 Today, I'm going to show you how to set up some remote access to your arcade cabinet, your arcade one up cabinet, which is running Android. There's lots of ways you can do this, but I like doing everything through SSH. So we're going to set up Turmux and SSH. This is basically an Android tutorial. We're just going to apply it to a cabinet. So the first thing you need to do is plug in a flash drive that has been formatted for the device with the APK. We're going to hit Windows N on a keyboard that we also have hooked up and we are going to click our little settings icon here. Next, you're going to go to storage and we're going to move to the USB drive that we have the APK on. Once we do that, we're going to navigate to the folder. I put it in the downloads folder on the USB flash drive. So double click on that and then click on the APK for Turmux. I've actually downloaded two different files here, but just click on the one that you downloaded. FDroid is a great place to get this APK. It's going to warn you that you're doing this for an unknown source. Just click continue and install and then go through that process. Once it's done installing, you can click done or you can click open. Oh, it's going to ask you for access to storage. You're going to confirm that because we do want to access the storage. That's kind of why we're saying this up or at least one of the reasons. Okay. Once it's installed, we can go ahead and click open, which will open up Turmux. I will take a moment to load up all the default settings. And then at this point, we want to make sure that we have Wi-Fi on. So what we're going to do is hit Windows N on our keyboard again. Now I set up Wi-Fi when I first set up this device, but I have disabled it since then. I just click there to turn it back on. And at this point, we can PKG update and and PKG upgrade. And this should update all our package lists and upgrade all the packages. Now this will take a few minutes, especially since it's your first time running it. And then after that, we're going to want to install our open SSH server. And the package you might think would be open SSH server or open SSHD. But what we're going to do here is when you try to run that, it might tell you the first time you run this that you want to change repos. So you can run Turmux change dash repos. You can go menu select it. I'm just going to select all mirrors. And for some reason, it picked out a server in Austria for me. I'm not sure why. It doesn't really matter. I'm not going to install a lot of packages. But again, we're going to then, again, if you want, run PKG update and PKG upgrade just to make sure that all the packages are updated now that we changed our repositories. Then we're going to do PKG install. Again, I tried open SSHD, but it's just open SSH with no D. So then I tried open SSHD. It's or just SSHD. It is PKG install open SSH is the name of the package. And agreed to the settings. It will go through download those packages, install it and set up an encryption key for you. And then at this point, you're going to need to set up a password because by default, Android devices don't have passwords for the user here. So there's going to type in PASWD and then type in your password twice. Probably has to be a minimum of six characters by default. But remember what you type. You can always change it later. And new password was successfully set up. Now we run SSHD to enable that. And I'm going to check my IP, but you need to install package PKG install IP route to to install the IP application at this point. Once it's installed, you can run the IP space a command again to see what your IP is. Of course, you can always go into the Android settings and see under network what your IP address is. Once you have your IP address, we also need to set up the storage. So termux, setup, storage that will allow you to access the storage on the Android system. And you can see if I see the storage in our home directory, you can see that we have folders here shared would be your main storage for Android files that you may want to push the device. Here I'm going to check out the size of the hard drive. Now I have the internal storage and I have the flash drive installed. The flash drive is 128 gigs. You can see the internal here. It says that it's 1.2 really. I think that it might be like a four gig. I saw at one point, but I'm going to put in a 32 gig flash drive. Again, Windows ends bring down this menu and I'm going to click to format that. Now in a previous video with the USB drive, I did portable storage for this. I'm going to do use tablet storage. This will basically kind of integrate it. So it's seen as part of your Android storage instead of a separate piece of storage. This is good in some cases because you can actually install applications to that. So your applications aren't filling up the internal storage. They told me that my SD card was a little slow, but I said, continue anyway, move the content. And here's going to move some of the applications and settings for applications over to the SD card. Of course, don't remove the SD card while you're doing this, but there's going to be a card that's in there all the time and basically just bumps up the internal storage to the 32 gigs plus the internal storage. Once we're done with that, we can go back to here and I can then pull down our menu again, Windows and once again, and I'm going to go to the settings gear. And in here, I'm going to scroll down and I am going to go to storage and just check. You can see that I have 3.66 gigs of 32 or I guess 36 it says. So the four internal and then the 32 I added. Now I'm on my desktop machine. We set up SSH. So in on Linux on any file manager, SSH forward slash colon forward slash forward slash the IP address. And for term mux, it's 80 22. And that will allow you to mount that drive. And then here I can just drag and drop any files from my computer to the remote computer. Of course, we could always use the shell and push stuff over, but I'm going to go to retroarch.com. Scroll down to in the download section to where it says Android. And I'm going to download the file now. At first time, I downloaded 64 bit because I just assumed the system was 64 bit. But then I went to install it and it failed. And I just assumed that it was pride because it's not a 64 bit system. So I checked. I went back. I downloaded the 32 bit APK copied that over and retroarch installed. No problem. And that was it. Again, this is not specific to this arcade cabinet. This is how you would set up SSH server for sharing or remote access on any Android device. But since this device is running Android, this is the way you go about doing it. And now not only can I copy files over, I can also get a shell on the system and change things. Now, when you restart the system, the SSH server is going to get shut off. And you can go back into term mux and turn it back on. There is also another application called term mux boot that you can also install. And in there you can have scripts run at boot time and you can enable SSH server to start at boot. But that's it. I thank you for watching. Please visit filmsbychrist.com. That's Chris the K. There's a link in the description as always. I hope that you have a great day.