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Commit Graph

8033 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oliver Schmidt
70a131e09a Just a minor comment improvement. 2018-09-02 23:07:26 +02:00
Greg King
39694d0aaa Fixed bugs; and, improved the efficiency of some pce library functions. 2018-08-30 11:48:46 +02:00
Greg King
959eff34a3 Fixed and improved some pce comments. 2018-08-30 11:48:46 +02:00
Greg King
2cc822b44e Fixed some mistakes (mostly in the documentation). 2018-08-30 11:48:46 +02:00
Greg King
b5d939c858 Style changes. 2018-08-30 11:48:46 +02:00
Greg King
203200e259 Used I/O mirror locations that avoid (redirected) zero-page accesses. 2018-08-30 11:48:46 +02:00
Greg King
c39d07dd17 Document style clean-up. 2018-08-29 15:43:20 -04:00
Greg King
f2d2f3c193 Moved the NES font into its own object module.
It can be replaced by a custom font when a program is built.
2018-08-29 12:13:58 -04:00
greg-king5
a08192b53e
Merge pull request #706 from xlar54/master
* tgi driver for c128 VIC-II

* Made the VIC-IIe TGI driver put its bitmap behind the ROMs.

* c128-hi.tgi doc
2018-08-29 10:34:05 -04:00
Laubzega
1b0e2cf783 Fix for multiple overlay segments. 2018-08-25 20:21:12 -07:00
Laubzega
8b584cb89f Add segment type "overlay". 2018-08-25 10:18:23 -07:00
Christian Groessler
2d4210b309 Atari5200 joystick driver: enable POT input.
The "Atari800" emulator doesn't emulate this aspect, therefore the problem
wasn't noticed before.
2018-08-24 17:04:31 +02:00
Greg King
31461aaf02 Made cc65's "Illegal escaped character" diagnostic show which code was escaped. 2018-08-21 08:58:21 -04:00
Stefan
f3ef819b43 Update crt0.s 2018-08-21 12:21:56 +02:00
Stefan
3ae5161636 CMOS optimisation 3rd
"The decimal flag D is cleared" [...]
http://shu.emuunlim.com/download/pcedocs/pce_cpu.html
2018-08-21 12:21:56 +02:00
Greg King
a76dcdc419 Removed the compiler's recovery code for illegal escaped characters.
It caused the error cascade that it was supposed to prevent.
2018-08-20 17:51:22 -04:00
Stefan
199226d089 Update irq.s 2018-08-20 22:31:08 +02:00
Stefan
e335b50ed1 CMOS optimisation
The Lynx CPU always cleared the flag.
2018-08-20 22:30:41 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
357d94e834 seek test: Test some additional error cases. 2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
0a7702626f seek test: remove trailing newline from filename
Looks like no one ever tried this?  fopen was returning EINVAL because
fgets was leaving a trailing newline at the end of the filename.
(Which is what fgets is documented to do.)
2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
b37d0a444c lseek: Return EINVAL if new position is less than 0 or greater than 2^24 - 1.
Also, implemented @greg-king5's suggestion to save a byte on error paths.
2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
59a4ab8778 lseek: Implement additional feedback from PR #723.
* Check CPU_ISET_65SC02 rather than APPLE2ENH.
* Set sreg and sreg+1 to $FF on error, to return -1 as a long.
2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
8cb930b50e lseek: use STZ for APPLE2ENH
(As suggested in pull request.)
2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
68a115cacf Fix ftell() on Apple II to return the correct value.
Fixes this issue:
https://github.com/cc65/cc65/issues/722

ftell() returns the value returned by lseek(), and lseek() for the
Apple II wasn't returning a value.
2018-08-20 22:24:48 +02:00
Greg King
9fee605e65 Added more source-code improvements to the conio test program.
Also, made the f6/f5 function keys change the border color instead of the background color.
2018-08-20 14:55:39 -04:00
Oliver Schmidt
13790bdbf0 Improved CONIO test in several ways.
- Use more consistent source code style.
- Don't presume that CH_F... constants are present.
- Allow to quit the program via 'Enter'.
2018-08-20 00:30:17 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
1644bcdf03 Implemented line wrap.
According to https://github.com/cc65/wiki/wiki/Direct-console-IO it is undefined what happens when the end of the sceen is reached. But it is _not_ undefined what happens when the end of the line is reached. So implement the usual thing - which was easy enough to do after all.
2018-08-20 00:30:17 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
f8c6c58373 Made Apple II CONIO more flexible.
Originally the Apple II had a 64 char set and used the upper two bits to control inverse and blinking. The Apple //e brought then an alternate char set without blinking but more individual chars. However, it does _not_ contain 128 chars and use the upper bit to control inverse as one would assume. Rather it contains more than 128 chars - the MouseText chars. And because Apple wanted to provide as much backward compatibility as possible with the original char set, the alternate char set has a rather weird layout for chars > 128 with the inverse lowercase chars _not_ at (normal lowercase char + 128).

So far the Apple II CONIO implementation mapped chars 128-255 to chars 0-127 (with the exception of \r and \n). It made use of alternate chars > 128 transparently for the user via reverse(1). The user didn't have direct access to the MouseText chars, they were only used interally for things like chline() and cvline().

Now the mapping of chars 128-255 to 0-127 is removed. Using chars > 128 gives the user direct access to the "raw" alternate chars > 128. This especially give the use direct access to the MouseText chars. But this clashes with the exsisting (and still desirable) revers(1) logic. Combining reverse(1) with chars > 128 just doesn't result in anything usable!

What motivated this change? When I worked on the VT100 line drawing support for Telnet65 on the Apple //e (not using CONIO at all) I finally understood how MouseText is intended to be used to draw arbitrary grids with just three chars: A special "L" type char, the underscore and a vertical bar at the left side of the char box. I notice that with those chars it is possible to follow the CONIO approach to boxes and grids: Combining chline()/cvline() with special CH_... char constants for edges and intersections.

But in order to actually do so I needed to be able to define CH_... constants that when fed into the ordinary cputc() pipeline end up as MouseText chars. The obvious approach was to allow chars > 128 to directly access MouseText chars :-)

Now that the native CONIO box/grid approach works I deleted the Apple //e proprietary textframe() function that I added as replacement quite some years ago.

Again: Please note that chline()/cvline() and the CH... constants don't work with reverse(1)!
2018-08-20 00:30:17 +02:00
Greg King
7b8d4b28c7 Fixed the system banking in the cbm510 and the cbm610 targets' versions of clock_gettime() and clock_settime().
Their library function calls must run in the execution bank.
2018-08-19 17:12:54 -04:00
Stefan
b93b88211c WDM support (#721)
WDM support
2018-08-19 10:29:25 -04:00
Oliver Schmidt
03a99569e3 Optimize for size. 2018-08-19 14:35:30 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
3598fb505d Fixed Visual C++ build (and some style adjustments). 2018-08-19 00:01:40 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
250e4ed9e0 Added dummy clock_settime() for the Atari.
Allow to build ip65/date65.
2018-08-18 01:36:56 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
fe5af26f9f Express assumption about struct timespec.
We basically cast a struct timespec pointer to a time_t pointer when we pass the clock_settime() paramter to localtime(). Explicitly express that in the source code.
2018-08-18 01:29:40 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
eb9872c684 Added clock_settime() for some CBMs.
The CIA TOD only stores the time but not the date. Therefore the date set by clock_settime() ist just stored inside the C library for retrieval via clock_gettime().

The "very special" handling of 12AM/PM is based on https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.sys.cbm/ysVYSX4AMbc/vHrXCWEhCOUJ saying:

==========

24hr: Wr => Rd => Nx
--------------------
  0 : 92 => 12 => 01   <= Switch from 00 to 01 (24-hour notation)
  1 : 01 => 01 => 02
  2 : 02 => 02 => 03
 11 : 11 => 11 => 92
 12 : 12 => 92 => 81   <= Switch from 12 to 13 (24-hour notation)
 13 : 81 => 81 => 82
 14 : 82 => 82 => 83
 23 : 91 => 91 => 12

1. column ("24hr"): hour to be tested (decimal)
2. column ("Wr"):   hour written to TOD register (BCD)
3. column ("Rd"):   hour read from TOD register (BCD) immediately after writing the value in column 2 to see the conversion between AM/PM, if any
4. column ("Nx"):   next hour (BCD) after the hour switch

==========

Thanks Paul!
2018-08-18 01:29:40 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
cb7ec508f6 Fixed 12 AM/PM handling.
Midnight is 12 AM and noon is 12 PM (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12-hour_clock). Therefore we need to subtract 12 hours in exactly those two hours.
2018-08-18 01:29:40 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
e549e23a87 Use non-POSIX values for S_IREAD and S_IWRITE.
(As requested in the PR.)
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
411a5a9483 Don't pass mode argument to open() from _fopen().
It isn't necessary, since paravirt.c has a default if the mode isn't
pushed onto the stack.
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
f72d355b18 sim65: Use mode_t for OMode. 2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
b30f790587 sim65: Blindly guessing to get Travis build to pass. 2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
a7d158e077 sim65: Build was failing on Windows, too.
Microsoft loves putting underscores in front of everything!
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
12fbdbf418 sim65: S_IREAD and S_IWRITE are nonstandard.
The Linux build was failing with:

sim65/paravirt.c: In function ‘PVOpen’:
sim65/paravirt.c:217:18: error: ‘S_IREAD’ undeclared (first use in this function)
         OMode |= S_IREAD;
                  ^
sim65/paravirt.c:217:18: note: each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in
sim65/paravirt.c:220:18: error: ‘S_IWRITE’ undeclared (first use in this function)
         OMode |= S_IWRITE;
                  ^
make[1]: *** [../wrk/sim65/paravirt.o] Error 1
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
974188796c sim65: If mode argument is omitted, use a reasonable default. 2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
aba320eade Allow "mode" argument to open() to be passed from 6502 code.
Implements this suggestion:
https://github.com/cc65/cc65/pull/719#issuecomment-413809096
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Patrick Pelletier
d602572bbe Fix permissions for files created by sim65.
Files created by my programs running under sim65 had really weird permissions:
--w-r--r-x  1 ppelleti  staff  19 Aug 16 23:22 json.test.print.tmp

So, for example, my program running under sim65 was not able to read
the file it had just written.

This is because the third argument to open (mode) was not being
specified in paravirt.c, so it was just picking up random crud off the
stack to use as the mode.

I added a mode of 0666, and now my program runs correctly.
2018-08-17 23:28:45 +02:00
Greg King
d13d068e71 Fixed the generation of the opcode byte when BRK is given an operand, in 65816 CPU mode.
The bug was created by commit 7e8bb7b700.
2018-08-16 23:51:04 -04:00
Oliver Schmidt
f40dcb5883 Added clock_getres() / clock_settime() for the Apple II.
The situation on the Apple II is rather special: There are several types of RTCs. It's not desirable to have specific code for all of them. As the OS supports file timestamps RTC owners usually use OS drivers for their RTC. Those drivers read the RTC and write the result in a "date/time location" in RAM. The OS reads the date/time from the RAM location. If there's no RTC the RAM location keeps containing zeros. The OS uses those zeros as timestamps and the files show up in a directory as "<NO DATE>".

There's no common interface to set RTCs so if an RTC _IS_ present there's just nothing to do. However, if there's _NO_ RTC present the user might very well be interest to "manually" set the RAM location in order to have timestamps. But he surely doesn't want to manually set the RAM location over an over again. Rather he wants to set it just once after booting the OS.

From that perspective it makes most sense to not set both the date and the time but rather only set the date and have the time just stay zero. Then files show up in a directory as "DD-MON-YY  0:00".

So clock_settime() checks if the current time equals 0:00. If it does _NOT_ then an RTC is supposed to be active and clock_settime() fails with ERANGE. Otherwise clock_settime() ignores sets the date - and completely ignores the time provided as parameter.

clock_getres() too checks if the current time equals 0:00. If it does _NOT_ then an RTC is supposed to be active and clock_getres() returns a time resolution of one minute. Otherwise clock_getres() presumes that the only one who sets the RAM location is clock_settime() and therefore returns a time resolution of one day.
2018-08-15 21:34:35 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
326ca263c9 Minor style fix. 2018-08-15 19:40:56 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
59a8149556 Added clock_getres() for CBMs.
All CBMs have a clock (CIA TOD) resolution of 1/10 second.
2018-08-15 19:40:27 +02:00
Oliver Schmidt
842c151edd Replaced _systime with clock_gettime.
We want to add the capability to not only get the time but also set the time, but there's no "setter" for the "getter" time().

The first ones that come into mind are gettimeofday() and settimeofday(). However, they take a struct timezone argument that doesn't make sense - even the man pages says "The use of the timezone structure is obsolete; the tz argument should normally be specified as NULL." And POSIX says "Applications should use the clock_gettime() function instead of the obsolescent gettimeofday() function."

The ...timeofday() functions work with microseconds while the clock_...time() functions work with nanoseconds. Given that we expect our targets to support only 1/10 of seconds the microseconds look preferable at first sight. However, already microseconds require the cc65 data type 'long' so it's not such a relevant difference to nanoseconds. Additionally clock_getres() seems useful.

In order to avoid code duplication clock_gettime() takes over the role of the actual time getter from _systime(). So time() now calls clock_gettime() instead of _systime().

For some reason beyond my understanding _systime() was mentioned in time.h. _systime() worked exactly like e.g. _sysremove() and those _sys...() functions are all considered internal. The only reason I could see would be a performance gain of bypassing the time() wrapper. However, all known _systime() implementations internally called mktime(). And mktime() is implemented in C using an iterative algorithm so I really can't see what would be left to gain here. From that perspective I decided to just remove _systime().
2018-08-15 16:06:44 +02:00