Typing Control-C in Terminal app causes an interrupt signal that should enter the DPPC debugger but this only worked once since the signal handler never returned. Even if the signal handler reenabled the signal somehow, it calls enter_debugger recursively which is strange since the earlier calls to enter_debugger would never return.
Now the signal handler just sets a flag (power_on) which can be used to exit any loop (emulator loops, stepping loops, disassembly loops, dumping loops).
Main always calls enter_debugger now which calls the ppc_exec loop. The power_on flag will exit the ppc_exec loop to return to the debugger. Recursion of enter_debugger is eliminated except for calls to loguru's ABORT_F.
An enum power_off_reason is used to indicate why the power_on flag is set to false and to determine what happens next.
The TLBEntries allow converting virtual guest address to virtual host address but there's no easy way to get a guest physical address for debugging purposes.
Add a phys_tag field to fix that.
There's probably still an issue with the inf_nan check
using reg_a for the first value instead of reg_a * reg_c.
This will probably need rewriting anyway.
genppctests.py
- Fix incorrect bits for some floating-point instruction opcodes or fields.
- Use separate register for FP results like DolphinPPCTests does.
- Remove extra FMULS.
- Use a regular expression for parsing ppcfloattest.txt. Don't parse the values, just put them in the output ppcloattests.csv file.
ppcfloattest.txt
- Clear crf0 and crf7 because we only care about crf1.
- Use values from DolphinPPCTests (0.0, 0.5, 1.0, 3.5, DBL_MAX, FLT_MAX, 2.4679999352, 4.9359998704, etc.). Some of the values were rounded. This will un-round them. Specify snan or qnan instead of nan.
- One of the FCMPO and FCMPU tests had qnan instead of snan input values.
ppcfloattest.csv
- Regenerate this file using the updated genppctests.py which uses the updated ppcfloattest.txt.
ppctests
- Update double_from_string to be able to parse the new values (snan, qnan, FLT_MAX, DBL_MAX).