The 'go-photo' display script

The basic 'go-photo' script just has to find the 'next' photo, copy it to the 'free' buffer and re-link display.jpg to the just 'filled' buffer (thus freeing the other buffer). Of course it's not quite that simple :-) To avoid any 'missing file' errors (and speed up the appearance of new photos), the 'source' folder contents will need to be checked after each photo is shown. Further, because the fbi script has to be launched last, this script has to set-up the files needed Note, it is assumed that the ram-disk folder (/photos/ram-disk) has already been created and 'mounted' to tmpfs, however to make sure type :-

df -HT
/photos holds the .jpg's to be displayed, and the /photos/ram-disk (tmpfs) folder holds both 'buffers' (buffer1.jpg, buffer2.jpg) and the display.jpg 'virtual' file name (which will be 'linked' to one of the buffers) The 3 'alias' files needed by fbi will be created (and linked actual to virtual, display.jpg to alias) by the fbi script. One thing to watch out for is to avoid 'overwriting' the 'just free' buffer too quickly = it takes fbi 1 second to stop 'reading' the old buffer and follow the alias - display - new buffer link.
The way it works is as follows :-
The outer loop runs 'while true' (i.e. for ever).
A directory list is generated in file date order (so the 'newest' photo is top of the list) and then we inner loop
- first name = top, compare with current, if it differs exit with next=top
 
New top is compared with previous top
- if no match (new top is newer), new top is used as the next photo
- else the dir list is scanned, and the photo after the current is chosen
- if current is not found, the top photo is used
The existing 'freeze' button will be replaced with a 'remote control', so there is no point in adding it at this stage

sudo nano go-photo.sh
#!/bin/bash # go-button.sh (based on go-photo.sh) # Start by setting up the gpio pin # clear any current setting (gpio remains set after the script crashes) sudo sh -c 'echo "17" > /sys/class/gpio/unexport' sudo sh -c 'echo "17" > /sys/class/gpio/export' sudo sh -c 'echo "in" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/direction' # show the button status and give the user a chance to see it (allows test at power-on) echo "Button detect - 'blank' = gpio didn't program, 1=default (not pressed, not plugged in), 0 = pressed" cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/value sleep 3 # this script copies the next photo into the free buffer and then updates the display alias # source photos are held in the /photos/ folder (fetching and resizing is performed by the fetch-resize script) # both buffers1&2.jpg and display.jpg are held in the /ram-disk/ folder (actual display is performed by the fbi script) # (all ram-disk files have to be recreated after each power on) mkdir -p /photos/ram-disk # -p means prevents errors if dir already exists mount -t tmpfs -o size=10M,mode=0755 tmpfs /photos/ram-disk # mount to tmpfs (10M is max allowed use, not reserved ram) # showtime=4 #photo show time -1 (so 4 = 5 seconds total) cfile="0" # current file name ctop="0" # current top by date nbuf="buffer1.jpg" # next (free) buffer # loop forever while [ true ]; do top="0" # no top found next="0" # no next found # Scan the photos dir for the current file for filename in $(ls -A1c /photos/*.jpg); do # note, when you ls a different folder, the path is added to each file name (so file is /photos/name.jpg ) if [ $top = "0" ]; then top=$filename if [ $filename != $ctop ]; then next=$filename; fi fi # find the next file AFTER the current if [ $next = "0" ]; then if [ $cfile = "0" ]; then next=$filename; fi if [ $filename = $cfile ]; then cfile="0"; fi fi done # if no next found, use top if [ $next = "0" ]; then next=$top; fi ctop=$top # OK, we have the next file, pause in case fbi is still reading the free buffer sleep 1 cp -f $next /photos/ram-disk/$nbuf cfile=$next if [ $nbuf = "buffer1" ] then; nbuf="buffer2.jpg" else nbuf="buffer1.jpg" fi # wait if button (GPIO 17) is held down (Lo). Check every 0.1s for fast response while [ "$(cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio17/value)" == '0' ]; do sleep 0.1 done # now switch the link (on the first pass this creates display.jpg) ln -s -f /photos/ram-disk/$nbuf /photos/ram-disk/display.jpg # wait for the rest of the show time sleep $showtime # now go find the next done

After creating any new script, don't forget to make it 'executable' :-)

sudo chmod +x go-photo.sh To test this from the command line (assuming you are in the directory where the script resides) just type :-
./go-photo.sh

If you have samba installed and are 'sharing' the /photos/ folder with your PC, on your PC you can 'map' the share and go look in the (share)/ram-disk folder and watch the buffer1/2 file sizes change as new photos are copied in. You should also see display.jpg 'switching' (i.e. 'tracking' buffer1.jpg file size then buffer2.jpg file size and back again)