a gcc-based cross-compiler for classic 68K and PPC Macintoshes
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Retro68

A GCC-based cross-compilation environment for 68K Macs. Why? Because there is no decent C++11 Compiler targetting Apple's System 6. If that's not a sufficient reason for you, I'm sure you will find someting more useful elsewhere.

If you are crazy enough to try it out, please say hello at wolfgang.thaller@gmx.net.

Prerequisites

  • Linux or Mac OS X
  • boost
  • CMake 2.8
  • GCC dependencies: GMP 4.2+, MPFR 2.3.1+ and MPC 0.8.0+
  • bison version 3.0.2 or later
  • Apple Universal Interfaces (tested with version 3.1 - see below)
  • An ancient Mac and/or an emulator.

For Ubuntu Linux, the following should help a bit:

sudo apt-get install cmake libgmp-dev libmpfr-dev libmpc-dev libboost-all-dev bison

On a Mac, get the homebrew package manager and:

brew install cmake gmp mpfr libmpc boost bison

In theory, you can also run Retro68 on a PowerMac G4 or G5 running Mac OS 10.4 (Tiger). In that case, get the tigerbrew package manager and

brew install gcc cmake

Apple Universal Interfaces

The Universal Interfaces used to be a free download from Apple. However, they have taken the site offline and the license agreement prohibits redistribution, so this might be a bit hard to find nowadays.

You do need a version that still supports 68K Mac development.

The package might be somewhere in this huge snapshot of Apple's FTP site made by the Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/ftpsites_developer.apple.com

If you have a Mac or some other way to read DiskCopy images, grab the MPW 3.5 image from:

http://macintoshgarden.org/apps/macintosh-programmer%E2%80%99s-workshop

and use the CIncludes directory from there.

Put the C header files into a directory called "CIncludes" at the top level of the Retro68 directory.

Building

Once you have all the prerequisites, execute these commands from the top level of the Retro68 directory:

cd ..
mkdir Retro68-build
cd Retro68-build
sh ../Retro68/build-toolchain.sh 

The toolchain will be installed in the "toolchain" directory inside the build directory.

Sample programs

Sample programs are built in several formats:

  • On Macs: Real Mac Applications (ApplicationName.APPL)
  • Elsewhere: ApplicationName.APPL, .rsrc/ApplicationName.APPL, .finf/ApplicationName.APPL (BasiliskII/Sheepshaver compatible)
  • MacBinary files (ApplicationName.bin)
  • Raw HFS disk image (ApplicationName.dsk, containing ApplicationName)

Look under Retro68-build/build-target/ for the compiled binaries.

Overview

Retro68 is an aggegation of various existing free software projects with a few small key components added.

Third Party Components:

  • binutils 2.20.1
  • gcc 4.9.1 with some Retro68-specific hacks
  • newlib 2.10.1 (inside the gcc directory)
  • elf2flt (from the ucLinux project's CVS)
  • hfsutils 3.2.6 (just for convenience)

Retro68-Specific Components:

  • ASFilter
  • PrepareHeaders.hs
  • MakeAPPL
  • libretro
  • TestApps - a few tiny test programs
  • Sample Programs: Raytracer, HelloWorld, Launcher, Dialog

binutils

Currently unmodified from the original. Configured for m68k-unknown-elf.

gcc

Various patches and hacks, most importantly:

  • Changed register usage.
  • Change the way 1-byte and 2-byte parameters are passed.
  • support `"\pPascal String Literals"``
  • added a pascal calling convention (pascal or __attribute__((__pascal__)))
  • added __attribute__((__raw_inline__(word1, word2, word3))) to emulate ONEWORDINLINE and friends
  • added __attribute__((regparam("..."))) to specify custom register calling conventions
  • added #pragma parameter to specify custom register calling conventions

newlib

Standard C library. Currently unmodified. The missing platform-dependent bits haven't been added, instead they are found in 'libretro'.

elf2flt

Converts from ELF to a much simpler binary format. Minor patch: provide symbols around .init and .fini sections

hfsutils:

Included for convenience. No changes.

prepare-headers.sh:

Apply any necessary patches to Apple's headers; currently, this only modifies ConditionalMacros.h.

ASFilter:

An evil hack. Installs a replacement for m68k-unknown-elf-as that runs a few regexps on generated assembly code. Two things are changed:

  1. Replace occurrences of the RTD instruction, with something that is supported on 68000 as well. GCC currently generates this in pascal functions that you declare.
  2. While we're at it, remove unnecessary duplicate RTS instructions from MacsBug symbol names.

MakeAPPL

Reads a FLAT executable as output by elf2flt and converts it to a MacBinary file containing a classic Macintosh application.

libretro

Contains startup code (handles relocations) and implementations for some standard library functions.

Console

Contains a library that implements basic text console functionality.

Sample Program: Hello World

The binary is in Retro68-build/build-target/Samples/HelloWorld/.

Sample Program: Raytracer

Calculates a nice 3D image, pixel by pixel. There are two versions: raytracer.c is a straightforward plain C implementation using floating point arithmetic.

Raytracer2 makes use of C++ features; it also uses fixed point arithmetic instead of floating point (operator overloading FTW).

The binaries are in Retro68-build/build-target/Samples/Raytracer/.

Sample Program: Launcher

A utility program for using Retro68 together with the minivmac emulator. Waits for a disk(image) to be inserted, and if it contains a single application, launches it. After the application exits, the disk is ejected again. This way, you can just drag a .dsk file generated by Retro68 on a minivmac Window to run your application.

Intended for System 6 without Multifinder.

Sample Program: Dialog

Shows a simple and useless dialog box. Demonstrates how to use Rez, the resource compiler. The binary is in Retro68-build/build-target/Samples/Dialog/.

License

The original parts of Retro68 are licensed under GPL3+, as are most other parts. Some parts are licensed GPL2+ or with more liberal licenses. Check the copyright notices in the individual files.