Apple II ProDOS-8 system files that run on startup and install clock drivers, ramdisks, and other utilities
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Joshua Bell 46aef091df Have clock/ram drivers print at the bottom of the screen.
Trying this out. Might not stick with it.

Also added a PAUSE.SYSTEM that just waits a bit, if you want a delay
in your startup sequence to watch the log messages.
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ns.clock Have clock/ram drivers print at the bottom of the screen. 2021-08-25 20:49:41 -07:00
pause Have clock/ram drivers print at the bottom of the screen. 2021-08-25 20:49:41 -07:00
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selectors Only run xattr if present try 3 2021-03-07 16:35:52 -08:00
.gitignore Combine preamble files, .gitignore, and split out ns.clock 2019-10-03 21:49:53 -07:00
Makefile Have clock/ram drivers print at the bottom of the screen. 2021-08-25 20:49:41 -07:00
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README.md Migrate from Travis-CI to GitHub Actions 2021-06-19 17:23:00 -07:00

ProDOS Drivers

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Build with ca65

What are ProDOS "drivers"?

The ProDOS operating system for the Apple II executes the first .SYSTEM file found in the boot directory on startup. A common pattern is to have the boot directory contain several "driver" files that customize ProDOS by installing drivers for hardware or modify specific parts of the operating system. These include:

  • Real-time Clock drivers (e.g. No-Slot Clock, Cricket!, AE DClock, etc)
    • In ProDOS 1.x, 2.0 and 2.4 the Thunderclock driver is built-in.
  • RAM Disk drivers (e.g. RamWorks)
    • In ProDOS 1.x, 2.0 and 2.4 only a 64K driver for /RAM is built-in.
  • Quit dispatcher/selector (BYE routines)
    • In ProDOS 1.0 and later, a 40-column friendly selector prompts for a prefix then a path ENTER PREFIX (PRESS "RETURN" TO ACCEPT)
    • In ProDOS 1.9 and 2.0.x, on 80-column systems, a menu-driven selector is installed instead.
    • In ProDOS 2.4.x Bitsy Bye is built-in.

Early versions of these drivers would often invoke a specific file on completion, sometimes user-configurable. The best versions of these drivers simply execute the following .SYSTEM file, although this is non-trivial code and often did not work with network drives.

This repository collects several drivers and uses common code to chain to the next .SYSTEM file, suporting network drives.

What is present here?

This repo includes The following drivers/modifications:

  • Real-time Clock drivers
    • No-Slot Clock
    • Cricket!,
    • Applied Engineering DClock
  • RAM Disk drivers
    • RAMWorks Driver by Glen E. Bredon
  • Quit dispatcher/selector (BYE routines)
    • 40-column Selector (from ProDOS)
    • 80-column menu-driven Selector (from ProDOS 1.9 and 2.x)
    • Bird's Better Bye (a 40-column menu-driven selector)
    • Buh-Bye (an enhanced version of the ProDOS 80-column, menu-driven selector)

In addition, QUIT.SYSTEM is present which isn't a driver but which immediately invokes the QUIT handler (a.k.a. program selector).

Some date/time utilities for The Cricker! clock are also included.

How do you use these?

The intent is that you use a tool like Copy II Plus or Apple II DeskTop to copy and arrange the SYSTEM files on your boot disk as you see fit. An example boot disk image catalog that is used on multiple different hardware configurations might include:

  • PRODOS - the operating system, e.g. ProDOS 2.4
  • NS.CLOCK.SYSTEM - install No-Slot Clock driver, if present
  • DCLOCK.SYSTEM - install DClock clock driver, if present
  • CRICKET.SYSTEM - install Cricket! clock driver, if present
  • RAM.DRV.SYSTEM - install RamWorks RAM disk driver, if present
  • BUHBYE.SYSTEM - install a customized Quit handler to replace the built-in one
  • QUIT.SYSTEM - invoke the Quit handler immediately, as a program selector
  • BASIC.SYSTEM - which will not be automatically invoked, but is available to manually invoke

Alternately, you might want to install some drivers then immediately launch into BASIC. In that case, put BASIC.SYSTEM after the drivers in place of QUIT.SYSTEM.