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CLK/Processors/68000/68000.hpp

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//
// 68000.hpp
// Clock Signal
//
// Created by Thomas Harte on 08/03/2019.
// Copyright © 2019 Thomas Harte. All rights reserved.
//
#ifndef MC68000_h
#define MC68000_h
#include <cstdint>
#include <iomanip>
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include "../../ClockReceiver/ClockReceiver.hpp"
#include "../RegisterSizes.hpp"
namespace CPU {
namespace MC68000 {
/*!
A microcycle is an atomic unit of 68000 bus activity — it is a single item large enough
fully to specify a sequence of bus events that occur without any possible interruption.
Concretely, a standard read cycle breaks down into at least two microcycles:
1) a 5 half-cycle length microcycle in which the address strobe is signalled; and
2) a 3 half-cycle length microcycle in which at least one of the data strobes is
signalled, and the data bus is sampled.
That is, assuming DTack were signalled when microcycle (1) ended. If not then additional
wait state microcycles would fall between those two parts.
The 68000 data sheet defines when the address becomes valid during microcycle (1), and
when the address strobe is actually asserted. But those timings are fixed. So simply
telling you that this was a microcycle during which the address trobe was signalled is
sufficient fully to describe the bus activity.
(Aside: see the 68000 template's definition for options re: implicit DTack; if your
68000 owner can always predict exactly how long it will hold DTack following observation
of an address-strobing microcycle, it can just supply those periods for accounting and
avoid the runtime cost of actual DTack emulation. But such as the bus allows.)
*/
struct Microcycle {
/*
The operation code is a mask of all the signals that relevantly became active during
this microcycle.
*/
static const int Address = 1 << 0;
static const int UpperData = 1 << 1;
static const int LowerData = 1 << 2;
static const int ReadWrite = 1 << 3; // Set = read; unset = write.
static const int IsData = 1 << 4; // i.e. this is FC0.
static const int IsProgram = 1 << 5; // i.e. this is FC1.
int operation = 0;
HalfCycles length = HalfCycles(2);
/*!
For expediency, this provides a full 32-bit byte-resolution address — e.g.
if reading indirectly via an address register, this will indicate the full
value of the address register.
The receiver should ignore bits 0 and 24+.
*/
const uint32_t *address = nullptr;
RegisterPair16 *value = nullptr;
};
/*!
This is the prototype for a 68000 bus handler; real bus handlers can descend from this
in order to get default implementations of any changes that may occur in the expected interface.
*/
class BusHandler {
public:
/*!
Provides the bus handler with a single Microcycle to 'perform'.
FC0 and FC1 are provided inside the microcycle as the IsData and IsProgram
flags; FC2 is provided here as is_supervisor — it'll be either 0 or 1.
*/
HalfCycles perform_bus_operation(const Microcycle &cycle, int is_supervisor) {
return HalfCycles(0);
}
void flush() {}
};
#include "Implementation/68000Storage.hpp"
class ProcessorBase: public ProcessorStorage {
};
template <class T, bool dtack_is_implicit> class Processor: public ProcessorBase {
public:
Processor(T &bus_handler) : ProcessorBase(), bus_handler_(bus_handler) {}
void run_for(HalfCycles duration);
private:
T &bus_handler_;
};
#include "Implementation/68000Implementation.hpp"
}
}
#endif /* MC68000_h */