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158 lines
4.9 KiB
Plaintext
158 lines
4.9 KiB
Plaintext
<chapter id="ch5-link">
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<title>Local variables and memory segments</title>
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<para>
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As mentioned in <xref linkend="ch4-link">, there are better ways
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to handle waiting than just executing vast numbers of NOPs. The
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Commodore 64 KERNAL library includes a <literal>rdtim</literal>
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routine that returns the uptime of the machine, in
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60<superscript>th</superscript>s of a second, as a 24-bit integer.
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The Commodore 64 programmer's guide available online actually has
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a bug in it, reversing the significance of the A and Y registers.
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The accumulator holds the <emphasis>least</emphasis> significant
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byte, not the most.
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</para>
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<para>
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Here's a first shot at a better delay routine:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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.scope
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; data used by the delay routine
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_tmp: .byte 0
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_target: .byte 0
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delay: sta _tmp ; save argument (rdtim destroys it)
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jsr rdtim
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clc
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adc _tmp ; add current time to get target
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sta _target
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* jsr rdtim
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cmp _target
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bmi - ; Buzz until target reached
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rts
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.scend
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</programlisting>
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<para>
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This works, but it eats up two bytes of file space that don't
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really need to be specified. Also, it's modifying data inside a
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program text area, which isn't good if you're assembling to a ROM
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chip. (Since the Commodore 64 stores its programs in RAM, it's
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not an issue for us here.) A slightly better solution is to
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use <literal>.alias</literal> to assign the names to chunks of RAM
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somewhere. There's a 4K chunk of RAM from $C000 through $CFFF
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between the BASIC ROM and the I/O ROM that should serve our
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purposes nicely. We can replace the definitions
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of <literal>_tmp</literal> and <literal>_target</literal> with:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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; data used by the delay routine
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.alias _tmp $C000
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.alias _target $C001
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</programlisting>
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<para>
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This works better, but now we've just added a major bookkeeping
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burden upon ourselves—we must ensure that no routines step on
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each other. What we'd really like are two separate program
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counters—one for the program text, and one for our variable
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space.
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</para>
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<para>
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Ophis lets us do this with the <literal>.text</literal>
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and <literal>.data</literal> commands.
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The <literal>.text</literal> command switches to the program-text
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counter, and the <literal>.data</literal> command switches to the
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variable-data counter. When Ophis first starts assembling a file,
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it starts in <literal>.text</literal> mode.
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</para>
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<para>
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To reserve space for a variable, use the .space command. This
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takes the form:
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<programlisting>
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.space varname size
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</programlisting>
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which assigns the name <literal>varname</literal> to the current
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program counter, then advances the program counter by the amount
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specified in <literal>size</literal>. Nothing is output to the
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final binary as a result of the <literal>.space</literal> command.
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</para>
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<para>
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You may not put in any commands that produce output into
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a <literal>.data</literal> segment. Generally, all you will be
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using are <literal>.org</literal> and <literal>.space</literal>
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commands. Ophis will not complain if you
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use <literal>.space</literal> inside a <literal>.text</literal>
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segment, but this is nearly always wrong.
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</para>
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<para>
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The final version of <literal>delay</literal> looks like this:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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; DELAY routine. Takes values from the Accumulator and pauses
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; for that many jiffies (1/60th of a second).
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.scope
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.data
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.space _tmp 1
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.space _target 1
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.text
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delay: sta _tmp ; save argument (rdtim destroys it)
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jsr rdtim
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clc
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adc _tmp ; add current time to get target
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sta _target
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* jsr rdtim
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cmp _target
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bmi - ; Buzz until target reached
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rts
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.scend
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</programlisting>
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<para>
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We're not quite done yet, however, because we have to tell the
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data segment where to begin. (If we don't, it starts at 0, which
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is usually wrong.) We add a very brief data segment to the top of
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our code:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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.data
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.org $C000
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.text
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</programlisting>
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<para>
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This will run. However, we also ought to make sure that we aren't
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overstepping any boundaries. Our program text shouldn't run into
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the BASIC chip at $A000, and our data shouldn't run into the I/O
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region at $D000. The <literal>.checkpc</literal> command lets us
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assert that the program counter hasn't reached a specific point
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yet. We put, at the end of our code:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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.checkpc $A000
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.data
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.checkpc $D000
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</programlisting>
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<para>
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The final program is available as <xref linkend="tutor5-src"
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endterm="tutor5-fname">. Note that we based this on the
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all-uppercase version from the last section, not any of the
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charmapped versions.
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</para>
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</chapter>
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