Banjo-Kazooie (100.0000%)
Baserom checksums
baserom.us.v10.z64:1fe1632098865f639e22c11b9a81ee8f29c75d7abaserom.us.v11.z64:ded6ee166e740ad1bc810fd678a84b48e245ab80baserom.jp.z64:90726d7e7cd5bf6cdfd38f45c9acbf4d45bd9fd8baserom.pal.z64:bb359a75941df74bf7290212c89fbc6e2c5601fe
Building
The following instructions should work on the following platforms:
- Ubuntu 18.04 or higher (x86_64)
- Docker only
- Linux (x86_64, ARM)
- macOS (x86_64, ARM)
Building Instructions Table Of Contents:
Local (Linux)
Works with Ubuntu 18.04 or higher.
1. Install dependencies
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y $(cat packages.txt)
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
git submodule update --init --recursive
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
2. Add baserom
Add the file for US v1.0 as baserom.us.v10.z64 in the project folder.
(optional): Check the baserom checksum
sha1sum baserom.us.v10.z64
The output should match the checksum specified above.
3. Build
To extract and build everything simply run:
make
If you want to build a specific module, instead do:
make <module_id>
...where the following are supported values of <module_id>
core1core2MMTTCCCBGSFPlairGVCCWRBBMMMSMfightcutscenes
Version Selection
Drop in us.v10 us.v11, jp, or pal as baserom.<version>.z64 e.g. baserom.us.v11.z64
make VERSION=us.v11
Local (Docker - Linux/macOS)
1. Get the Docker image
(if available) you can pull it from GitLab (but you need to be logged in):
docker login registry.gitlab.com
docker pull registry.gitlab.com/banjo.decomp/banjo-kazooie:latest
(otherwise) you can build it yourself:
docker build -t banjo-kazooie .
NOTE for ARM users (Windows ARM, Raspberry Pi and similar, or Apple Silicon): Use this command instead:
docker build --platform linux/amd64 -t banjo-kazooie .
2. Add baserom
Follow the same instructions as Step 3 above in "Local (Linux)".
3. Run the Docker container
docker run -it --rm -v $(pwd):/banjo banjo-kazooie
NOTE for ARM users: Use this command instead:
docker run --platform linux/amd64 -it --rm -v $(pwd):/banjo banjo-kazooie
4. Build
Follow the same instructions as Step 4 above in "Local (Linux)".
To exit Docker, simply type exit.
Cloud (GitLab CI)
These are the instructions for building on GitLab CI. This applies to the main repo - if you have a fork, you will need to follow these steps too!
1. Upload the baserom
Upload the file for US v1.0 as baserom.us.v10.enc.z64 to a remote server where it can be downloaded from with wget or curl. The file has to be encrypted with AES-256-CBC, as follows:
openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -salt -in baserom.us.v10.z64 -out baserom.us.v10.enc.z64
Then, upload the encrypted file to a server and get a direct download link.
Sharing services like Google Drive, Dropbox, or OneDrive might not work, as they require manual interaction to download the file.
2. Set up environment variables
In your GitLab project, go to Settings > CI/CD > Variables and add the following variables (for each version):
BASEROM_<VER>_URL: a direct download URL for the baserom.us.v10.z64 file (see above); this file has to be encrypted withAES-256-CBCBASEROM_<VER>_KEY: the AES key used to encrypt the baserom file aboveBASEROM_<VER>_SHA1: the SHA1 checksum of the baserom file; simply use the one mentioned above
Replace <VER> with the version you are using:
US10US11JPPAL
3. Trigger the pipeline
Push a commit to your repository and you should see a new pipeline starting in the CI/CD > Pipelines section!