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389 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
389 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
<!doctype linuxdoc system>
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<article>
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<!-- Title information -->
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<title>grc -- GEOS Resource Compiler
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<author><url name="Maciej 'YTM/Elysium' Witkowiak" url="mailto:ytm@elysium.pl">
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<and><url name="Greg King" url="mailto:gngking@erols.com">
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<date>VII 2000; VI,VII 2002; 2005-8-3
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<abstract>
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This document describes a compiler that can create GEOS headers and menues for,
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and VLIR files from, cc65-compiled programs.
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</abstract>
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<!-- Table of contents -->
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<toc>
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<!-- Begin the document -->
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<sect>Overview
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<p><bf/grc/ is a part of cc65's GEOS support. The tool is necessary to
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generate required and optional resources. A required resource for every GEOS
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application is the header, that is: an icon, some strings, and some addresses.
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Optional resources might be menu definitions, other headers (e.g., for data
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files of an app.), dialog definitions, etc. Without an application's header,
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GEOS is unable to load and start it.
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Currently, <bf/grc/ supports only menues and the required header definition,
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along with support for building VLIR-structured files.
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<bf/grc/ generates output in three formats: C header, <bf/ca65/ source (.s),
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and, for linking VLIR, <bf/ld65/ configuration script. That is because
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application header data must be in assembly format, while menu definitions can
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be translated easily into C. The purpose of the C file is to include it as a
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header in only one project file. The assembly source should be processed by
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<bf/ca65/, and linked as the first object (read about <ref
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name="the building process" id="building-seq">). The VLIR structure currently
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is supported for only projects that are written entirely in assembly code.
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<bf/grc/ can be used also as a handy VLIR linker -- used to build
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VLIR-structured <tt/.cvt/ files out of prepared binary chains.
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<sect>Usage
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<p>grc accepts the following options:<tscreen><verb>
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-f force the writing of the output files
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-o name name the .c output file
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-s name name the .s output file
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-l name name the ld65 output file
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-h show this help
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</verb></tscreen>
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When used as a VLIR linker, the correct syntax is:<tscreen><verb>
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grc -vlir output.cvt header.bin vlir0.bin vlir1.bin ...
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</verb></tscreen>
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Default output names are made from input names with extensions replaced by
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<tt/.h/ and <tt/.s/. <bf/grc/ will not overwrite existing files unless forced
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to do so. That is done to avoid situations where you have <tt/test.c/ and
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<tt/test.grc/ files. Both would put their output into <tt/test.s/. For that
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reason, you should name your resource-files differently than sources, e.g.,
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<tt/resource.grc/ or <tt/apphead.grc/.
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<sect>Resource file format
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<p>A resource file has the name extension <tt/.grc/. That is not required, but
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it will make for an easier recognition of the file's purpose. Also, <bf/cl65/
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recognizes those files. <bf/grc/'s parser is very weak, at the moment; so,
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read the comments carefully, and write resources exactly as they are written
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here. Look out for CAPS. and small letters. Everything after a '<tt/;/',
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until the end of the line, is considered as a comment, and ignored. See the
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included <ref name="commented example .grc file" id="example-grc"> for a
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better view of the problem.
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<sect1>Menu definition
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<p><tscreen><verb>
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MENU menuName leftx,topy <ORIENTATION> {
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"item name 1" <MENU_TYPE> pointer
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...
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"item name x" <MENU_TYPE> pointer
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}</verb></tscreen>
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The definition starts with the keyword <tt/MENU/, then goes the menu's name,
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which will be represented in C as <tt/const void/. Then are the co-ordinates
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of the top left corner of the menu box. The position of the bottom right
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corner is estimated, based on the length of item names and the menu's
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orientation. It means that the menu box always will be as large as it should
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be. Then, there's the orientation keyword; it can be either <tt/HORIZONTAL/ or
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<tt/VERTICAL/. Between <tt/{/ and <tt/}/, there's the menu's
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content. It consists of item definitions. First is an item name -- it has to
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be in quotes. Next is a menu-type bit. It can be <tt/MENU_ACTION/ or
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<tt/SUB_MENU/; either of them can be combined with the <tt/DYN_SUB_MENU/ bit
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(see <url name="the GEOSLib documentation" url="geos.html"> for descriptions of
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them). You can use C logical operators in expressions, but you have to do it
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without spaces. So, a dynamically created submenu will be something like:
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<tscreen><verb>
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"dynamic" SUB_MENU|DYN_SUB_MENU create_dynamic</verb></tscreen>
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The last part of the item definition is a pointer which can be any name that is
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present in the C source code that includes the generated header. It can point
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to a function or to another menu definition.
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If you are doing sub(sub)menu definitions, remember to place the lowest level
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definition first, and the top-level menu as the last one. That way, the C
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compiler won't complain about unknown names.
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<sect1>Header definition
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<p><tscreen><verb>
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HEADER <GEOS_TYPE> "dosname" "classname" "version" {
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author "Joe Schmoe"
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info "This is my killer-app!"
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date yy mm dd hh ss
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dostype SEQ
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mode any
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structure SEQ
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}</verb></tscreen>
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The header definition describes the GEOS header sector which is unique to
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each file. Currently, there's no way to change the default <bf/grc/ icon
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(an empty frame). It will be possible in the next version. The definition
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starts with the keyword <tt/HEADER/, then goes the GEOS file-type. You can use
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only <tt/APPLICATION/ here at the moment. Then, there are (each one in quotes)
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the DOS file-name (up to 16 characters), the GEOS Class name (up to 12
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characters), and the version info (up to 4 characters). The version should be
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written as &dquot;<tt/V/x.y&dquot;, where <em/x/ is the major, and <em/y/ is
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the minor, version number. Those fields, along with both braces, are required.
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The lines between braces are optional, and will be replaced by default and
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current values. The keyword <tt/author/ and its value in quotes name the
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programmer, and can be up to 63 bytes long. <tt/info/ (in the same format) can
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have up to 95 characters. If the <tt/date/ field is omitted, then the time of
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that compilation will be placed into the header. Note that, if you do specify
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the date, you have to write all 5 numbers. The <tt/dostype/ can be <tt/SEQ/,
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<tt/PRG/, or <tt/USR/. <tt/USR/ is used by default; GEOS usually doesn't care.
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The <tt/mode/ can be <tt/any/, <tt/40only/, <tt/80only/, or <tt/c64only/; and,
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it describes system requirements. <tt/any/ will work on both 64-GEOS and
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128-GEOS, in 40- and 80-column modes. <tt/40only/ will work on 128-GEOS in
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40-column mode only. <tt/80only/ will work on only 128-GEOS in 80-column mode,
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and <tt/c64only/ will work on only 64-GEOS. The default value for
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<tt/structure/ is <tt/SEQ/ (sequential). You can put <tt/VLIR/ there, too; but
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then, you also have to put in a third type of resource -- a VLIR-table
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description.
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<sect1>VLIR table description
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<p><tscreen><verb>
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VLIR headname address {
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vlir0
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blank
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vlir2
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blank
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vlir4
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}</verb></tscreen>
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The first element is the keyword <tt/VLIR/, then goes the name for the header
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binary file (read below), and the base address for all VLIR chains that are
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different from 0. It can be either decimal (e.g., <tt/4096/) or hexadecimal
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with a <tt/0x/ prefix (e.g., <tt/0x1000/). Then, between braces are the names
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of VLIR chain binaries or the keyword <tt/blank/ which denotes empty chains.
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In the example, chains #1 and #3 are missing. The names between braces are
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the names of binaries that contain code for each VLIR part. They matter only
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for the generated <bf/ld65/ configuration file, and will be the names of the
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resulting binary files after linking. Each one will contain one VLIR chain;
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and, they will have to be put together, in the correct order, into a VLIR
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<tt/.cvt/ file, by <bf/grc/ in its VLIR linker mode.
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The <tt/headname/ will be the name for the binary file which will contain only
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a GEOS <tt/.cvt/ header made out of compiling the <tt/.s/ header file that also
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was generated by <bf/grc/. At the end of the resulting <bf/ld65/ config. file
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(<tt/.cfg/), in comments, there will be information about what commands are
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required for putting the stuff together. Read <ref name="this description"
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id="building-vlir"> for details.
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<sect>Building a GEOS sequential application<label id="building-seq">
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<p>Before proceeding, please read the <url name="compiler" url="cc65.html">,
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<url name="assembler" url="ca65.html">, and <url name="linker" url="ld65.html">
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documentation, and find the appropriate sections about building programs, in
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general.
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GEOS support in cc65 is based on the <em/Convert v2.5/ format, well-known in
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the GEOS world. It means that each file built with the cc65 package has to be
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deconverted, in GEOS, before it can be run. You can read a step-by-step
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description of that in the GEOS section of the <url name="cc65 Compiler Intro"
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url="intro.html">.
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Each project consists of four parts, two are provided by cc65. Those parts
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are:<enum>
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<item>application header
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<item>start-up object
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<item>application objects
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<item>system library
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</enum>
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<bf/2./ and <bf/4./ are with cc65; you have to write the application,
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yourself. ;-)
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The application header is defined in the <tt/HEADER/ section of the <tt/.grc/
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file, and processed into an assembly <tt/.s/ file. You must assemble it, with
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<bf/ca65/, into the object <tt/.o/ format.
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<sect1>Building a GEOS application without cl65
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<p>Assume that there are three input files: &dquot;<tt/test.c/&dquot; (a C
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source), &dquot;<tt/test.h/&dquot; (a header file), and
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&dquot;<tt/resource.grc/&dquot; (with menu and header definitions). Note the
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fact that I <em/don't recommend/ naming that file &dquot;<tt/test.grc/&dquot;,
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because you will have to be very careful with names (<bf/grc/ will make
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&dquot;<tt/test.s/&dquot; and &dquot;<tt/test.h/&dquot; out of
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&dquot;<tt/test.grc/&dquot;, by default; and, you don't want that because
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&dquot;<tt/test.s/&dquot; is compiled from &dquot;<tt/test.c/&dquot;, and
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&dquot;<tt/test.h/&dquot; is something completely different)!
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<bf/One important thing/ -- the top of &dquot;<tt/test.c/&dquot; looks like:
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<tscreen><verb>
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#include <geos.h>
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#include "resource.h"
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</verb></tscreen>
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There are no other includes.
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<sect2>First step -- compiling the resources
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<p><verb>
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$ grc resource.grc
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</verb>
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will produce two output files: &dquot;<tt/resource.h/&dquot; and
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&dquot;<tt/resource.s/&dquot;.
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Note that &dquot;<tt/resource.h/&dquot; is included at the top of
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&dquot;<tt/test.c/&dquot;. So, resource compiling <em/must be/ the first step.
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<sect2>Second step -- assembling the application header
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<p><verb>
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$ ca65 -t geos resource.s
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</verb>
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And, voilá -- &dquot;<tt/resource.o/&dquot; is ready.
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<sect2>Third step -- compiling the code
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<p><verb>
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$ cc65 -t geos -O test.c
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$ ca65 -t geos test.s
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</verb>
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That way, you have a &dquot;<tt/test.o/&dquot; object file which
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contains all of the executable code.
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<sect2>Fourth and last step -- linking it together
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<p><verb>
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$ ld65 -t geos -o test.cvt resource.o geos.o test.o geos.lib
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</verb>
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&dquot;<tt/resource.o/&dquot; comes first because it contains the
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header. The next one is &dquot;<tt/geos.o/&dquot;, a required starter-code
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file; then, the actual application code in &dquot;<tt/test.o/&dquot;, and the
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last is the GEOS system library.
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The resulting file &dquot;<tt/test.cvt/&dquot; is an executable that's
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contained in the well-known GEOS <em/Convert/ format. Note that it's name
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(<tt/test/) isn't important; the real name, after deconverting, is the DOS name
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that was given in the header definition.
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At each step, a <tt/-t geos/ was present on the command-line. That switch is
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required for the correct process of GEOS sequential app. building.
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<sect>Building a GEOS VLIR application<label id="building-vlir">
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<p>Currently, you can build VLIR applications only if your code is written in
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assembly -- no C code allowed.
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In your sources, only the command <tt/.segment &dquot;/<em/NAME/<tt/&dquot;/
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will decide which code/data goes where. File-names don't matter. Segments
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<tt/CODE/, <tt/RODATA/, <tt/DATA/, and <tt/BSS/ go into VLIR part #0. Segment
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<tt/VLIR1/ goes into VLIR part #1, <tt/VLIR2/ goes into VLIR part #2, and so
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on.
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The GEOS resource file's contents are similar to <ref
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name="the sequential-file example" id="building-seq">, but there also is a
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<tt/VLIR/ section and a <tt/structure VLIR/ tag. Here is that part:<tscreen>
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<verb>
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VLIR vlir-head.bin 0x3000 {
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vlir-0.bin ; CODE, RODATA, DATA, BSS
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vlir-1.bin ; VLIR1
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vlir-2.bin ; VLIR2
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}</verb></tscreen>
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(Source files are only <tt/.s/.)
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OK, we have &dquot;<tt/cvthead.grc/&dquot;, so let's allow <bf/grc/ to compile
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it:<verb>
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$ grc cvthead.grc
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</verb>
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Now, there are two new files: &dquot;<tt/cvthead.cfg/&dquot; and
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&dquot;<tt/cvthead.s/&dquot; -- the first one is a config. file for <bf/ld65/,
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and the second one contains the GEOS <tt/.cvt/ header. It can be assembled:
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<verb>
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$ ca65 -t geos cvthead.s
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</verb>
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Now, we have &dquot;<tt/cvthead.o/&dquot;. The rest of the assembly
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sources can be assembled:<verb>
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$ ca65 -t geos vlir0.s
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$ ca65 -t geos vlir1.s
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$ ca65 -t geos vlir2.s
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</verb>
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Note that the file-names here, although similar to those from the
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<tt/VLIR/ section of the <tt/.grc/ file, are not significant. The only thing
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that matters is which code will go into which segment.
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Now, we can generate binaries. This time, the order of the arguments on the
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command-line is not important.<verb>
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$ ld65 -C cvthead.cfg vlir1.o cvthead.o vlir0.o vlir2.o
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</verb>
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As defined in the <tt/.grc/ file, we now have the binary parts of the
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VLIR file: &dquot;<tt/vlir-head.bin/&dquot;, &dquot;<tt/vlir-0.bin/&dquot;,
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&dquot;<tt/vlir-1.bin/&dquot;, and &dquot;<tt/vlir-2.bin/&dquot;.
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The last step is to put them together in the right order -- the order of the
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arguments <em/is important/ this time! As suggested in the comments at the end
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of &dquot;<tt/cvthead.cfg/&dquot;, we do:<verb>
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$ grc -vlir output.cvt vlir-head.bin vlir-0.bin vlir-1.bin vlir-2.bin
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</verb>
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That is the end. The file &dquot;<tt/output.cvt/&dquot; can be
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deconverted under GEOS. Note that <tt/-C cvthead.cfg/ was used on the
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<bf/ld65/ command-line instead of the switch <tt/-t geos/.
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<sect>Bugs and feedback
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<p>This is the first release of <bf/grc/, and it contains bugs, for sure! I am
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aware of them; I know that the parser is weak, and if you don't follow the
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grammar rules strictly, then everything will crash. However, if you find an
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interesting bug, mail me. :-) Mail me also for help with writing your
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<tt/.grc/ file correctly if you have problems with it. I would appreciate
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comments also, and help on this file because I am sure that it can be written
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better.
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<sect>Legal stuff
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<p><bf/grc/ is covered by the same license as the whole cc65 package, so you
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should see its documentation for more info. Anyway, if you like it, and want
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to encourage me to work more on it, send me a postcard with a sight of your
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neighbourhood, city, region, etc. Or, just e-mail me with info that you
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actually used it. See <url name="the GEOSLib documentation" url="geos.html">
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for addresses.
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<appendix>
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<sect>Appendix A -- example.grc<label id="example-grc">
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<p><tscreen><verb>
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; Note that MENU can define both menues and submenues.
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; If you want to use any C operators (such as "|", "&", etc.), do it WITHOUT
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; any spaces between the arguments (the parser is simple and weak).
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MENU subMenu1 15,0 VERTICAL
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; This is a vertical menu, placed at (15,0).
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{
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; There are three items, all of them will call functions.
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; The first and third ones are normal functions, see GEOSLib documentation for
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; information about what the second function should return (it's a dynamic one).
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"subitem1" MENU_ACTION smenu1
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"subitem2" MENU_ACTION|DYN_SUB_MENU smenu2
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"subitem3" MENU_ACTION smenu3
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}
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;; Format: MENU "name" left,top ALIGN { "itemname" TYPE pointer ... }
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MENU mainMenu 0,0 HORIZONTAL
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; Here, we have our main menu, placed at (0,0), and it is a horizontal menu.
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; Because it is a top-level menu, you would register it in your C source by
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; using: DoMenu(&ero;mainMenu);
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{
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; There are two items -- a submenu and an action.
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; This calls a submenu named subMenu1 (see previous definition).
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"first sub-menu" SUB_MENU subMenu1
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; This will work the same as an EnterDeskTop() call in C source code.
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"quit" MENU_ACTION EnterDeskTop
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}
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;; Format: HEADER <GEOS_TYPE> "dosname" "classname" "version"
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HEADER APPLICATION "MyFirstApp" "Class Name" "V1.0"
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; This is a header for an APPLICATION which will be seen in the directory as a
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; file named MyFirstApp with the Class-string "Class Name V1.0"
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{
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; Not all fields are required, default and current values will be used.
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author "Maciej Witkowiak" ; always in quotes!
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info "Information text" ; always in quotes!
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; date yy mm dd hh ss ; always 5 fields!
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; dostype seq ; can be: PRG, SEQ, USR (only all UPPER- or lower-case)
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; structure seq ; can be: SEQ, VLIR (only UPPER- or lower-case)
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mode c64only ; can be: any, 40only, 80only, c64only
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}</verb></tscreen>
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</article>
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