installation.
--title                : Force the title to use for this game.
		         By default pop-fe will automatically discover the
			 game title from the image file provided. This argument
			 can be used to override the title if the autodetection
			 is wrong or fails.
--game_id              : Force the game id. By default pop-fe will extract
		         the SYSTEM.CNF file off the game iso and use it to
			 detect the game-id. This argument can be used to
			 override the id.
			 For multidisc games this supports a comma-separated
			 list of ids.
			 This argument does not affect libcrypt. Libcrypt
			 handling will always use the id from the cue/bin.
--cover                : Image to use as the game icon. If not specified pop-fe
		         will automatically fetch one from the internet.
--logo                 : Image to use as the Boot logo on PSP. If not specified
		         the default P.O.P.S one will be used.
--pic0                 : Image to use as the PIC0/Screenshot. If not specified
		         pop-fe will automatically fetch one from the internet.
--pic1                 : Image to use as the PIC1/Screenshot. If not specified
		         pop-fe will automatically fetch one from the internet.
--manual               : Specify a http link, zip-file or a directory containing
                         scans of the manual. This is only supported for
			 PSP at the moment. See Manual section below.
--resolution	       : By default resolution is set to '2' (640x512)
		         for PAL games. I.e. games with a GameId that starts
			 with SCES or SLES.
			 And it is set to '1' (640x480) for all other games,
			 which are assumed to all be NTSC.
			 This argument can be used to force the resolution
			 to a specific value.
		         See https://www.psdevwiki.com/ps3/PARAM.SFO#RESOLUTION
			 for a list of possible values.
			 When forcing the resolution to NTSC for PS3 this
			 will additionally inject the ps1_netemu config option
			 to set the speed of the game correctly.
--whole-disk           : For PS3 Packages pop-fe will default to only encode
		         the data track in the pkg disc image and not the raw
			 CD-DA tracks. The CD-DA tracks are converted to
			 ATRAC3 format which is much much smaller which are
			 then injected into the package.
			 This makes packaged for games with CD-DA music much
			 smaller in size. Use this argument if you still want
			 the raw audio tracks to also be stored in the disc
			 image. (This is only useful if at a later time you
			 want to convert the EBOOT.PBP file back into a .BIN
			 file)
--watermark            : Add a watermark consisting of disk-id and game-title
		         to PIC0 for PSP and PSC games.
--list-themes          : This lists all the available themes
--theme <theme>        : Use ICON0/PIC0/PIC1/SND0 from the theme if available
--psio-dir <path>      : This specifies the path to where a PSIO sd card has
                         been mounted. The games will be be installed as
                         <path>/<game-title>/<game-title>.bin
                         If you list more than one file it is assumed these
                         are all the disks part of a multidisc game and
                         MULTIDISC.LST will be created accordingly.
                         PSIO uses CU2 files so must have cue2cu2.py installed
			 in the same directory as pop-fe.py.
--psp-dir <path>       : This specifies the path to where a PSP sd card has
                         been mounted. The games will be converted into
                         an EBOOT.PBP and will be installed as
                         <path>/PSP/GAME/<game-id>/EBOOT.PBP
                         The EBOOT.PBP will have a cover icon as well as a
                         background image embedded.
			 If you specify multiple images then a single multi-disk
			 EBOOT.PBP will be created.
			 If you specify path as 'auto' then pop-fe will
			 scan all mounted media and pick the first one that
			 contains a PSP or VITA memory card.
--psp-install-memory-card : Used to install memory card images on the PSP.
			 See memory card section below for usage.
--psp-use-cdda        : With this setting the PSP EBOOT will be created
		        containing the full CDDA tracks but no ATRAC3
			tracks will be injected.
			This is helpful for games on PSP that depend on
			the "cdrom" to automatically play the next track
			when the current track ends, which PSP does not do
			automatically for ATRAC3 audio files.
--ps2-dir             : This is the directory that holds the USB stick to
		        install VCD files for running under POPS on a PS2.
--ps3-pkg             : This creates a PS3 PKG
			This requires CU2 files so make sure this script is
			installed.
--psc-dir             : This is the directory that holds the USB stick
		        with AutoBleem to install to. The game will be installed
			as Games/<title>.PBP. The PSC emulator can only handle
			single disc PBPs :-(
			Specify --psc-dir=auto and it will scan all connected
			devices to try to find the one with AutoBleem.
--ps1_newemu          : This only applies for PS3 PKGs. This switches the
                        emulator to use to ps1_newemu instead of the default
			ps1_netemu.
--romhacks            : Comma separated list of romhacks to apply.
		        Only supported types are .ppf and .xdelta files.
			There must be one romhack for each disk image in the
			conversion.
			This requires that you have xdelta3 installed.
--snd0                : Provide an audio file to be played when this game
		        is focused on the XMB. See the SND0.AT3 section below.
			To disable snd0 use --snd0=no
--retroarch-bin-dir  : The directory where retroarch game bins are to be
                        installed, inside a subfolder. Includes an m3u file 
                        for correctly loading multi-dics games.
--retroarch-cue-dir  : The directory where retroarch game cues (as .CD files)
                        are to be installed with their respective bins, inside 
                        a subfolder. Includes an m3u file for correctly loading
                        multi-dics games.
--retroarch-pbp-dir  : The directory where retroarch game pbp images are to be
                        installed.
--retroarch-thumbnail-dir : Where the coverimage for retroarch should go.

#
Examples:
Assume I have connected my PSP with USB and it is shows up as :
   /run/media/sahlberg/disk
   
$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=/run/media/sahlberg/disk /psx/Metal\ Gear\ Solid\ VR\ Missions.cue

Or you can just let pop-fe try to discover it automagically for you. This
works for both Linux and Windows:

$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto /psx/Metal\ Gear\ Solid\ VR\ Missions.cue

If you specify more than one cue file then it is assumed that this is
a multidisc game and we will use the first cue file to determine the
game id and title to be used for the whole set.

Example:
 # ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto /psx/Grandia1of2.img /psx/Grandia2of2.img

During the conversion process the img/bin file will be temporarily converted
into an ISO file as NORMAL01.iso in the current directory.
This is in order to open the iso9660 image and read the system.cnf file
to extract the game id.
You can avoid/skip this step by forcing the game-id from the command line,
using (example only):
    --game-id=SLUS00957
    
Game art and images are fetched from https://psxdatacenter.com/
If a file named the same as the CUE but with the extension *_cover.png is found in the game
directory it assumed to be the cover image and thus we skip pulling it from psxdatacenter.
Example: cuefile:  foo.cue and corresponding cover in foo_cover.png

Similarly, files named as <cue>_pic0.png and <cue>_pic1.png are used for the screenshot
images.


ROMHACKS
========
Romhacks can be provided and automatically applied.
These must either be in PPF format and have a 'ppf' extension or in
Xdelta[3] format and have a 'xdelta' extension.
This is a comma-separated list of hacks to apply, one hack for each disk
in the conversion.
If you don't want to specify a hack for a disk in the set, then specify 'none'.
You must have xdelta3 installed in order to apply such romhacks.

Example:
To apply a romhack on a single disc:
$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto --romhacks SMT.xdelta Shin\ Megami\ Tensei.cue

To apply a romhack to only the second disc of a two disc game:
$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto --romhacks none,X.ppf D1.cue D2.cue


PS3 External config files
=========================
External configs is a way to add commands to the ps1_netemu emulator to
tweak gameplay and fix bugs for individual titles.

See: https://www.psdevwiki.com/ps3/Talk:PS1_Emulation#External_Configs

pop-fe/pop-fe-ps3 comes with a bunch of configs built in for various games.
(See the ps3configs subdirectory.)

You can also specify additional config files that pop-fe/pop-fe-ps3 will
automatically eject when you create a PS3 package.
This is done by storing the config file in the same directory as the cue file
and with the filename <cue-file>.ps3config

PSP External config files
=========================
External configs is a way to add commands to the pops emulator to
tweak gameplay and fix bugs for individual titles.

See: ...

pop-fe/pop-fe-psp comes with a bunch of configs built in for various games.
(See the pspconfigs subdirectory.)

You can also specify additional config files that pop-fe/pop-fe-psp will
automatically eject when you create a PSP EBOOT.
This is done by storing the config file in the same directory as the cue file
and with the filename <cue-file>.pspconfig

Image files for PS3 packages
============================
PS3 packages uses 3 image files: <cue>_cover.png, <cue>_pic0.png and <cue>_pic1.png
Cover is the game cover and shown in the game list on the XMB.
It is square and it will be resized to 176x176 pixels.
If you provide your own custom image here, create it as 176x176 as then there
will be no blurring due to rescaling.

Pic0 is the foreground image when the game is selected in the XMB. It is
1000x560 pixels in size.

Pic1 is the background image when the game is selected in the XMB. It is
1920x1080 pixels in size.

These files must be named like the cue file.
Example:
MyGame.cue -> MyGame_cover.png MyGame_pic0.png MyGame_pic1.png

Installing Memory Card images on PSP
====================================
Most memory card image formats are supported.
To provide a memory card image to install along with the the game
you just add the filename to the list of images.
The file extension does not matter as we detect the memory cards by file size.
Some platforms, such as PSP, require a two step process to install the
memory cards so follow the onscreen instructions carefully.

Example:
   ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto Crash.cue Crash.srm


You can also install a memory card image directly for an already installed
game. But before this works, you must have ran the game at least once
so that the PSP creates the required metadata files in the SAVEDATA
directory. Since you are not providing a disk image to determine the game-id
from you must specify game-id explicitely.

Example:
   ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto --game_id=SCUS94900 --psp-install-memory-card Crash.srm


VITA SUPPORT
============
Vita is supported and you can install EBOOTs for its memory card also.
The only difference is that when installing on a PSP you specify the path to the
root of the SD card. If you want to install to a SD card for a Vita then you
specify the path to the pspemu directory on the SD card:

Example:  
$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=/run/media/sahlberg/disk/pspemu/ /psx/Metal\ Gear\ Solid\ VR\ Missions.cue

or just use the auto feature:

$ ./pop-fe.py --psp-dir=auto /psx/Metal\ Gear\ Solid\ VR\ Missions.cue


--fetch-metadata
================
This argument will download and install
<cue>_cover.png,
<cue>_pic0.png,
<cue>_pic1.png,
<cue>.snd0,
<cue>.manual,
as well as the game id and title in the directory where the game is stored.
This requires that the game directory is writeable.

VMP.PY
======
vmp.py is a utility to convert between signed VMP memory card images
(as used by PSP) and raw memory card images as created for example by
Memory Card Annihilator on the PS2.


SND0.AT3
========
For PS3/PSP this is the audio that will be played when this games icon is
focused on the XMB. It can either be a 16bit/44100/Stereo WAVE file or a
youtube link.
If you specify --snd0='auto' then pop-fe will search youtube for the name of
the game and the string 'ps1 ost' and use the first search result.
YMMV

The game database in gamedb.py contains curated youtube links for some games.
IF a game has a curated link then it will be automatically used even if the
--snd0 argument is not provided.
Please send patches to populate these fields in gamedb.py with more entries.


Examples:

  $ ./pop-fe.py --ps3-pkg=alundra.pkg Alundra.cue --snd0='https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKmZTw7bmI0&list=PL2S7vVonTF8UZrKK17J8FBksvYbnqyHz-&index=1'
  
  $ ./pop-fe.py --ps3-pkg=alundra.pkg Alundra.cue --snd0=Alundra.WAV
  
  $ ./pop-fe.py --ps3-pkg=alundra.pkg Alundra.cue --snd0=auto

If specified as a file it must be WAVE/16bit/stereo/44100Hz.

This file/link will be automatically converted into ATRAC3 format using the
atracdenc tool.


A good way to generate these WAV files is to find a good OST music file for
the game at youtube and download it in 3GP format. Then convert it to
44100Hz/Stereo/16bit WAV like so:

$ ffmpeg -i Azure\ Dreams\ OST\ 3.\ Overture.3gp  -ar 44100 -ac 2 Azure\ Dreams\ OST\ 3.\ Overture.wav


(See:
  how to create these type of files by hand:
    https://atunnic.gitbook.io/tnpsh-wiki/big-stinky-brew/aesthetic/snd0-atrac3
  relation between EA3 and WAV files for ATRAC3 data:
    https://github.com/GrapheneCt/ElevenMPV-A/blob/04885b62dcd7dfb318986cf0b553483975b745a6/ElevenMPV-A/source/audio/at3.cpp#L264
    and
    https://github.com/GrapheneCt/ElevenMPV-A/blob/04885b62dcd7dfb318986cf0b553483975b745a6/ElevenMPV-A/source/audio/at3.cpp#L132
  discussions at psx-place:
    https://www.psx-place.com/threads/pop-fe-a-utility-to-create-psx-classics-packages-for-ps3.37426/
)


MANUAL
======
Pop-fe can create a "Software Manual" for PSP. Use the --manual command line
argument and spepcify either a https-link, a zip-file, a cbr-file (==rar)
or a directory containing scans of the manual to use to generate DOCUMENT.DAT.
The files can be in any format and will be converted to PNG and re-scaled to
480 pixels wide to match the PSP screen.

The image filenames must contain a format that pop-fe understands to match
page numbers. The naming format that is supported right now are
* Filename must contain a four digit substrung that matches the page number.
  Example: '0000'
* Filename must contain 'pag' followed by two digits that matches a page number.
  Example: 'pag00'
Page-numbering start at either 0 or 1.

You can also store the manual locally alongside the cue file.
The file needs to have the same name as the cue but the extension .manual
The format of this file can either be a pre-processed DOCUMENT.DAT file
or it can be a zip file containing image scans.

If this file exist then pop-fe will use it as the manual, overriding any
any default manual that may be specified in gamedb.py.


PSIO
====
PSIO uses a varient of CUE files called CU2.
To generate a CU2 file when installing PSIO games you need to have the
CUE2CU2.PY tool installed in the same directory as POP-FE.PY.
This tool can be downloaded from :

  https://github.com/NRGDEAD/Cue2cu2

Just copy cue2cu2.py to the same directory as pop-fe.py and make it executable :

  chmod +x cue2cu2.py


PS2 Support
===========
Pop-fe can convert games into VCD format and install it on a USB memory stick
that has been prepared to be used with POPStarter and OPL to play PS1 games.
The USB stick must have a POPS subdirectory where the VCD file and memory cards
will be installed and an ART subdirectory for cover and background images.

PS3 Support
===========
Pop-fe can convert games into a PS3 PKG that can be installed on PS3 systems
with CFW or HEN.

PSClassic support
=================
Pop-fe can convert games and install them for use on AutoBleem 1.0 memory
sticks.
Multidisc support only works for when running the PBP from retroarch as the
builtin PCSX emulator does not see to support multidisc PBPs.

RetroArch Support
=================
The PSX emulator cores in retroarch support a variety of formats, with m3u and
pbp files being the most convenient for loading multi-disc games. Pop-fe can
prepare these formats/schemes for retroarch to load.

Preparations
------------
Install ecdsa python module:

$ pip3 install ecdsa

$ cd <directory where pop-fe is installed>

Install PSL1GHT as a subdirectory in the pop-fe directory
and compile the pgcrypt module:

$ git clone https://github.com/sahlberg/PSL1GHT
$ cd PSL1GHT/tools/ps3py
$ git checkout origin/use-python3
$ make
$ cd ../../..

Then to use it just run it as

$ ./pop-fe.py --ps3-pkg=Grandia.pkg Grandia_d1.cue Grandia_d2.cue


LIBCRYPT
========
Libcrypt is a copy protection used on a small number of PAL releases.
https://red-j.github.io/Libcrypt-PS1-Protection-bible/index.htm

The protection is based on careful corruption of the subchannel data of the
disk and may prevent the converted games from running on PSP/PS3.

Libcrypt games are automatically patched using
https://github.com/alex-free/libcrypt-patcher/

PS3
---
Libcrypt protected games are automatically patched by injecting the MagicWord
into the package file.
(The MagicWord is a compact representation of the subchannel corruption)
This should be sufficient to allow any games to work when converted to
a PS3 package.

ADDITONAL DEPENDENCIES:
=======================
Iso-parser
----------
You need python support to read ISO9660 images. This is needed to be able to
read system.cnf to discover the game-id.
I support two different such python extensions since the are not all available
on all flavors of linux. Pycdio and Pycdlib.
As long as you have one of them installed things should work.

pip3 install pycdio
or
pip3 install pycdlib

cue2cu2
-------
Note: this is now a submodule so I am not sure what to change here
This is a small program that parses a CUE and reformats it into CU2 format.
It is used by PSIO but also to create the TOC structure we need for PSP
EBOOTs when a CCD file is not present.
It is also required when creating PS3 PKGs.

Please install this python script in the same directory as pop-fe.
It can be downloaded from   https://github.com/NRGDEAD/Cue2cu2
Make it executable by calling

chmod +x cue2cu2.py

binmerge
--------
Note: this is now a submodule so I am not sure what to change here
This is a small python program to merge multi-bin files into a single bin.
This is required if you intend to use pop-fe with multi-bin disks.

This tool can be downloaded from
https://github.com/putnam/binmerge
and should be placed in the same directory as pop-fe.py.

Make it executable with
chmod +x binmerge

requests
--------------
This is used to fetch data from the internet.
Install this with :
pip3 install requests

CDDA SUPPORT
------------
CDDA is supported for PSP/VITA/PS3 but requires an external tool to convert the
audio tracks into ATRAC3 LP2 format.
If you do not have this tool installed then pop-fe will still create the
EBOOT.PBP image but without the audio tracks.

The instructions to set this tool up are part of the Linux/Windows install
instructions below. (atracdenc)


INSTALLATION
============
Pop-fe has a few external dependencies. It requires python3 and some additional
bits and pieces. Here are some examples on how to install pop-fe and its
dependencies on different OSes:

For installations on Linux/Posix/ you need to have a build environment.
Make sure you have 'git', 'gcc', 'g++', 'make', 'cmake' installed.


Fedora36 Automatic Install:
-------------------------
sudo dnf install python-is-python3
sudo dnf install pip3
sudo dnf install python3-devel
sudo dnf install libsndfile-devel
sudo dnf install ffmpeg
git clone --recursive https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git
cd pop-fe
./pop-fe.py --install


Debian/Mint Automatic Install:
------------------------------
sudo apt install python-is-python3
sudo apt install python3-pip
sudo apt install libsndfile-dev
sudo apt install git
sudo apt install ffmpeg
git clone --recursive https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git
cd pop-fe
./pop-fe.py --install


Debian/Mint Manual Install:
------------------------
sudo apt install python-is-python3
sudo apt install python3-pip
sudo apt install libsndfile-dev
sudo apt install git
pip3 install pytubefix
pip3 install PyPDF2
pip3 install requests
pip3 install pycdlib  (or pip3 install pycdio)
pip3 install ecdsa
pip3 install tkinterdnd2
pip3 install opencv-contrib-python
pip3 install rarfile
pip3 install scikit-learn
pip3 install scipy
git clone --recursive https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git
make -C pop-fe/PSL1GHT/tools/ps3py/
cmake -B pop-fe/atracdenc/src/ -S pop-fe/atracdenc/src/
make -C pop-fe/atracdenc/src/
wget https://github.com/alex-free/libcrypt-patcher/releases/download/v1.0.8/libcrypt-patcher-v1.0.8-linux-i386-static.zip
unzip -j libcrypt-patcher-v1.0.8-linux-i386-static.zip */lcp


Android (Termux https://f-droid.org/en/packages/com.termux/) Manual Install:
------------------------
pkg install build-essential git patchelf python-pip python-pillow opencv-python ninja libsndfile
pip install pytubefix PyPDF2 requests pycdlib ecdsa tkinterdnd2 rarfile pycryptodome
git clone --recursive https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git
make -C pop-fe/PSL1GHT/tools/ps3py/
cmake -B pop-fe/atracdenc/src/ -S pop-fe/atracdenc/src/
make -C pop-fe/atracdenc/src/

Windows (x86_64)
----------------
Windows hs prebuilt binary releases of pop-fe available at :
https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe/releases
If you use these you do not need to perform the manual install described below.


Install Mingw64/MSYS2
Open Mingw64 Prompt and type

export PATH=$PATH:/mingw64/bin
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc
pacman -S make
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-python
pacman -S git
pacman -S unzip
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-python-pip
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-python-pillow
pip3 uninstall pillow
pip3 install pillow
pip3 install PyPDF2
pip3 install requests
pip3 install pycdlib
pip3 install pycryptodome
pip3 install ecdsa
pip3 install opencv-contrib-python
pip3 install rarfile
pip3 install scikit-learn
pip3 install scipy
git clone https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git
git clone https://github.com/NRGDEAD/Cue2cu2.git
git clone https://github.com/putnam/binmerge.git
cd pop-fe
cp ../Cue2cu2/cue2cu2.py .
chmod +x cue2cu2.py
cp ../binmerge/binmerge .
chmod +x binmerge
git clone http://github.com/sahlberg/PSL1GHT
cd PSL1GHT/tools/ps3py
git checkout origin/use-python3
make
cd ../../..
wget https://github.com/dcherednik/atracdenc/releases/download/0.0.3/atracdenc-x86_0.0.3.zip
unzip -j atracdenc-x86_0.0.3 -x README.TXT
wget https://github.com/alex-free/libcrypt-patcher/releases/download/v1.0.8/libcrypt-patcher-v1.0.8-linux-i386-static.zip
unzip -j libcrypt-patcher-v1.0.8-linux-i386-static.zip */lcp
pip install pyinstaller
pip install pygubu
pyinstaller PSL1GHT/tools/ps3py/pkg.py
pyinstaller cue2cu2.py
pyinstaller binmerge
pyinstaller sign3.py
pyinstaller --add-data "PS3LOGO.DAT;." pop-fe.py
pyinstaller --add-data "PS3LOGO.DAT;." --add-data "pop-fe-ps3.ui;." pop-fe-ps3.py --hidden-import pop-fe --hidden-import pygubu.builder.tkstdwidgets --hidden-import pygubu.builder.ttkstdwidgets --hidden-import pygubu.builder.widgets.pathchooserinput
mkdir dist/pop-fe-ps3/atracdenc
mkdir dist/pop-fe-ps3/atracdenc/src
cp dist/binmerge/binmerge.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp dist/cue2cu2/cue2cu2.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp dist/pkg/pkg.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp dist/pkg/pkgcrypt.cp39-mingw_x86_64.pyd dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp dist/pop-fe/pop-fe.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp dist/sign3/sign3.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/.
cp atracdenc.exe dist/pop-fe-ps3/atracdenc/src/.


On windows, always run pop-fe from git-bash and from within the pop-fe
directory.
The directory names for the E: drive-letter is /e etc in the git-bash shell
so use --psp-dir=/e or --psp-dir=auto

You may need to run this command every time you open the MSYS2 shell:
export PATH=$PATH:/mingw64/bin


POP-FE-PS3
==========
pop-fe-ps3.py is a graphical frontend to pop-fe:create_ps3() and can be used to
create PS3 packages from a GUI instead of using the command line.

Docker
----------------
# You can also run pop-fe inside a docker container.
# Assuming Docker is already installed on your preferred distro, run:
docker build -t pop-fe https://github.com/sahlberg/pop-fe.git

# You can then execute pop-fe directly:
docker run -it pop-fe:latest --help
# or get a shell and run pop-fe interactively:
docker run -it --entrypoint /bin/bash pop-fe:latest
./pop-fe.py

# Here is another Docker example where we mount the current host directory into the container at "/psp".
# Directory structure:
# .
# ├── game.bin
# ├── game.cue
# └── pspemu/
#     └── PSP/
#         └── GAME/
docker run -it --volume "$(pwd):/psp" pop-fe:latest --psp-dir=/psp/pspemu /psp/game.cue

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Python script to automate the process of fetching boxart and installing PS1 games (onto your PSP/VITA/PS2/PS3)

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