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887 lines
41 KiB
Markdown
887 lines
41 KiB
Markdown
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Emulating the Sega Genesis - Part I
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===================================
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*Also available on [dev.to](https://dev.to/transistorfet/emulating-the-sega-genesis-part-i-1ao5)*
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###### *Written December 2021/January 2022 by transistor_fet*
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A few months ago, I wrote a 68000 emulator in Rust named
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[Moa](https://jabberwocky.ca/projects/moa/). My original goal was to emulate a simple
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[computer](https://jabberwocky.ca/projects/computie/) I had previously built. After only a few
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weeks, I had that software up and running in the emulator, and my attention turned to what other
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platforms with 68000s I could try emulating. My thoughts quickly turned to the Sega Genesis and
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without thinking about it too much, I dove right in. What started as an unserious half-thought of
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"wouldn't that be cool" turned into a few months of fighting documentation, game programming hacks,
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and my sanity with some side quests along the way, all in the name of finding and squashing bugs in
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the 68k emulator I had already written.
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If you haven't already, you might want to read [Making a 68000 Emulator in
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Rust](https://jabberwocky.ca/posts/2021-11-making_an_emulator.html) where I talk about the basic
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structure and function of the emulator, as well as details about the 68000. I wont go into too much
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detail about that here and instead focus on the Genesis-specific hardware, and the challenges of
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debugging the emulator itself.
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This is Part I in the series, which covers setting up the emulator, getting some game ROMs to run,
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and implementing the DMA and memory features of the VDP. [Part
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II](https://jabberwocky.ca/posts/2022-01-emulating_the_sega_genesis_part2.html) will cover adding a
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graphical frontend to Moa, and then implementing a first attempt at generating video output. [Part
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III](https://jabberwocky.ca/posts/2022-01-emulating_the_sega_genesis_part3.html) will be about
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debugging the various problems in the VDP and CPU implementations to get a working emulator capable
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of playing games.
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* [The Start](#the-start)
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* [Sega Genesis/Mega Drive](#sega-genesis-mega-drive)
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* [The Games](#the-games)
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* [Diving In](#diving-in)
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* [Dummy Devices](#dummy-devices)
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* [Memory and DMA](#memory-and-dma)
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* [Talking To The VDP](#talking-to-the-vdp)
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* [Implementing The Memory Ops](#implementing-the-memory-ops)
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* [Next Time](#next-time)
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The Start
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---------
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Before starting Moa, I had never tried to make an emulator, but I have worked on projects with some
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similarities such as interpreters, artificial life simulators, and some simple games. I had been
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looking for a fun distracting project, so I was approaching this as a fun challenge. Especially
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with the Genesis support, I wanted to get something up and running fast, just to see if it would
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work at all, so rather than taking my more usual measured approach, I was working fast and loose to
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get a proof of concept running. I could always go back and fix things later, right?
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I was primarily hoping to simulate the video chip in the Sega Genesis, enough to see the intended
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graphics output and play the games. Not only would it be a nice accomplishment to get some visual
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feedback, but I would have to work out a way of creating a separate frontend that could display
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graphics to a host window, which I could use for other systems as well. I was less concerned with
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audio, since that would require getting the Z80 working, which wasn't even on my horizon at the
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time. I was hoping that I could get away with just the 68k for now (which is certainly possible for
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some but not all games).
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Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
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-----------------------
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<p align="center">
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<img src="images/2022-01/sega-genesis.jpg" title="Sega Genesis" />
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</p>
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(From Wikipedia by Evan-Amos, used under the Creative Commons license.)
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The [Sega Genesis](https://segaretro.org/Sega_Mega_Drive) (also known as the Mega Drive outside of
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North America) was released in 1988/1989 as a successor to the popular Sega Master System. It's
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main processor is a 68000 clocked at just under 8 MHz, which compared to computers of the time was
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pretty outdated, but it's slower speed is compensated by the custom video display processor (VDP),
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as well as a Z80 coprocessor, both of which can offload work from the 68000. While the 68000 can
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address up to 16 MB, it only has 64KB of main RAM, located at address `0xFF0000`. The VDP (also
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known by the part number of the chip, YM7101) has it's own separate 64KB of RAM which is only
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accessible through the VDP, either by writing data to the VDP's ports, or configuring a DMA (direct
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memory access) transfer from main memory to video memory, which is performed by the VDP. Game
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cartridges are mapped to address `0` of the 68000's address space, and can be up to 4MB. It also
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has two sound generation chips, the SN76489 and YM2612, but I don't have audio working yet so I wont
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talk much about these.
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The Genesis was one of the first video game consoles to have some backwards compatibility with it's
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predecessor, although a [special pin-converter](https://segaretro.org/Power_Base_Converter) was
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needed in order to plug Master System cartridges into the Genesis. In order to accomplish this, the
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Genesis has a Z80 processor (in addition to the main 68000 processor), which can run on it's own
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with it's own bus and memory. It only has 2 KB of RAM instead of the 24 KB of the Master System,
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but the 68000's address space can be mapped into a banked area that the Z80 can access. While some
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games work fine without the Z80 present, others will wait for certain data to be written by the Z80
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before proceeding, which results in the game hanging.
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The VDP or Video Display Processor is the central peripheral device in the console. It generates
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the video output signal, controls the video memory, handles DMA (Direct Memory Access) to transfer
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data to the video memory, as well as handling all the interrupts in the system (there are 3, one
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each for the horizontal and vertical blanking, and one for the game controllers). It has it's own
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64KB of video memory (VRAM) which holds all the graphics and data tables that describe which
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graphics should be displayed and where on the screen. Internal to the VDP there is also the colour
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ram (CRAM), and vertical scroll ram (VSRAM), which have their own separate address spaces, and hold
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the colour palettes and vertical cell offset numbers respectively. In addition, there are 22
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internal 8-bit registers which configure how the VDP behaves, which can only be accessed indirectly
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through the memory-mapped interface to the VDP. They control the graphics mode to use, the size of
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the scrollable planes, the locations in VRAM of the scroll and sprite tables, the length and source
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address to use for DMA transfers, and a few other things.
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The Games
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---------
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I'll mostly refer to "Sonic The Hedgehog 2" in examples because in the end, it's the game that
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worked the best, even though I actually started with Sonic 1. During development, I also tried
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Earthworm Jim, Ren and Stimpy's Invention, and a few others that didn't work as well. It wasn't
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until I took a break and came back to it that I found [ComradeOj's demos and test
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ROMs](https://www.mode5.net/#), which where much easier to test with.
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In order to better trace the ROM's execution, the `.bin` ROM images can be disassembled using
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m68k-gcc's objdump command:
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```
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m68k-linux-gnu-objdump -b binary -m m68k:68000 -D binaries/genesis/Sonic2.bin > Sonic2.asm
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```
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One of the nice things about working with the 68000 is that it's still a supported architecture in
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the latest version of gcc, so all the latest gcc tools can be used to compile and inspect binaries.
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It's uncertain how much longer that will be the case, but that said, support was recently added to
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LLVM and experimental support is available in Rust, so who knows. Maybe there's still a long life
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ahead for the 68000 architecture.
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Diving In
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---------
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The first thing to sort out was the format of Sega Genesis game ROMs. Some ROMs use a flat binary
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format which can be directly loaded at address `0` without any changes or special parsing. Other
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ROMs use a format with the file extension `.smd` which interleaves the even- and odd-addressed bytes
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of the ROM in 16 KB chunks, but there are utilities available that convert from `.smd` to `.bin`
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format. Since I was hoping to focus my attention on simulating the VDP, I chose to just use the
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binary format for ROMs since the emulator can already load flat binaries, and I can use the
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available conversion utilities to convert any `.smd` ROMs I had into `.bin` ROMs.
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That was easier than I was expecting. All I had to do was load the ROM file into a `MemoryBlock`
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object in the emulator, and map that object to address `0`. I also needed 64 KB of RAM mapped to
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addresses 0xFF0000 through 0xFFFFFF, which also uses a `MemoryBlock`. My Moa machine definition
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looked something like this:
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```rust
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let mut system = System::new();
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let rom = MemoryBlock::load("binaries/genesis/Sonic2.bin").unwrap();
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system.add_addressable_device(0x00000000, wrap_transmutable(rom)).unwrap();
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let ram = MemoryBlock::new(vec![0; 0x00010000]);
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system.add_addressable_device(0x00FF0000, wrap_transmutable(ram)).unwrap();
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let mut cpu = M68k::new(M68kType::MC68000, 7_670_454);
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cpu.enable_tracing();
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system.add_device("cpu", wrap_transmutable(cpu)).unwrap();
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Ok(system)
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```
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Running this gave the results:
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```
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0x00000206: 4ab9 00a1 0008
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tstl (#00a10008)
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Status: Running
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PC: 0x0000020c
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SR: 0x2700
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D0: 0x00000000 A0: 0x00000000
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D1: 0x00000000 A1: 0x00000000
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D2: 0x00000000 A2: 0x00000000
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D3: 0x00000000 A3: 0x00000000
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D4: 0x00000000 A4: 0x00000000
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D5: 0x00000000 A5: 0x00000000
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D6: 0x00000000 A6: 0x00000000
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D7: 0x00000000
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SSP: 0xfffffe00
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USP: 0x00000000
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Current Instruction: 0x00000206 TST(IndirectMemory(10551304), Long)
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0x00fffe00: 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
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0x00fffe10: 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
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0x00fffe20: 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
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0x00fffe30: 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
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Error { err: Emulator, native: 0, msg: "No segment found at 0xa10008" }
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thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Error { err: Emulator, native: 0, msg: "No segment found at 0xa10008" }', frontends/moa-minifb/src/lib.rs:70:40
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```
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Wow, It worked! (sort of). The first line of the output shows the address of the instruction being
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executed (`0x206`), followed by the instruction data that was decoded. Below that is the decoded
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instruction in assembly notation. When an error occurs, Moa will dump the values of the CPU
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registers along with a dump of the stack area, which in this case is located at address `0xfffe00`.
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The `tstl (#0xa10008)` instruction that's being executed is supposed to compare the value stored at
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the address `0xa10008` to zero, and set the flags in the `%sr` register accordingly. The error that
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occurs means there was an attempt to access address `0xa10008`, which isn't mapped to a valid area
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on the data bus, and Moa is currently configured to cause a fatal error in that case.
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According to the [memory map](https://segaretro.org/Sega_Mega_Drive/Memory_map) for the Genesis, the
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address `0xa10008` is the control port for Controller 1, which makes sense. It's doing something
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that would be expected of a Genesis ROM, even if it only gets one instruction in before dying.
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Taking a look at the first 16 bytes of the ROM shows:
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```
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00000000: FF FF FE 00 00 00 02 06 00 00 02 00 00 00 02 00
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```
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The first 4 bytes are the stack pointer (`0xfffffe00`) and the next 4 bytes are the reset address,
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which is the same address as the starting instruction, `0x206`. (If your curious, the two addresses
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that follow the reset address are for the bus error and address error handlers respectively, which
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point to the same handler at `0x200`).
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You may have noticed that the stack pointer value (`0xfffffe00`) is a full 32-bit address, but the
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68000 only supports 24-bit addresses. In hardware, the extra 8-bits at the top (ie. `0xff`) would
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be ignored. I had to modify the emulator to allow an address mask to be configured, so that all
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32-bit addresses coming from the 68000 are masked to only 24-bits. I eventually made a more
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complete and configurable solution that's described later.
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To get around the no segment found error, I added another memory block for 0xa10000 in order to
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prevent the error, and now a handful of instructions are running correctly until the next "No
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segment found" error occurs.
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```
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0x00000206: 4ab9 00a1 0008
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tstl (#00a10008)
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0x0000020c: 6606
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bne 6
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0x0000020e: 4a79 00a1 000c
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tstw (#00a1000c)
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0x00000214: 667c
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bne 124
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0x00000216: 4bfa 007c
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lea (%pc + #007c), %a5
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0x0000021a: 4c9d 00e0
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movemw (%a5)+, %d5-%d7
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0x0000021e: 4cdd 1f00
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moveml (%a5)+, %a0-%a4
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0x00000222: 1029 ef01
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moveb (%a1 + #ffffef01), %d0
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0x00000226: 0200 000f
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andb #0000000f, %d0
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0x0000022a: 6708
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beq 8
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0x00000234: 3014
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movew (%a4), %d0
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Status: Running
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PC: 0x00000236
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SR: 0x2704
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D0: 0x00000000 A0: 0x00a00000
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D1: 0x00000000 A1: 0x00a11100
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D2: 0x00000000 A2: 0x00a11200
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D3: 0x00000000 A3: 0x00c00000
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D4: 0x00000000 A4: 0x00c00004
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D5: 0xffff8000 A5: 0x000002ae
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D6: 0x00003fff A6: 0x00000000
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D7: 0x00000100
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SSP: 0xfffffe00
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USP: 0x00000000
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Current Instruction: 0x00000234 MOVE(IndirectAReg(4), DirectDReg(0), Word)
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0xfffffe00:
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Error { err: Emulator, native: 0, msg: "No segment found at 0xc00004" }
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```
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Another missing I/O device. The `0xc00004` address is the control port of the VDP, so again that
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makes sense. Adding another `MemoryBlock` for that address range prevents the emulator from hitting
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another error, but it instead gets stuck in a loop.
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```
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0x0000024c: 3287
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movew %d7, (%a1)
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0x0000024e: 3487
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movew %d7, (%a2)
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0x00000250: 0111
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btstb %d0, (%a1)
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0x00000252: 66fc
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bne -4
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0x00000250: 0111
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btstb %d0, (%a1)
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0x00000252: 66fc
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bne -4
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0x00000250: 0111
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btstb %d0, (%a1)
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0x00000252: 66fc
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bne -4
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...
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```
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The register `%a1` has the value `0xa11100`, `%d0` has `0x00`, and `%d7` has `0x0100`. The code
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first writes the value `0x0100` to address `0xa11100`, and then tests if the bit that was just set
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at that memory location is 1. It then loops back to the bit test instruction until it becomes 0,
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which never happens because that address is just a memory location at the moment, and not an I/O
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device. That address, according to the map, is the Z80 bus request location for enabling or
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disabling the bus request pin on the Z80.
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At this point I'll need to start properly implementing the devices at these address locations in
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order to get further in the execution of a program. It's only executed a hundred or so instructions
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to get to this infinite loop, which isn't very much, but this is very promising.
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Dummy Devices
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-------------
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In order to get the game ROMs to run further, I needed some basic devices that can respond to the
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addresses of the various peripherals. It was just a matter of looking through the [memory
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map](https://segaretro.org/Sega_Mega_Drive/Memory_map) and filling in the gaps. The Sega CD and 32X
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devices could be ignored, since I was only working on basic Genesis support for now, but the rest
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will need to respond in some way, so they will need to be assigned to Moa devices.
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To start with, there is a 64KB chunk of addresses at `0xa00000` for accessing the Z80's address space,
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which can be filled with a `MemoryBlock` for now.
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Then there's a chunk of 0x20 addresses starting at `0xa10000`, which are mostly related to the
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controllers. An exception to that is the special version register at the start of that range. It's
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supposed to always return a constant value to indicate which hardware version of the console the ROM
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is running on. I can just add that location to the same device as the controllers to make it easy.
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I'll need a `Transmutable` object to represent all the controllers.
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```rust
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pub struct GenesisControllerPort {
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pub data: u16,
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pub ctrl: u8,
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pub th_count: u8,
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pub next_read: u8,
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}
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pub struct GenesisControllers {
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pub port_1: GenesisControllerPort,
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pub port_2: GenesisControllerPort,
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pub expansion: GenesisControllerPort,
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}
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impl Addressable for GenesisControllers {
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fn len(&self) -> usize {
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0x20
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}
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fn read(&mut self, mut addr: Address, data: &mut [u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
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// If the address is even, only the second byte (odd byte) will be meaningful
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let mut i = 0;
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if (addr % 2) == 0 {
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addr += 1;
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i += 1;
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}
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match addr {
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REG_VERSION => { data[i] = 0xA0; } // Overseas Version, NTSC, No Expansion
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REG_DATA1 => { data[i] = self.port_1.next_read; },
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REG_DATA2 => { data[i] = self.port_2.next_read; },
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REG_DATA3 => { data[i] = self.expansion.next_read; },
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REG_CTRL1 => { data[i] = self.port_1.ctrl; },
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REG_CTRL2 => { data[i] = self.port_2.ctrl; },
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REG_CTRL3 => { data[i] = self.expansion.ctrl; },
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_ => { warning!("{}: !!! unhandled reading from {:0x}", DEV_NAME, addr); },
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}
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info!("{}: read from register {:x} the value {:x}", DEV_NAME, addr, data[0]);
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Ok(())
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}
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fn write(&mut self, addr: Address, data: &[u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
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info!("{}: write to register {:x} with {:x}", DEV_NAME, addr, data[0]);
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match addr {
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REG_DATA1 => { self.port_1.set_data(data[0]); }
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REG_DATA2 => { self.port_2.set_data(data[0]); },
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REG_DATA3 => { self.expansion.set_data(data[0]); },
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REG_CTRL1 => { self.port_1.ctrl = data[0]; },
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REG_CTRL2 => { self.port_2.ctrl = data[0]; },
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REG_CTRL3 => { self.expansion.ctrl = data[0]; },
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_ => { warning!("{}: !!! unhandled write of {:0x} to {:0x}", DEV_NAME, data[0], addr); },
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}
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Ok(())
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}
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}
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```
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The next set of addresses are a bit clumsy unfortunately. The addresses `0xa11000`, `0xa11100`, and
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`0xa11200` are special registers used for controlling the Z80, and all other addresses in that range
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are "prohibited" (not that that stops ROMs from accessing those areas, as I've found out, in
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frustration). `0xa11000` is used to configure DRAM mode for ROM development on the hardware, which
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isn't needed here. The other two locations control the Z80's reset and bus request lines
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respectively. The bus request signal will tell the Z80 to stop running and disconnect itself from
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the memory bus, so that the 68000 can access the Z80's RAM directly. Without this, the read and
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writes could conflict with each other resulting in both CPUs reading or writing garbage. This wont
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reset the Z80, which will continue running where it left off, when the bus request signal is
|
|
de-asserted. The reset signal allows the Z80 to be reset so that it starts in a known state.
|
|
Again, I'll need a custom `Transmutable` device to handle these locations, and the unmapped areas
|
|
will just return nothing.
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
pub struct CoprocessorControl {
|
|
pub bus_request: bool,
|
|
pub reset: bool,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl Addressable for CoprocessorControl {
|
|
fn len(&self) -> usize {
|
|
0x4000
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn read(&mut self, addr: Address, data: &mut [u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
|
|
match addr {
|
|
0x100 => {
|
|
data[0] = if self.bus_request && self.reset { 0x01 } else { 0x00 };
|
|
},
|
|
_ => { warning!("{}: !!! unhandled read from {:0x}", DEV_NAME, addr); },
|
|
}
|
|
info!("{}: read from register {:x} of {:?}", DEV_NAME, addr, data);
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn write(&mut self, addr: Address, data: &[u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
|
|
info!("{}: write to register {:x} with {:x}", DEV_NAME, addr, data[0]);
|
|
match addr {
|
|
0x000 => { /* ROM vs DRAM mode (not implemented) */ },
|
|
0x100 => {
|
|
self.bus_request = data[0] != 0;
|
|
},
|
|
0x200 => {
|
|
self.reset = data[0] == 0;
|
|
},
|
|
_ => { warning!("{}: !!! unhandled write {:0x} to {:0x}", DEV_NAME, data[0], addr); },
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The last area of the address space to implement is `0xc00000` to `0xc00020`, which is mapped to the
|
|
VDP. While there's a lot of internal state to the VDP, it has quite a small interface to the rest
|
|
of the system. Most features of the VDP will be performed during the `.step()` function, where the
|
|
device has access to the `System` object. Copying data from main memory requires access to the
|
|
`System`'s `Bus` object, so DMA will be implemented in the `.step()`.
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
pub struct Ym7101State {
|
|
pub ctrl_port_buffer: Option<u16>, // Used to store the first word of a transfer request
|
|
pub regs: [22; u8], // The internal registers of the VDP
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
pub struct Ym7101 {
|
|
pub state: Ym7101State,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl Ym7101 {
|
|
pub fn new() -> Ym7101 {
|
|
Ym7101 {
|
|
state: Ym7101State::new(),
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl Steppable for Ym7101 {
|
|
fn step(&mut self, system: &System) -> Result<ClockElapsed, Error> {
|
|
|
|
Ok((1_000_000_000 / 13_423_294) * 4)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl Addressable for Ym7101 {
|
|
fn len(&self) -> usize {
|
|
0x20
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn read(&mut self, addr: Address, data: &mut [u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
|
|
match addr {
|
|
// Read from Data Port
|
|
0x00 | 0x02 => {
|
|
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
// Read from Control Port
|
|
0x04 | 0x06 => {
|
|
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
_ => { println!("{}: !!! unhandled read from {:x}", DEV_NAME, addr); },
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn write(&mut self, addr: Address, data: &[u8]) -> Result<(), Error> {
|
|
match addr {
|
|
// Write to Data Port
|
|
0x00 | 0x02 => {
|
|
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
// Write to Control Port
|
|
0x04 | 0x06 => {
|
|
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
_ => { warning!("{}: !!! unhandled write to {:x} with {:?}", DEV_NAME, addr, data); },
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Early in development I called this device Ym7101 after the part number, and it's stuck since then,
|
|
so just know that `Ym7101` is the VDP device. I'm using a separate `Ym7101State` object here for
|
|
the actual internal data of the VDP because it'll get pretty complicated pretty quickly. I've since
|
|
broken it into 3 objects, one for the DMA and memory management, one for updating the display, and
|
|
one to tie it all together and handle the nitty gritty interfacing details, but at this point in the
|
|
project, it was just two Rust objects.
|
|
|
|
The system definition now looks like this:
|
|
```rust
|
|
let mut system = System::new();
|
|
|
|
let rom = MemoryBlock::load("binaries/genesis/Sonic2.bin").unwrap();
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00000000, wrap_transmutable(rom)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let ram = MemoryBlock::new(vec![0; 0x00010000]);
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00ff0000, wrap_transmutable(ram)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let coproc_mem = MemoryBlock::new(vec![0; 0x00010000]);
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00a00000, wrap_transmutable(coproc_mem)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let controllers = genesis::controllers::GenesisControllers::new();
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00a10000, wrap_transmutable(controllers)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let coproc = genesis::coproc_memory::CoprocessorControl::new();
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00a11000, wrap_transmutable(coproc)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let vdp = genesis::ym7101::Ym7101::new();
|
|
system.add_addressable_device(0x00c00000, wrap_transmutable(vdp)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let mut cpu = M68k::new(M68kType::MC68000, 7_670_454);
|
|
system.add_device("cpu", wrap_transmutable(cpu)).unwrap();
|
|
|
|
Ok(system)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The ROM still gets stuck in a loop after a certain point, probably because the VDP's interrupts are
|
|
not yet implemented, but it gets much farther than before now that the CoprocessorControl object is
|
|
responding as the ROM expects.
|
|
|
|
After putting some print statements into the VDP read and write functions to get a sense of what's
|
|
going on, I get the following log messages:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
genesis_controller: read from register 9 the value 0
|
|
genesis_controller: read from register b the value 0
|
|
genesis_controller: read from register d the value 0
|
|
genesis_controller: read from register 1 the value a0
|
|
ym7101: control port read 2 bytes from 4 with [0, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [128, 4]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [129, 20]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [130, 48]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [131, 60]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [132, 7]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [133, 108]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [134, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [135, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [136, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [137, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [138, 255]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [139, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [140, 129]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [141, 55]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [142, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [143, 1]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [144, 1]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [145, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [146, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [147, 255]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [148, 255]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [149, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [150, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [151, 128]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 4 with [64, 0]
|
|
ym7101: control port write 2 bytes to 6 with [0, 128]
|
|
ym7101: data port write 2 bytes to 0 with [0, 0]
|
|
coprocessor: write to register 100 with 1
|
|
coprocessor: write to register 200 with 1
|
|
coprocessor: read from register 100 of [0]
|
|
coprocessor: write to register 200 with 0
|
|
coprocessor: write to register 100 with 0
|
|
coprocessor: write to register 200 with 1
|
|
ym7101: write 2 bytes to port 4 with data [129, 4]
|
|
ym7101: write 2 bytes to port 6 with data [143, 2]
|
|
ym7101: write 2 bytes to port 4 with data [192, 0]
|
|
ym7101: write 2 bytes to port 6 with data [0, 0]
|
|
ym7101: write 2 bytes to port 0 with data [0, 0]
|
|
...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
There's more output than this but it eventually stops after a few seconds of running. The
|
|
controllers are accessed first, followed by a bunch of activity trying to talk to the VDP. The
|
|
coprocessor is reset, and then the VDP is accessed again and data is directly written to it.
|
|
It continues for another 200 or so lines after what's shown here. It's mainly the VDP that needs to
|
|
do something at this point, in order to get further in the ROM's execution.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Memory and DMA
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
It's time to get into the details of the VDP, and the natural first place to start is with getting
|
|
data into the VDP's various memory areas. It uses its own memory exclusively to generate the
|
|
display output, so data needs to be loaded before anything can be displayed. As I already mentioned
|
|
above, there are three different memory areas that are directly accessible only by the VDP: VRAM,
|
|
CRAM, and VSRAM. CRAM and VSRAM are very small, but VRAM is much larger (64KB, the same size as
|
|
main memory), and is used for most of the VDP's functions.
|
|
|
|
In addition, the CPU and VDP can both directly access main memory, as long as the other is not
|
|
accessing it at the same time. In hardware, this is handled through bus arbitration. The VDP can
|
|
assert the bus request signal, which when active will cause the CPU to temporarily suspend what it's
|
|
doing, disconnect from the memory bus, and assert an acknowledge signal to tell the VDP it can use
|
|
the bus. The VDP is then free to access main memory until it de-asserts the bus request signal.
|
|
|
|
<p align="center">
|
|
<img src="images/2022-01/sega-genesis-block-diagram.png" title="Block Diagram showing VDP connections" />
|
|
</p>
|
|
|
|
The green arrows show that the CPU can make a memory request to the VDP or to main RAM, and the VDP
|
|
can also make a memory request to main RAM, but only the VDP interface logic can access CRAM, VSRAM,
|
|
or VRAM.
|
|
|
|
The only reason the VDP needs to access main memory is to perform a direct memory access (DMA)
|
|
operation, which will copy some contents of main memory into a VDP memory area without using the
|
|
CPU. This direct copying is much faster than if the CPU were to alternate between reading data from
|
|
RAM and writing it to the VDP's memory-mapped I/O ports. It is however possible to also write data
|
|
through the CPU, which is used when only a little bit of data needs to be sent. There is more
|
|
overhead required in order to set up a DMA transfer than a CPU transfer, and that might not always
|
|
be worth the extra cycles, just to transfer a few words.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Talking To The VDP
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
To access the VDP from the 68000, the address range from [0xc00000 to
|
|
0xc00020](https://segaretro.org/Sega_Mega_Drive/VDP_general_usage) is used to read and write to
|
|
different VDP "ports" (distinct from the VDP "registers"). Each port is 16-bits wide and most are
|
|
mapped to multiple adjacent addresses. The data port for example, at address `0xc00000` is also
|
|
mirrored at `0xc00002` so writing a word to either location has the same effect.
|
|
|
|
Only two ports are really important for most VDP functions: the data port and the control port. The
|
|
control port is used to both set the internal register values of the VDP, as well as to set up
|
|
memory operations. The data port only used to send data to a VDP memory area from the CPU, rather
|
|
than through a DMA transfer.
|
|
|
|
To set a register, the upper most two bits of the 16-bit word written to the control port must be
|
|
`0b10`. The rest of the upper byte will have the register number (0x00 to 0x17) and the lower byte
|
|
will have the new value to load into the register. The other control words written to the control
|
|
port (as part of a transfer setup) are guaranteed to never contain `0b10` as the upper two bits, so
|
|
these bits can be used to distinguish between the two types of requests.
|
|
|
|
To set up a memory operation, two words must be written to the control port. The first word
|
|
contains almost the entire 16-bit destination address for the operation, minus the two most
|
|
significant bits. The upper two most bits are actually part of the operation mode number, and
|
|
exchanging them with the lower two bits of the second word will give the full destination address in
|
|
the first word. The control bits in the second word need to be shifted down two bits, and ORed with
|
|
the two bits from the first word to get a 6-bit operation mode which determines the transfer type.
|
|
The operation mode specifies if DMA should be used or not, whether to read or write data, and which
|
|
of the three memory areas to target. A DMA request requires more info than provided, which must be
|
|
written to the appropriate registers before the transfer request is sent to the control port.
|
|
|
|
So in the `write()` method of the `Addressable` trait from the previous section, I need something
|
|
like this:
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
debug!("{}: write {} bytes to port {:x} with data {:?}", DEV_NAME, data.len(), addr, data);
|
|
|
|
let value = read_beu16(data);
|
|
if (value & 0xC000) == 0x8000 {
|
|
self.regs[((data & 0x1F00) >> 8) as usize] = (data & 0x00FF) as u8;
|
|
} else {
|
|
match self.state.ctrl_port_buffer {
|
|
None => {
|
|
self.state.ctrl_port_buffer = Some(value)
|
|
},
|
|
Some(first) => {
|
|
let second = value;
|
|
self.state.ctrl_port_buffer = None;
|
|
|
|
self.transfer_type = ((((first & 0xC000) >> 14) | ((second & 0x00F0) >> 2))) as u8;
|
|
self.transfer_addr = ((first & 0x3FFF) | ((second & 0x0003) << 14)) as u32;
|
|
debug!("{}: transfer requested of type {:x} to address {:x}", DEV_NAME, self.transfer_type, self.transfer_addr);
|
|
},
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Hmmm... when I run it I get the following log message, but not the log message that a transfer was
|
|
requested.
|
|
```
|
|
ym7101: write 4 bytes to port 4 with data [0x40, 0x00, 0x00, 0x80]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The CPU is writing 4 bytes at once. Oh right! Of course it is. The CPU implementation is using
|
|
the helper functions to read and write 4 bytes at once when an instruction accesses a long word.
|
|
The ROM is using a single `movel` instruction to write both words of the transfer setup rather than
|
|
using two instructions. This is also why the VDP's data and control ports are mirrored at the
|
|
adjacent addresses, because in hardware, the CPU would write a word to the first address, and then
|
|
write a second word to that address plus two.
|
|
|
|
Digging around in the logs shows that the same thing is actually being done with register
|
|
assignments as well. Two register assignments can be put into a single instruction like
|
|
`movel #0x80048114, (%a4)`, where `%a4` contains the address of the control port `0xC00004`.
|
|
That would set both VDP register 0 to 0x04, and VDP register 1 to 0x14.
|
|
|
|
For now, I'll just modify the `.write()` function to allow long word accesses:
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
let value = read_beu16(data);
|
|
if (value & 0xC000) == 0x8000 {
|
|
self.state.set_register(value);
|
|
if data.len() == 4 {
|
|
let value = read_beu16(&data[2..]);
|
|
if (value & 0xC000) != 0x8000 {
|
|
return Err(Error::new(&format!("{}: unexpected second byte {:x}", DEV_NAME, value)));
|
|
}
|
|
self.state.set_register(value);
|
|
}
|
|
} else {
|
|
match (data.len(), self.state.ctrl_port_buffer) {
|
|
(2, None) => { self.state.ctrl_port_buffer = Some(value) },
|
|
(2, Some(upper)) => self.state.setup_transfer(upper, read_beu16(data)),
|
|
(4, None) => self.state.setup_transfer(value, read_beu16(&data[2..])),
|
|
_ => { error!("{}: !!! error when writing to control port with {} bytes of {:?}", DEV_NAME, data.len(), data); },
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
It's a bit clumsy but it works for testing. I eventually added a mechanism called `BusPort` which
|
|
simulates the CPU's connection to the `Bus` object in `System`. The `BusPort` is created when the
|
|
CPU object is created, and it's stored in the CPU object. The CPU will then use it for all read and
|
|
write operations to more accurately simulate the bus. Any read or write call on `BusPort` will be
|
|
broken into multiple operations if necessary in order to fit the given data bus size, and the
|
|
address will be masked to the given address bus size. This will also fix the issue with 24-bit
|
|
addressing on the 68000. At the same time, it's possible to configure a CPU as a 68030 with a
|
|
32-bit address and data bus, which I intend to use for future Computie hardware revisions, and
|
|
possibly other systems.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Implementing The Memory Ops
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
|
|
Now that the `Addressable` implementation can receive the control port transfer setup, it's time to
|
|
actually implement the transfer operations, both through the data port and through DMA. For a
|
|
manual transfer, once configured, data can either be read from or written to the data port. After
|
|
each memory operation, the destination address will be increment by the value stored in the auto
|
|
increment register of the VDP (register `0x0f`). It doesn't matter what size the operation was; the
|
|
address will always be incremented by that value, so it must be set correctly.
|
|
|
|
A DMA transfer, on the other hand, takes place as soon as the second transfer configuration word is
|
|
written to the control port, assuming the DMA enable bit is set in the Mode2 register (`0x01`). In
|
|
hardware, the VDP would assert the bus request signal to tell the CPU to disconnect from the memory
|
|
bus while the VDP directly accesses the main RAM to copy data into its VRAM. Once the operation is
|
|
complete, the VDP would de-assert the bus request signal and the CPU would continue where it left
|
|
off. I cheated a bit by simply performing the complete operation in one call to the `.step()`
|
|
function, rather than simulating the time it would take. It's worked fine so far.
|
|
|
|
In order to perform a DMA transfer, there are two additional values that are needed. The source
|
|
address in RAM where the data to copy is located, and the amount of data to be copied. These values
|
|
are stored across 5 different 8-bit registers in the VDP, which must be set before configuring the
|
|
transfer through the control port. The count value is split across registers `0x13` and `0x14`,
|
|
each containing half of the 16-bit count. The source address is split across registers `0x15` to
|
|
`0x17` where the address is shifted to the right one bit, since the address must start on an even
|
|
byte address (ie. bit 0 must always be zero, so it's not even stored in the register). The upper
|
|
two bits of register `0x17`, which is the high part of the address, specifies whether the operation
|
|
is a transfer, copy, or fill. See [VDP
|
|
Registers](https://wiki.megadrive.org/index.php?title=VDP_Registers#0x17_-_DMA_source_address_high)
|
|
for details.
|
|
|
|
To make the code easier to understand, I made a simple enum called `DmaType` to hold the type of
|
|
operation, or `DmaType::None` if there is no operation pending. The addresses and counts are
|
|
assembled from the register values when the transfer is set up through the control port.
|
|
|
|
The following code was then added to the VDP's `.step()` function. The transfer operation type is
|
|
selected by the `self.transfer_run` value. Each type has its own loop which iterates until the
|
|
remaining count is 0. The destination address is incremented by the value of the auto increment
|
|
register (`0x0f`) after each iteration, just like a manual transfer. The `DmaType::Memory`
|
|
operation is a bit more involved since it must use the system bus to read data. In order to reuse
|
|
the same loop for each of the three target memory areas, the `.get_transfer_target_mut()` function
|
|
returns a slice of the appropriate memory area.
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
match self.transfer_run {
|
|
DmaType::None => { /* Do Nothing */ },
|
|
|
|
DmaType::Memory => {
|
|
info!("{}: starting dma transfer {:x} from Mem:{:x} to {:?}:{:x} ({} bytes)", DEV_NAME, self.transfer_type, self.transfer_src_addr, self.transfer_target, self.transfer_dest_addr, self.transfer_remain);
|
|
let mut bus = system.get_bus();
|
|
|
|
while self.transfer_remain > 0 {
|
|
let mut data = [0; 2];
|
|
bus.read(self.transfer_src_addr as Address, &mut data)?;
|
|
|
|
let addr = self.transfer_dest_addr as usize;
|
|
let target = self.get_transfer_target_mut();
|
|
target[addr % target.len()] = data[0];
|
|
target[(addr + 1) % target.len()] = data[1];
|
|
|
|
self.transfer_dest_addr += self.transfer_auto_inc;
|
|
self.transfer_src_addr += 2;
|
|
self.transfer_remain -= 2;
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
DmaType::Copy => {
|
|
info!("{}: starting dma copy from VRAM:{:x} to VRAM:{:x} ({} bytes)", DEV_NAME, self.transfer_src_addr, self.transfer_dest_addr, self.transfer_remain);
|
|
while self.transfer_remain > 0 {
|
|
self.vram[self.transfer_dest_addr as usize] = self.vram[self.transfer_src_addr as usize];
|
|
self.transfer_dest_addr += self.transfer_auto_inc;
|
|
self.transfer_src_addr += 1;
|
|
self.transfer_remain -= 1;
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
DmaType::Fill => {
|
|
info!("{}: starting dma fill to VRAM:{:x} ({} bytes) with {:x}", DEV_NAME, self.transfer_dest_addr, self.transfer_remain, self.transfer_fill_word);
|
|
while self.transfer_remain > 0 {
|
|
self.vram[self.transfer_dest_addr as usize] = self.transfer_fill_word as u8;
|
|
self.transfer_dest_addr += self.transfer_auto_inc;
|
|
self.transfer_remain -= 1;
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Reset the mode after a transfer has completed
|
|
self.set_dma_mode(DmaType::None);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Note: this code includes a bug that I'll fix in Part III. Bonus points if you can spot it
|
|
|
|
The helper function `.set_dma_mode()` is used to also control the DMA busy flag in the VDP's status
|
|
word, which is returned when reading from VDP's control port (instead of writing). It's probably
|
|
not that important since the CPU technically shouldn't be running when a DMA is in progress, but I
|
|
threw it in for completeness.
|
|
|
|
```rust
|
|
pub fn set_dma_mode(&mut self, mode: DmaType) {
|
|
match mode {
|
|
DmaType::None => {
|
|
self.status &= !STATUS_DMA_BUSY;
|
|
self.transfer_run = DmaType::None;
|
|
},
|
|
_ => {
|
|
self.status |= STATUS_DMA_BUSY;
|
|
self.transfer_run = mode;
|
|
},
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Phew! That was a lot of boring bits, but it's done now. Testing is another matter, but without a
|
|
reference to compare it to, it's hard to find problems without the display output. It will get more
|
|
interesting soon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Next Time
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
By this point I had only been working on the Genesis support for about a week, while also working on
|
|
other parts of the emulator. The time spent on the Genesis was mostly reading up on how it worked.
|
|
I was flying through everything, making great progress, and having a lot of fun at the same time.
|
|
|
|
The CPU to VDP interface was pretty much implemented and I could get data into the VDP registers and
|
|
memory areas. The next step was to use that data to generate an image and send it to some kind of
|
|
window on the local machine. That's an entire post's worth of effort, so... I'll make another post!
|
|
Click [Part II](https://jabberwocky.ca/posts/2022-01-emulating_the_sega_genesis_part2.html) to continue
|
|
|