HanalogInstruments / m8c

Cross-platform M8 tracker headless client

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This Fork - Remote CLIENT HACK

This is a hacked version of the M8 client designed to enable remote control. This client version connects to the sister-fork server version of m8c. It allows remote control - in that it displays the headless m8 and passes key commands to the server. It does not stream audio.

This Fork - Remote SERVER HACK

This is a hacked version of the M8 client designed to enable remote control. The server version connects to the sister-fork client version of m8c. It allows remote control - it streams the GUI to the client and receives key commands from the client. This server deals with the serial connection to the m8. To use the server, rename main.c to be main_client.c and main_server.c to main.c.

m8c

m8c is a client for Dirtywave M8 tracker's headless mode. The application should be cross-platform ready and can be built in Linux, Windows (with MSYS2/MINGW64) and Mac OS.

Please note that routing the headless M8 USB audio isn't in the scope of this program -- if this is needed, it can be achieved with tools like jackd, alsa_in and alsa_out for example. Check out the guide in file AUDIOGUIDE.md for some instructions on routing the audio.

Many thanks to:

Trash80 for the great M8 hardware and the original font (stealth57.ttf) that was converted to a bitmap for use in the progam.

driedfruit for a wonderful little routine to blit inline bitmap fonts, https://github.com/driedfruit/SDL_inprint/

marcinbor85 for the slip handling routine, https://github.com/marcinbor85/slip

turbolent for the great Golang-based g0m8 application, which I used as reference on how the M8 serial protocol works.

Disclaimer: I'm not a coder and hardly understand C, use at your own risk :)


Installation

These instructions are tested with Raspberry Pi 3 B+ and Raspberry Pi OS with desktop (March 4 2021 release), but should apply for other Debian/Ubuntu flavors as well. The begining on the build process on OSX is slightly different at the start, and then the same once packages are installed.

The instructions assume that you already have a working Linux desktop installation with an internet connection.

Open Terminal and run the following commands:

Install required packages (Raspberry Pi, Linux)

sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y git gcc make libsdl2-dev libserialport-dev

Install required packages (OSX)

This assumes you have installed brew

brew update && brew install -y git gcc make sdl2 libserialport

Download source code (All)

mkdir code && cd code
git clone https://github.com/laamaa/m8c.git

Build the program

cd m8c
make

Start the program

Connect the M8 or Teensy (with headless firmware) to your computer and start the program. It should automatically detect your device.

./m8c

If the stars are aligned correctly, you should see the M8 screen.


Keyboard mappings

Keys for controlling the progam:

  • Up arrow = up
  • Down arrow = down
  • Left arrow = left
  • Right arrow = right
  • a / left shift = select
  • s / space = start
  • z / left alt = opt
  • x / left ctrl = edit

Additional controls:

  • Alt + enter = toggle full screen / windowed
  • Alt + F4 = quit program
  • Delete = opt+edit (deletes a row)
  • Esc = toggle keyjazz on/off
  • r / select+start+opt+edit = reset display (if glitches appear on the screen, use this)

Keyjazz allows to enter notes with keyboard, oldschool tracker-style. The layout is two octaves, starting from keys Z and Q. When keyjazz is active, regular a/s/z/x keys are disabled.

Gamepads

The program uses SDL's game controller system, which should make it work automagically with most gamepads.

Enjoy making some nice music!

Config

Keyboard and game controller bindings can be configured via config.ini.

If not found, the file will be created in one of these locations: Windows: C:\Users<username>\AppData\Roaming\m8c\config.ini Linux: /home//.local/share/m8c/config.ini MacOS: /Users//Library/Application Support/m8c/config.ini

See the config.ini.sample file to see the available options.


FAQ

  • When starting the program, something like the following appears and the program does not start:
$ ./m8c
INFO: Looking for USB serial devices.
INFO: Found M8 in /dev/ttyACM1.
INFO: Opening port.
ERROR: Error: Failed: Permission denied

This is likely caused because the user running m8c does not have permission to use the serial port. The eaiest way to fix this is to add the current user to a group with permission to use the serial port.

On Linux systems, look at the permissions on the serial port shown on the line that says "Found M8 in":

$ ls -la /dev/ttyACM1
crw-rw---- 1 root dialout 166, 0 Jan  8 14:51 /dev/ttyACM0

This shows that the serial port is owned by the user 'root' and the grou 'dialout'. Both the user and the group have read/write permissions. To add a user to the group, run this command, replacing 'dialout' with the group shown on your own system:

sudo adduser $USER dialout

You may need to log out and back in or even fully reboot the system for this change to take effect, but this will hopefully fix the problem. Please see this issue for more details.


Bonus content: quickly install m8c locally with nix

nix-env -iA m8c-stable -f https://github.com/laamaa/m8c/archive/refs/heads/main.tar.gz

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Cross-platform M8 tracker headless client

License:Other


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