Package Details: libretro-vice-xscpu64-git r21117.341dd731a-1

Git Clone URL: https://aur.archlinux.org/libretro-vice-git.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: libretro-vice-git
Description: Commodore C64 SuperCPU core
Upstream URL: https://github.com/libretro/vice-libretro
Keywords: retroarch
Licenses: GPL2
Groups: libretro
Conflicts: libretro-vice-git, libretro-vice-xscpu64
Provides: libretro-vice-xscpu64
Submitter: quellen
Maintainer: abouvier
Last Packager: abouvier
Votes: 4
Popularity: 0.001463
First Submitted: 2017-11-26 21:23 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2023-07-08 03:21 (UTC)

Latest Comments

1 2 Next › Last »

abouvier commented on 2023-05-25 02:55 (UTC)

You should make this package a split package, with each core in its own package.

carlosfritz commented on 2023-04-03 06:15 (UTC)

A super package like the one you provide is probably useful for some people. Maybe create an x128 package if you feel the urge, but I think we are good as we are. I will keep this up as is. Thanks for your effort :)

abouvier commented on 2023-04-03 03:40 (UTC)

Then libretro-vice-git should probably be transformed into a split package providing each core individually.

carlosfritz commented on 2023-04-02 18:21 (UTC) (edited on 2023-04-02 18:58 (UTC) by carlosfritz)

I know. If you only want to emulate the Commodore 64 and do not want a lot of cores you most likely will never need cluttering your core list, this package is for you!

abouvier commented on 2023-04-02 17:18 (UTC)

This core is already provided by libretro-vice-git.

veganvelociraptr commented on 2022-01-06 12:31 (UTC)

I recently updated Retroarch and all cores to the latest git, and I don't understand why this core stopped working.

If I follow the build instructions to the letter, and install everything manually, then everything works as intended.

But using this PKGBUILD, which does the exact thing that I do manually, the x64 and x64sc cores crash when starting them.

veganvelociraptr commented on 2021-11-20 12:29 (UTC) (edited on 2021-11-20 13:24 (UTC) by veganvelociraptr)

Fixed by adding "make clean" to build() in PKGBUILD, like this:

build() {
  cd "${_gitname}"
  make clean EMUTYPE=x128
  make EMUTYPE=x128
  make clean EMUTYPE=x64
  make EMUTYPE=x64
  make clean EMUTYPE=x64dtv
  make EMUTYPE=x64dtv
  make clean EMUTYPE=x64sc
  make EMUTYPE=x64sc
  make clean EMUTYPE=xcbm2
  make EMUTYPE=xcbm2
  make clean EMUTYPE=xcbm5x0
  make EMUTYPE=xcbm5x0
  make clean EMUTYPE=xpet
  make EMUTYPE=xpet
  make clean EMUTYPE=xplus4
  make EMUTYPE=xplus4
  make clean EMUTYPE=xscpu64
  make EMUTYPE=xscpu64
  make clean EMUTYPE=xvic
  make EMUTYPE=xvic
}

veganvelociraptr commented on 2021-11-20 12:04 (UTC)

Something is broken in this package. Because when I do a git clone of the git repo, manually compile any or all of the EMUTYPEs, and copy it/them to the retroarch core directory, it works without issues.

KuleRucket commented on 2021-11-16 15:13 (UTC)

@veganvelociraptr same here. I'm glad I read your comment because this is my first time trying to use retroarch and I though I was the problem.

veganvelociraptr commented on 2021-09-21 16:06 (UTC)

Is anyone else having issues getting this to work? It used to work just fine a few updates, but now all cores except for C128 refuse to load for me, "Failed to load Libretro core" is all it says. The C128 core makes Retroarch coredump for me.

It works for me when I use Lakka, which has pre-compiled cores compared to AUR.