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89 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
89 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
This README is from the ancient_hackage branch where I'm trying to
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figure out just how far I got with Syn68k for the iPad before I
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dropped it. Much of the info in this README will be incorrect.
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I hacked autogen.sh to usee glibtoolize --force, but I should see
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if I can use autoreconf to do the right thing.
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Mac OS X 10.6 notes:
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Xcode: 3.2.3 64-bit Xcode IDE: 1688.0, Xcode Core: 1691.0, ToolSupport: 1591.0
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PATH="/Developer/usr/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin"
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./autogen.sh
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mkdir build
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cd build
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CC='gcc -m32 -fno-stack-check -fno-stack-protector' ../configure
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make
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cd test
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./syngentest
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========================================================================
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Syn68k is a "synthetic CPU" that executes Motorola 68LC040
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instructions, either via interpretation or via compilation into Intel
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(32-bit) x86 instructions. It was originally written to allow
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Executor (a Macintosh emulator) to run on platforms that didn't
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contain a 680x0 CPU. Executor first ran on the Sun-3, and then on
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NeXT computers.
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Syn68k has not been actively worked on since about 1995. When it was
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originally written, there were a bunch of alterable variables in
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various Makefiles that allowed us to build Syn68k for many different
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architectures with a few different features.
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In late 2003 we did a partial conversion from our build system to the
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GNU build system. The result was a Syn68k that could be built with
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the then current version of gcc but basically only for the i386
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architecture using the native code back-end. That's basically the
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state Syn68k was in when I put the code on GitHub in September 2008.
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In June 2009, I've been able to scrape together a little free time and
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make it so Syn68k builds on a few more platforms than it did when I
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first put it on GitHub. There's still a lot of cruft that can be
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removed, but at least there are enough variants that can be built to
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show that both big-endian (e.g., PowerPC) and little-endian
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(e.g. i386, x86_64), 32-bit and 64-bit, native (i386-only) and
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non-native versions work.
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To compile syn68k, try
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./autogen.sh
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./configure
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make
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To test syn68k, run test/syngentest and compare the output to
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test/output/10000. It should be the same, assuming the same block of
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memory can be obtained for the test. If you want to be more thorough,
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you can use other command line options and compare the results to
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other files, as described in test/output/README.
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If you plan on building Executor, you'll need to put Syn68k where it
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can be found during Executor's build. The easiest way is with
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make install
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To compile a 32-bit syn68k on an x86_64 system, make sure you have all
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the 32-bit libraries you need:
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On Fedora 10 I needed to install glibc-devel.i386 and libgcc.i386
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On Fedora 11 I needed glibc-devel.i586 and libgcc.i586
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On Fedora 12 I needed the .i686 versions of those packages
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Once you have those install, try this:
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./autogen.sh
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CC='gcc -m32' ./configure --build=i686-pc-linux-gnu --host=i686-pc-linux-gnu
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make
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make install
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It's possible to compile a 64-bit version of Syn68k on an x86_64, but
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such a version won't work with Executor yet (and will not use native
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x86 instructions).
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My email address is still <ctm@ardi.com>, although ARDI itself is
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defunct. I get a ridiculous amount of spam and will quite possibly
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not see email addressed to me. I'm ctm on GitHub (http://github.com)
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and typically check my email there once a day.
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--Cliff Matthews
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