

- #N64 emulator for mac # 3 – wx mupen 64 plus how to#
- #N64 emulator for mac # 3 – wx mupen 64 plus trial#

Open InputAutoCfg.ini in your preferred text editor. For me this is in the directory /usr/share/games/mupen64plus/InputAutoCfg.ini. Now you can press a button on your controller to see which axis or button it corresponds with.Īpplying custom controller config to mupen You will see a gui for numbered axes and buttons. For help with that, see Ubuntu Forums - Gaming & Leisure - HOWTO : Joystick/Gamepads under UbuntuĪssuming you have that set up and your joystick is already calibrated properly, all you need to do is run jstest-gtk /dev/input/js0 &, where js0 is the calibration file for the device you are currently testing. You will need the joystick calibration tool jscal to determine which button is which. Here is a solution anybody currently running mupen64plus, with or without a gui, should be able to use. Unfortunately, m64py was not a working solution for me and "trial and error" is too cumbersome. For each axis, this must be greater than the corresponding AnalogDeadzone value # An absolute value of the SDL joystick axis >= AnalogPeak will saturate the N64 controller axis value (at 80). # The minimum absolute value of the SDL analog joystick axis to move the N64 controller axis value from 0. # SDL joystick name (name check disabled if this is empty string) # Specifies which joystick is bound to this controller: -2=Keyboard/mouse, -1=Auto config, 0 or more= SDL Joystick number # If True, then mouse buttons may be used with this controller

# Specifies which type of expansion pak is in the controller: 1=None, 2=Mem pak, 5=Rumble pak # Specifies whether this controller is 'plugged in' to the simulated N64 # Mupen64Plus SDL Input Plugin config parameter version number.
#N64 emulator for mac # 3 – wx mupen 64 plus trial#
There I found the area where it talked about the joysticks and figured by trial and error that if I see on my controller a number (the buttons are numbered) I type that number minus one in the config file, and for the buttons I was not using I just leave it blank, as in "". The file I used to configure the controllers is: ~/.config/mupen64plus/mupen64plus.cfg
#N64 emulator for mac # 3 – wx mupen 64 plus how to#
I myself couldn't run a GUI for mupen, so I ended up figuring out how to configuire it and run it in the Terminal.
