// // ClockConverter.hpp // Clock Signal // // Created by Thomas Harte on 01/01/2023. // Copyright © 2023 Thomas Harte. All rights reserved. // #ifndef ClockConverter_hpp #define ClockConverter_hpp #include "../9918.hpp" namespace TI { namespace TMS { template constexpr int cycles_per_line() { switch(personality) { default: return 342; case Personality::V9938: case Personality::V9958: return 1368; case Personality::MDVDP: return 3420; } } constexpr int TMSAccessWindowsPerLine = 171; /*! This implementation of the TMS, etc mediates between three clocks: 1) the external clock, which is whatever the rest of the system(s) it plugs into run at; 2) the internal clock, which is used to time and place syncs, borders, pixel regions, etc; and 3) a memory acccess clock, which correlates to the number of windows available for memory accesses. E.g. for both a regular TMS9918 and the Sega Master System, the external clock is 3.58Mhz, the internal clock is 5.37Mhz and the memory access clock is 2.69Mhz. Or, put another way, for both a TMS9918 and Master System: * 228 external cycles; * is 342 internal cycles; * which exactly covers 228 NTSC colour clocks; and * contains 171 memory access windows. Both the Yamaha extensions and the Mega Drive VDP are a bit smarter about paged mode memory accesses, obviating any advantage to treating (3) as a separate clock. */ template class ClockConverter { public: /*! Given that another @c source external **half-cycles** has occurred, indicates how many complete internal **cycles** have additionally elapsed since the last call to @c to_internal. E.g. for the TMS, @c source will count 456 ticks per line, and the internal clock runs at 342 ticks per line, so the proper conversion is to multiply by 3/4. */ int to_internal(int source) { switch(personality) { // Default behaviour is to apply a multiplication by 3/4; // this is correct for the TMS and Sega VDPs other than the Mega Drive. default: { const int result = source * 3 + cycles_error_; cycles_error_ = result & 3; return result >> 2; } // The two Yamaha chips have an internal clock that is four times // as fast as the TMS, therefore a stateless translation is possible. case Personality::V9938: case Personality::V9958: return source * 3; // The Mega Drive runs at 3420 master clocks per line, which is then // divided by 4 or 5 depending on other state. That's 7 times the // rate provided to the CPU; given that the input is in half-cycles // the proper multiplier is therefore 3.5. case Personality::MDVDP: { const int result = source * 7 + cycles_error_; cycles_error_ = result & 1; return result >> 1; } } } /*! Provides the number of complete external cycles that lie between now and @c internal_cycles into the future. Any trailing fractional external cycle is discarded. */ HalfCycles half_cycles_before_internal_cycles(int internal_cycles) const { // Logic here correlates with multipliers as per @c to_internal. switch(personality) { default: return HalfCycles( ((internal_cycles << 2) + (2 - cycles_error_)) / 3 ); case Personality::V9938: case Personality::V9958: return HalfCycles(internal_cycles / 3); case Personality::MDVDP: return HalfCycles( ((internal_cycles << 1) + (1 - cycles_error_)) / 7 ); } } /*! Converts a position in internal cycles to its corresponding position on the TMS memory-access clock, i.e. scales down to 171 clocks per line */ static constexpr int to_tms_access_clock(int source) { switch(personality) { default: return source >> 1; case Personality::V9938: case Personality::V9958: return source >> 3; case Personality::MDVDP: return source / 20; } } /// The number of internal cycles in a single line. constexpr static int CyclesPerLine = cycles_per_line(); private: // Holds current residue in conversion from the external to // internal clock. int cycles_error_ = 0; }; } } #endif /* ClockConverter_hpp */