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Author SHA1 Message Date
Virgil Dupras
2d2a846b25 Inline SCPY
I'm planning a string reform and it's standing in the way.
2020-05-24 14:19:25 -04:00
Virgil Dupras
a59322c252 Remove XPACK
Now that everything is cross-compiled, no need to XPACK. If we ever
need it again, we know where to find it.
2020-05-24 13:45:22 -04:00
Virgil Dupras
4c1cacd8d0 Remove Linker
Now that the boot binary is fully cross-compiled, there's no use for
the linker anymore. Theoretically, it could still be useful, but I
can't think of a real use case.

Let's take it out of the picture. If it's ever needed again, I'll
know where to find it.
2020-05-24 10:22:56 -04:00
22 changed files with 6 additions and 188 deletions

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@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ MASTER INDEX
3 Usage 30 Dictionary
70 Implementation notes 100 Block editor
120 Linker 150 Extra words
150 Extra words
200 Z80 assembler 260 Cross compilation
280 Z80 boot code 350 Core words
410 PS/2 keyboard subsystem 420 Bootstrap guide

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@ -5,9 +5,6 @@ LIT -- Write a LIT entry. You're expected to write
LIT< x -- Read following word and write to HERE as a
string literal.
S= a1 a2 -- f Returns whether string a1 == a2.
SCPY a -- Copy string at addr a into HERE, without
NULL termination.

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
Linker
Relink a dictionary by applying offsets to all word references
in words of the "compiled" type.
A typical usage of this unit would be to, right after a
bootstrap-from-icore-from-source operation, identify the root
word of the source part, probably "H@", and run " ' thatword
RLDICT ". Then, take the resulting relinked binary, concatenate
it to the boot binary, and write to boot media.
LIMITATIONS
This unit can't automatically detect all offsets needing
relinking. This is a list of situations that aren't handled:
(cont.)

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@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
Cells: It's not possible to know for sure whether a cellWord
contains an address or a number. They are therefore not
automatically relinked. You have to manually relink each of
them with RLCELL. In the case of a DOES> word, PFA+2, which
is always an offset, is automatically relinked, but not
PFA+0.
Load with "122 LOAD"

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@ -1 +0,0 @@
1 9 LOADR+

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@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
( Skip atom, considering special atom types. )
: ASKIP ( a -- a+n )
DUP @ ( a n )
( ?br or br or NUMBER )
DUP 0x67 = OVER 0x53 = OR OVER 0x20 = OR OVER 0x24 = OR
IF DROP 4 + EXIT THEN
( regular word )
0x22 = NOT IF 2+ EXIT THEN
( it's a lit, skip to null char )
( a )
1+ ( we skip by 2, but the loop below is pre-inc... )
BEGIN 1+ DUP C@ NOT UNTIL
( skip null char )
1+
;

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@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
( RLATOM pre-comment
Relink atom at a, applying offset o with limit ol.
Returns a, appropriately skipped.
0x24 = IF: 0x24 is an addrWord, which should be offsetted in
the same way that a regular word would. To achieve this, we
skip ASKIP and instead of skipping 4 bytes like a numberWord,
we skip only 2, which means that our number will be treated
like a regular wordref. )

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
: RLATOM ( a o ol -- a+n )
ROT ( o ol a )
DUP @ ( o ol a n )
DUP 0x24 = IF
DROP 2+ ( o ol a+2 )
ROT ROT 2DROP ( a ) EXIT
THEN
ROT ( o a n ol )
< IF ( under limit, do nothing )
NIP ( a )
ELSE ( o a )
TUCK @ ( a o n )
-^ ( a n-o )
OVER ! ( a )
THEN
ASKIP ;

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@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
( RLWORD pre-comment
Relink a word with specified offset. If it's not of the type
"compiled word", ignore. If it is, advance in word until a2
is met, and for each word that is above ol, reduce that
reference by o.
Arguments: a1: wordref a2: word end addr o: offset to apply
ol: offset limit. don't apply on refs under it.
The 0x0e and 0x2b check at the beginning is to ensure we have
either a compiledWord or a doesWord. If we don't, we do
nothing. The further 0x2b check is because if we have a
doesWord, we start 2 bytes later.
)

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
: RLWORD ( ol o a1 a2 -- )
SWAP DUP C@ ( ol o a2 a1 n )
DUP 0x0e = OVER 0x2b = OR NOT IF
( unwind all args ) 2DROP 2DROP EXIT THEN
0x2b = IF 2+ THEN ( ol o a2 a1 )
1+ ( ol o a2 a1+1 )
BEGIN ( ol o a2 a1 )
2OVER SWAP ( ol o a2 a1 o ol )
RLATOM ( ol o a2 a+n )
2DUP < IF ABORT THEN ( Something is very wrong )
2DUP = ( ol o a2 a+n f )
IF ( unwind )
2DROP 2DROP EXIT
THEN
AGAIN
;

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
( RLDICT pre-comment: Copy dict from target wordref, including
header, up to HERE. We're going relocate those words by
specified offset. To do this, we're copying this whole memory
area in HERE and then iterate through that copied area and call
RLWORD on each word. That results in a dict that can be
concatenated to target's prev entry in a more compact way.
This copy of data doesn't allocate anything, so H@ doesn't
move. Moreover, we reserve 4 bytes at H@ to write our target
and offset because otherwise, things get too complicated with
the PSP.
The output of this word is 3 numbers: top copied address, top
copied CURRENT, and then the beginning of the copied dict at
the end to indicate that we're finished processing.
cont. )

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
( Note that the last word is always skipped because it's not
possible to reliably detect its end. If you need that last
word, define a dummy word before calling RLDICT.
We first start by copying the affected area to H@+4. This is
where the relinking will take place.
Then we iterate the new dict from the top, keeping track of
wr, the current wordref and we, wr's end offset.
Initially, we get our wr and we, withH@ and CURRENT, which we
offset by u+4. +4 before, remember, we're using 4 bytes
as variable space.
At each iteration, we becomes wr-header and wr is fetched from
PREV field. )

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
: RLDICT ( target offset -- )
H@ 2+ ! H@ ! ( H@+2 == offset, H@ == target )
H@ @ WORD( DUP H@ -^ ( src u )
DUP ROT SWAP H@ 4 + ( u src u dst )
SWAP MOVE ( u )
4 + DUP CURRENT @ WORD( + ( u we )
DUP .X NL
SWAP CURRENT @ PREV + DUP .X NL ( we wr )
BEGIN ( we wr )
DUP ROT ( wr wr we )
H@ @ H@ 2+ @ ( wr wr we ol o )
2SWAP RLWORD ( wr )
DUP PREV SWAP ( wr oldwr )
WORD( SWAP ( we wr )
DUP 4 - H@ <= ( are we finished? )
UNTIL H@ 4 + .X NL ;

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@ -1 +1 @@
1 LOAD+ 3 LOAD+ 6 LOAD+ 7 LOAD+
1 LOAD+ 3 LOAD+ 6 LOAD+

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@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
XPACK - pack source code
The goal of this word is to pack source code in tight places,
such as on the boot section of an EEPROM. It takes a block
number, reads it and packs it to HERE. It normalizes all
whitespaces to a single space and ignore comments.

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
: XPACK ( blkno -- )
BLK@
BLK( 0x2e RAM+ ! ( boot ptr )
['] (boot<) 0x08 RAM+ ! ( C<* override )
BEGIN
WORD
0x2e RAM+ @ BLK( 1024 + < IF
DUP LIT< ( S= IF
DROP [COMPILE] (
ELSE
SCPY 0x20 C,
THEN 0 ( loop again )
ELSE 1 ( stop looping ) THEN
UNTIL
0 0x08 RAM+ !
;

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@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
( b1 b2 -- )
: XPACKR 1+ SWAP DO I DUP . NL XPACK LOOP ;

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@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
: SCPY
BEGIN ( a )
C@+ ( a+1 c )
?DUP NOT IF DROP EXIT THEN
C, ( a c )
AGAIN ;

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@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
: +! TUCK @ + SWAP ! ;
: [entry] ( w -- )
H@ SWAP SCPY ( h )
H@ SWAP
BEGIN C@+ ( w+1 c ) ?DUP IF C, 0 ELSE 1 THEN UNTIL DROP
H@ SWAP - ( sz )
( write prev value )
H@ CURRENT @ - ,

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@ -1,11 +1,7 @@
( Words here until the end of the low part, unlike words
preceeding them, aren't immediately needed for boot. But its
better to have as many words as possible in the xcomp part. )
: IMMEDIATE
CURRENT @ 1-
DUP C@ 128 OR SWAP C! ;
: IMMED? 1- C@ 0x80 AND ;
: +! TUCK @ + SWAP ! ;
: -^ SWAP - ;
: / /MOD NIP ;
: MOD /MOD DROP ;

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@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
: LIT< WORD 34 , BEGIN C@+ DUP C, NOT UNTIL DROP ; IMMEDIATE
: BEGIN H@ ; IMMEDIATE
: AGAIN COMPILE (br) H@ - _bchk , ; IMMEDIATE
: UNTIL COMPILE (?br) H@ - _bchk , ; IMMEDIATE
: [ INTERPRET ; IMMEDIATE
: ] R> DROP ;
: LIT< WORD 34 , SCPY 0 C, ; IMMEDIATE
: LITA 36 , , ;
: COMPILE ' LITA ['] , , ; IMMEDIATE
: [COMPILE] ' , ; IMMEDIATE

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