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collapseos/doc/load-run-code.md

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# Load code in RAM and run it
Collapse OS likely runs from ROM code. If you need to fiddle with your machine
more deeply, you will want to send arbitrary code to it and run it. You can do
so with the shell's `poke` and `call` commands.
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For example, let's say that you want to run this simple code that you have
sitting on your "modern" machine and want to execute on your running Collapse OS
machine:
ld a, (0xa100)
inc a
ld (0xa100), a
ret
(we must always return at the end of code that we call with `call`). This will
increase a number at memory address `0xa100`. First, compile it:
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zasm < tosend.asm > tosend.bin
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Now, we'll send that code to address `0xa000`:
> mptr a000
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A000
> poke 8 (resulting binary is 8 bytes long)
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Now, at this point, it's a bit delicate. To pipe your binary to your serial
connection, you have to close `screen` with CTRL+A then `:quit` to free your
tty device. Then, you can run:
cat tosend.bin > /dev/ttyUSB0 (or whatever is your device)
You can then re-open your connection with screen. You'll have a blank screen,
but if the number of characters sent corresponds to what you gave `poke`, then
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Collapse OS will be waiting for a new command. Go ahead, verify that the
transfer was successful with:
peek 8
3A00A13C3200A1C9
Good! Now, we can try to run it. Before we run it, let's peek at the value at
`0xa100` (being RAM, it's random):
> mptr a100
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A100
> peek
61
So, we'll expect this to become `62` after we run the code. Let's go:
> mptr a000
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A000
> call 00 0000
> mptr a100
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A100
> peek
62
Success!
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## The upload.py tool
The serial connection is not always 100% reliable and a bad byte can slip in
when you push your code and that's not fun when you try to debug your code (is
this bad behavior caused by my logic or by a bad serial upload?). Moreover,
sending contents bigger than `0xff` bytes can be a hassle.
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To this end, there is a `upload.py` file in `tools/` that takes care of loading
the file and verify the contents. So, instead of doing `mptr a000` followed by
`poke 8` followed by your `cat` above, you would have done:
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./upload.py /dev/ttyUSB0 a000 tosend.bin
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This emits `mptr`, `poke` and `peek` commands and fail appropriately if the
`peek` doesn't match sent contents. If the file is larger than `0xff` bytes,
repeat the process until the whole file was sent (file must fit in memory space
though, of course). Very handy.
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## Labels in RAM code
If your code contains any label, make sure that you add a `.org` directive at
the beginning of your code with the address you're planning on uploading your
code to. Otherwise, those labels are going to point to wrong addresses.
## Calling ROM code
The ROM you run Collapse OS on already has quite a bit of code in it, some of
it could be useful to programs you run from RAM.
If you know exactly where a routine lives in the ROM, you can `call` the address
directly, no problem. However, getting this information is tedious work and is
likely to change whenever you change the kernel code.
A good approach is to define yourself a jump table that you put in your glue
code. A good place for this is in the `0x03` to `0x37` range, which is empty
anyways (unless you set yourself up with some `rst` jumps) and is needed to
have a proper interrupt hook at `0x38`. For example, your glue code could look
like (important fact: `jp <addr>` uses 3 bytes):
jp init
; JUMP TABLE
jp printstr
jp aciaPutC
.fill 0x38-$
jp aciaInt
init:
[...]
It then becomes easy to build yourself a predictable and stable jump header,
something you could call `jumptable.inc`:
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.equ JUMP_PRINTSTR 0x03
.equ JUMP_ACIAPUTC 0x06
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You can then include that file in your "user" code, like this:
#include "jumptable.inc"
.org 0xa000
ld hl, label
call JUMP_PRINTSTR
ret
label: .db "Hello World!", 0
If you load that code at `0xa000` and call it, it will print "Hello World!" by
using the `printstr` routine from `core.asm`.
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## Doing the same with the BASIC shell
The BASIC shell also has the capacity to load code from serial console but its
semantic is a bit different from the regular shell. Instead of peeking and
poking, you use `getc` to send data and then `putc` to send the same data back
for verification. Then, you can use `poke` to commit it to memory.
There's an upload tool that use these commands and it's `uploadb.py`. It is
invoked with the same arguments as `upload.py`.
Once your code is uploaded, you will call it with BASIC's `usr` command. See
BASIC's README for more details.