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1
.gitignore
vendored
1
.gitignore
vendored
@ -1,2 +1 @@
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*.o
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/kernel/user.h
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34
README.md
34
README.md
@ -27,33 +27,25 @@ github issue][forth-issue].
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Documentation is lacking, it's not ready yet, this is a WIP branch.
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## See it in action
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## Getting started
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Michael Schierl has put together [a set of emulators running in the browser that
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run Collapse OS in different contexts][jsemul].
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Using those while following along with the [User Guide](doc/) is your quickest
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path to giving Collapse OS a try.
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## Documentation
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Usage documentation is in-system. Run `0 LIST` for an introduction. You can
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also open `blk/000` in a modern text editor.
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Usage documentation is in-system, so access to documentation requires you to
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run Collapse OS. Fortunately, doing so in an emulator is easy.
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See `/emul/README.md` for getting an emulated system running.
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Then, run `0 LIST` for an introduction, follow instructions from there.
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## Organisation of this repository
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* `forth`: Forth is slowly taking over this project (see issue #4). It comes
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from this folder.
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* `recipes`: collection of recipes that assemble parts together on a specific
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* `blk`: Collapse OS filesystem's content. That's actually where Collapse OS'
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source code is located. Everything else is peripheral.
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* `recipes`: collection of recipes that assemble Collapse OS on a specific
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machine.
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* `blk`: Collapse OS filesystem's content. See `000` for intro.
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* `doc`: User guide for when you've successfully installed Collapse OS.
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* `tools`: Tools for working with Collapse OS from "modern" environments. For
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example, tools for facilitating data upload to a Collapse OS machine
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through a serial port.
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* `emul`: Emulated applications.
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* `emul`: Tools for running Collapse OS in an emulated environment.
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* `tests`: Automated test suite for the whole project.
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## Status
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@ -63,13 +55,13 @@ for more information.
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## Discussion
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For a general discussion of Collapse OS and the ecosystem of technologies and ideas that may develop around it refer to [r/collapseos][discussion]
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For a general discussion of Collapse OS and the ecosystem of technologies and
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ideas that may develop around it refer to [r/collapseos][discussion]
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A more traditional [mailing list][listserv] and IRC (#collapseos on freenode) channels are also maintained.
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A more traditional [mailing list][listserv] and IRC (#collapseos on freenode)
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channels are also maintained.
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[libz80]: https://github.com/ggambetta/libz80
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[web]: https://collapseos.org
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[jsemul]: https://schierlm.github.io/CollapseOS-Web-Emulator/
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[discussion]: https://www.reddit.com/r/collapseos
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[listserv]: http://lists.sonic.net/mailman/listinfo/collapseos
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[forth-issue]: https://github.com/hsoft/collapseos/issues/4
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51
TRICKS.txt
51
TRICKS.txt
@ -1,51 +0,0 @@
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This file describe tricks and conventions that are used throughout the code and
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might need explanation.
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*** Quickies
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or a: Equivalent to "cp 0", but results in a shorter opcode.
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xor a: sets A to 0 more efficiently than ld a, 0
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and 0xbf: Given a letter in the a-z range, changes it to its uppercase value
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if it's already uppercased, then it stays that way.
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*** Z flag for results
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Z if almost always used as a success indicator for routines. Set for success,
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Reset for failure. "xor a" (destroys A) and "cp a" (preserves A) are used to
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ensure Z is set. To ensure that it is reset, it's a bit more complicated and
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"unsetZ" routine exists for that, although that in certain circumstances,
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"inc a \ dec a" or "or a" can work.
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*** Little endian
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z80 is little endian in its 16-bit loading operations. For example, "ld hl, (0)"
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will load the contents of memory address 0 in L and memory address 1 in H. This
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little-endianess is followed by Collapse OS in most situations. When it's not,
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it's specified in comments.
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This get a bit awkward with regards to 32-bit. There are no "native" z80 32-bit
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operations, so z80 doesn't mandate an alignment. In Collapse OS, 32-bit numbers
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are stored as "big endian pair of little endian 16-bit numbers". For example,
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if "ld dehl, (0)" existed and if the first 4 bytes of memory were 0x01, 0x02,
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0x03 and 0x04, then DE (being the "high" word) would be 0x0201 and HL would be
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0x0403.
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*** DAA
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When it comes to dealing with decimals, the DAA instruction, which look a bit
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obscur, can be very useful. It transforms the result of a previous arithmetic
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operation involving two BCD (binary coded decimal, one digit in high nibble,
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the other digit in low nibble. For example, 0x99 represents 99) into a valid
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BCD. For example, 0x12+0x19=0x2b, but after calling DAA, it will be 0x31.
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To clear misunderstanding: this does **not** transform an arbitrary value into
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BCD. For example, "ld a, 0xff \ daa" isn't going to magically give you a binary
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coded 255 (how could it?). This is designed to be ran after an arithmetic
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operation.
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A common trick to transform an arbitrary number to BCD is to loop 8 times over
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your bitstream, SLA your bits out of your binary value and then run
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"adc a, a \ daa" over it (with provisions for carries if you expect numbers
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over 99).
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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ emulator.
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## Not real hardware
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In the few emulated apps described below, we don't try to emulate real hardware
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because the goal here is to facilitate userspace development.
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because the goal here is to facilitate "high level" development.
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These apps run on imaginary hardware and use many cheats to simplify I/Os.
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@ -18,44 +18,17 @@ folder.
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First, make sure that the `libz80` git submodule is checked out. If not, run
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`git submodule init && git submodule update`.
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After that, you can run `make` and it builds all applications.
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After that, you can run `make` and it builds the `forth` interpreter.
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## forth
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Collapse OS' Forth interpreter, which is in the process of replacing the
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zasm-based project.
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The Forth interpreter is entirely self-hosting, that is, it assembles its
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binary with itself.
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There are 3 build stages.
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**Stage 0**: At this stage, all we have are our bootstrap binaries, `boot.bin`
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and `z80c.bin`. We concatenate them into `forth0.bin` ans then wrap the
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emulator around it which is named `stage1` (because it builds the stage 1) to
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have a barebone forth interpreter.
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**Stage 1**: The `stage1` binary allows us to augment `forth0.bin` with
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the compiled dictionary of a full Forth interpreter. We feed it with
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`$(FORTHSRCS)` and then dump the resulting compiled dict.
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From there, we can create `forth1.bin`, which is wrapped by both the `forth`
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and `stage2` executables. `forth` is the interpreter you'll use.
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**Stage 2**: `stage2` is used to resolve the chicken-and-egg problem and use
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the power of a full Forth intepreter, including an assembler, to assemble
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`z80c.bin`. This is a manual step executed through `make updatebootstrap`.
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Normally, running this step should yield the exact same `boot.bin` and
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`z80c.bin` as before, unless of course you've changed the source.
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Run `./forth` to get the COllapse OS prompt. Type `0 LIST` for help.
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## Problems?
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If the libz80-wrapped zasm executable works badly (hangs, spew garbage, etc.),
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it's probably because you've broken your bootstrap binaries. They're easy to
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mistakenly break. To verify if you've done that, look at your git status. If
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`boot.bin` or `z80c.bin` are modified, try resetting them and then run
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`make clean all`. Things should go better afterwards.
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`forth.bin` is modified, try resetting it and then run `make clean all`. Things
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should go better afterwards.
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If that doesn't work, there's also the nuclear option of `git reset --hard`
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and `git clean -fxd`.
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@ -63,3 +36,5 @@ and `git clean -fxd`.
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If that still doesn't work, it might be because the current commit you're on
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is broken, but that is rather rare: the repo on Github is plugged on Travis
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and it checks that everything is smooth.
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[libz80]: https://github.com/ggambetta/libz80
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1
tools/.gitignore
vendored
1
tools/.gitignore
vendored
@ -10,3 +10,4 @@
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/exec
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/blkpack
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/blkunpack
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/blkup
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@ -8,9 +8,10 @@ BIN2C_TGT = bin2c
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EXEC_TGT = exec
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BLKPACK_TGT = blkpack
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BLKUNPACK_TGT = blkunpack
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BLKUP_TGT = blkup
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TARGETS = $(MEMDUMP_TGT) $(BLKDUMP_TGT) $(UPLOAD_TGT) $(FONTCOMPILE_TGT) \
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$(TTYSAFE_TGT) $(PINGPONG_TGT) \
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$(BIN2C_TGT) $(EXEC_TGT) $(BLKPACK_TGT) $(BLKUNPACK_TGT)
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$(TTYSAFE_TGT) $(PINGPONG_TGT) $(BIN2C_TGT) $(EXEC_TGT) $(BLKPACK_TGT) \
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$(BLKUNPACK_TGT) $(BLKUP_TGT)
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OBJS = common.o
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all: $(TARGETS)
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@ -29,6 +30,7 @@ $(BIN2C_TGT): $(BIN2C_TGT).c
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$(EXEC_TGT): $(EXEC_TGT).c
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$(BLKPACK_TGT): $(BLKPACK_TGT).c
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$(BLKUNPACK_TGT): $(BLKUNPACK_TGT).c
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$(BLKUP_TGT): $(BLKUP_TGT).c
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$(TARGETS): $(OBJS)
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$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $@.c $(OBJS) -o $@
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67
tools/blkup.c
Normal file
67
tools/blkup.c
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <fcntl.h>
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#include <unistd.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include "common.h"
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/* Push specified file to specified device blk device, starting from blkno
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* and upwards.
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*/
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int main(int argc, char **argv)
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{
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if (argc != 4) {
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fprintf(stderr, "Usage: ./blkup device blkno fname\n");
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return 1;
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}
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unsigned int blkno = strtol(argv[2], NULL, 10);
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FILE *fp = fopen(argv[3], "r");
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if (!fp) {
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fprintf(stderr, "Can't open %s.\n", argv[3]);
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return 1;
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}
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int fd = open(argv[1], O_RDWR|O_NOCTTY|O_SYNC);
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if (fd < 0) {
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fprintf(stderr, "Could not open %s\n", argv[1]);
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return 1;
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}
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set_interface_attribs(fd, 0, 0);
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set_blocking(fd, 1);
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char s[0x40];
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char buf[1024] = {0};
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sendcmdp(fd, ": _ 1024 0 DO KEY DUP .x I BLK( + C! LOOP ;");
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int returncode = 0;
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while (fread(buf, 1, 1024, fp)) {
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sendcmd(fd, "_");
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for (int i=0; i<1024; i++) {
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putchar('.');
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fflush(stdout);
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write(fd, &buf[i], 1);
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usleep(1000); // let it breathe
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mread(fd, s, 2); // read hex pair
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s[2] = 0; // null terminate
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unsigned char c = strtol(s, NULL, 16);
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if (c != buf[i]) {
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// mismatch!
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fprintf(stderr, "Mismatch at bno %d (%d) %d != %d.\n", blkno, i, buf[i], c);
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// we don't exit now because we need to "consume" our whole program.
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returncode = 1;
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}
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usleep(1000); // let it breathe
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}
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readprompt(fd);
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if (returncode) break;
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memset(buf, 0, 1024);
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sprintf(s, "%d BLK> ! BLK!", blkno);
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sendcmdp(fd, s);
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blkno++;
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}
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sendcmdp(fd, "FORGET _");
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printf("Done!\n");
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fclose(fp);
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return returncode;
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}
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@ -16,6 +16,24 @@ void mread(int fd, char *s, int count)
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}
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}
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void mexpect(int fd, char ec)
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{
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char c;
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mread(fd, &c, 1);
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if (c != ec) {
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fprintf(stderr, "Expected %d but got %d\n", ec, c);
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}
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}
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void readprompt(int fd)
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{
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mexpect(fd, ' ');
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mexpect(fd, 'o');
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mexpect(fd, 'k');
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mexpect(fd, '\r');
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mexpect(fd, '\n');
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}
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void sendcmd(int fd, char *cmd)
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{
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char junk[2];
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@ -28,16 +46,16 @@ void sendcmd(int fd, char *cmd)
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usleep(1000);
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}
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write(fd, "\r", 1);
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mread(fd, junk, 2); // sends back \r\n
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mexpect(fd, '\r');
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mexpect(fd, '\n');
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usleep(1000);
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}
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// Send a cmd and also read the "> " prompt
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// Send a cmd and also read the " ok" prompt
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void sendcmdp(int fd, char *cmd)
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{
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char junk[2];
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sendcmd(fd, cmd);
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mread(fd, junk, 2);
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readprompt(fd);
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}
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// from https://stackoverflow.com/a/6947758
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@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
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void sendcmd(int fd, char *cmd);
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void sendcmdp(int fd, char *cmd);
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void mread(int fd, char *s, int count);
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void readprompt(int fd);
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int set_interface_attribs(int fd, int speed, int parity);
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void set_blocking(int fd, int should_block);
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|
@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ int main(int argc, char **argv)
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}
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usleep(1000); // let it breathe
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}
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mread(fd, s, 2); // "> " prompt
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readprompt(fd);
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sendcmdp(fd, "FORGET _");
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printf("Done!\n");
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fclose(fp);
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|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user