6.5 KiB
MissionControl
Use controllers from other consoles natively on your Nintendo Switch via Bluetooth. No dongles or other external hardware neccessary.
Features
- Supports all firmware versions
- Pair Bluetooth controllers natively via
Change Grip/Order
screen - Native button remapping (firmware 10.0.0+)
btdrv-mitm
sysmodule adds extension IPC commands that can be used to interact with thebluetooth
process without interfering with the state of the system.
Supported Controllers
Currently, the following controllers are supported. If you have a third-party variant of one of the below, or a Bluetooth controller that isn't listed, consider submitting an issue with the controller details, including vid/pid, to request support.
- Nintendo Wii Remote + extensions (Nunchuck, Classic Controller, Classic Controller Pro)
- Nintendo WiiU Pro Controller
- Sony DualShock4 Controller
- Microsoft Xbox One S Controller*
*Not all Xbox One wireless controllers support Bluetooth. Older variants use a proprietary 2.4Ghz protocol and cannot be used with the Switch. See here for information on identifying the Bluetooth variant.
Requirements
- Hackable Nintendo Switch running the latest Atmosphère CFW
- Compatible Bluetooth controller
Installation
Download the latest release .zip and extract to the root of your SD card. A console reboot is required in order for MissionControl to become active.
Note: Currently a modified boot2 is required to launch btdrv-mitm early enough to intercept Bluetooth initialisation. This will get overwritten any time Atmosphère is updated on SD, and will need to be replaced.
Usage
Install MissionControl to your SD card, reboot the console and then pair controllers as you normally would via the Controllers->Change Grip/Order
screen. Once paired, controllers will reconnect automatically when woken up.
Most native features should just work (with the exception of things like firmware update). If you find something that's broken please create an issue.
How it works
MissionControl works by Man-In-The-Middling the bluetooth
system module and intercepting its initialisation IPC commands and system events, and translating incoming/outgoing data to convince the Switch that it's communicating with an official Pro Controller.
To achieve this, the btdrv-mitm
module obtains the handles to bluetooth
system events and shared memory when the system attempts to initialise them over IPC via the btm
and hid
modules. It then creates its own secondary versions of these and passes their handles on instead of the original. This allows modifications to be made to any data buffers before notifying (or not) the system. Additionally, the WriteHidData
IPC command is intercepted to translate or drop outgoing requests to the controller. In the case of the latter, fake responses can be written directly to the buffer in shared memory.
Intercepting initialisation IPC commands also allows homebrew to properly make use of the bluetooth
service. Normally, calling any of the IPC commands that would initialise or finalise system events would either crash the console, or invalidate the event handles held by system processes. With btdrv-mitm
we are able to hand out alternative event handles when homebrew attempts to initialise an interface, and redirect the real system events to those instead of the events held by system processes.
IPS patches to the bluetooth
module are provided to (re)enable the passing of abitrary pincodes when Bluetooth legacy pairing is used (Nintendo hardcodes a value of '0000'
, ignoring IPC arguments). This enables Wii(U) devices to be paired with the console.
Building from source
First, clone the repository to your local machine
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/ndeadly/MissionControl.git
MissionControl uses a custom fork of libnx
that adds Bluetooth service wrappers and type definitions. This needs to be built and installed first
cd libnx
make && make install
Next build Atmosphere-libs
cd ../Atmosphere-libs
make
Finally, build and package the distribution .zip. This will build a custom boot2
, btdrv-mitm
and package them up with bluetooth exefs patches.
cd ..
make dist
The resulting package can be installed as described above.
Planned Features
- Controller management application
- Rumble support
- Motion support
- Keyboard and mouse support
Known Issues and limitations
- Non-Switch controllers cannot be used to wake the system from sleep.
- Controllers that haven't had their hardware ID whitelisted for identification will not be recognised as connected. This can include some official Switch controllers. They will however still pair with the console and store their details to the database. If you encounter such a controller, please create an issue requesting support.
- Wii(U) controllers can take a while to pair with the console. For some reason they are only detected at the end of a device discovery cycle. Be patient and re-press the sync button on the controller if neccessary.
- Xbox One button layout was changed at some point in a firmware update. Please ensure your controller firmware is up to date if you have issues with incorrect button mappings.
Credits
- switchbrew for the extensive documention of the Switch OS.
- devkitPro for the homebrew compiler toolchain.
- SciresM for his dedicated work on the Atmosphère project, libstratosphere and general helpfulness with all things Switch related.
- misson20000 for his handy debug monitor Twili and IPC logger Ilia
- dekuNukem, CTCaer, shinyquagsire23 and others for their work in reversing and documenting the switch controller communication protocol.
- friedkeenan for helping to test Wii extension controller support.
- Everyone else over at the ReSwitched discord server who helped answering technical questions.