Big news: RomM 2.0 has been released! The coolest self-hosted ROM manager just got a little cooler. Included in this release are a couple big features, a number of improvements, and a LOT of small fixes.
Authentication
Support for session based, Basic and OAuth-backed authentication is now stable and generally available. Limit access to your library by enabling authentication, and grant limited access to your friends and family by giving them a specific role (viewer, editor or admin).
Machine-to-machine communication is now possible via the API, and one of the supported authentication methods (basic or token based). Read more about it on the wiki.
Background worker
This release adds experimental support for Redis, which, along with enabling session-backed authentication, allows RomM to run library scans in a background worker. This means any scan you run against your library will continue to run, even if you navigate to another page, or close the window entirely.
Not included in 2.0 (but coming in a future 2.x release) is the ability to schedule and run asynchronous tasks, which will help manage your library behind-the-scenes.
Bulk selection
Managing large libraries is now much easier using the gallery bulk selector, which allows you to mass rescan, update, download and delete a selection of games.
So what’s next?
In the short term, we plan to improve basic functionality, add more features to the client (collections, recently added, UI options, etc.), introduce scheduled backend tasks (automated library management), and refactor the backend to make it easier to build on later
In the long term, there are two feature we’re keen to build: .DAT file support (automated game recognition via hash comparison) and physical device management. This would allow you to send games to your devices (Retrodeck, OnionOS, GarlicOS, PC, Android, etc.) and sync save states/save files between devices.
If you have any questions, please post them in the comments and we’ll be happy to answer them!
Check the release notes to check the breaking changes that this version has. You will need to adapt your docker-compose.yml file.
Thanks to u/arcaneasada_romm for all his effort and help because without him RomM v2.0.0 wouldn’t be possible.
Thanks to all the contributors that made RomM a better software!
I didn’t need this. Now im setting it up… Thanks :D
Can I use this app organise my roms and manage which ones are on my steam deck?
Not yet, but in the future RomM will support device management.
The link to the docker-compose example in the release notes doesn’t work, but I was able to get it working piecing together the other release notes, finally able to scan my library now due to the background worker :D
Amazing work all around!
Thanks for the heads up! We recently switched the exposed API port but forgot to update the docs, which have now been fixed.
Not sure if you still see replies to this thread but is there an option to store metadata (mostly images) in the folder or a subfolder? For example this is how Jellyfin is storing it if you tick the store metadata in folders option. https://i.imgur.com/F2ku5wa.png
It stores folder.jpg (main image), logo.jpg (logo), background.jpg (if you use backgrounds/headers) in the main folder and can also store all other metadata in a .nfo. Sometimes it also stores metadata in a subfolder for example the episode thumbnails are stored in a subfolder.
I think this is an important option for a proper collection, one reason is because an emulator or emulator manager might use these images themselves to populate their navigation menus which if they’re all hidden away in an romm database, won’t be seen. Another is that it makes browsing your collection in a regular file browser a lot more visual and aesthetic
Hi! I think this can be a good improvement for our current metadata resources structure. Could you open a GitHub issue to keep the track?
Sure I’ll do that shortly, appreciate the reply
Solid release! Thanks for all of your efforts on this one.
This seems amazing! Stupid question: I’ve already my big Roms folders, I need to change the structure of my files / folders or can I use the same I’m using?
Thank you!
It depends, as long as your folder structure follows the [RomM folder structure convention](https://github.com/zurdi15/romm#-folder-structure) you will be able to scan it directly.I have a lot of ROMs that aren’t well organized/named. I have lots of dupes too.
What would you recommend me to use to organize? Most of the programs for this are pretty old and for Windows. Is that still as good as it gets? Any suggestions?
I don’t know any program to organize and/or rename rom files, but as u/arcaneasada_romm said, RomM will have a cli (and eventually through the web UI) to do such things, but that’s in the long term.
If you find it’s too much work right now to restructure your roms in a way that conforms with RomM, we do plan to build cli commands in the near future, one of which will “import” files into a common structure.
Is this something i could integrate with emudeck on my steamdeck
Cool! I’ll try it sometime over the weekend. Does this have built in emulators as well?
Integrating RomM with emulatorjs is actually in the roadmap! But not yet.
I’ve been out of the loop regarding game emulation for a few years now. Is there a way to integrate this with some emulator that’ll allow all ROMs to be stored in RomM, but accessed through the emulator?
Are there screenshots available anywhere?