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Also, add the new `bshell` emulated tool. BASIC is on its way to replace the shell.
80 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
80 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
# emul
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This folder contains a couple of tools running under the [libz80][libz80]
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emulator.
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## Build
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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 tools.
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## shell
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Running `shell/shell` runs the shell in an emulated machine. The goal of this
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machine is not to simulate real hardware, but rather to serve as a development
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platform. What we do here is we emulate the z80 part, the 64K memory space and
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then hook some fake I/Os to stdin, stdout and a small storage device that is
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suitable for Collapse OS's filesystem to run on.
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Through that, it becomes easier to develop userspace applications for Collapse
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OS.
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We don't try to emulate real hardware to ease the development of device drivers
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because so far, I don't see the advantage of emulation versus running code on
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the real thing.
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## bshell
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The `basic` app is on its way to replace the shell. It is wrapped in the z80
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emulator in the same way that the shell is and interacts with `cfsin` similarly.
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## zasm
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`zasm/zasm` is `apps/zasm` wrapped in an emulator. It is quite central to the
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Collapse OS project because it's used to assemble everything, including itself!
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The program takes no parameter. It reads source code from stdin and spits
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binary in stdout. It supports includes and had both `apps/` and `kernel` folder
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packed into a CFS that was statically included in the executable at compile
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time.
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The file `zasm/zasm.bin` is a compiled binary for `apps/zasm/glue.asm` and
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`zasm/kernel.bin` is a compiled binary for `tools/emul/zasm/glue.asm`. It is
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used to bootstrap the assembling process so that no assembler other than zasm
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is required to build Collapse OS.
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This binary is fed to libz80 to produce the `zasm/zasm` "modern" binary and
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once you have that, you can recreate `zasm/zasm.bin` and `zasm/kernel.bin`.
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This is why it's included as a binary in the repo, but yes, it's redundant with
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the source code.
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Those binaries can be updated with the `make updatebootstrap` command. If they
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are up-to date and that zasm isn't broken, this command should output the same
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binary as before.
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## runbin
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This is a very simple tool that reads binary z80 code from stdin, loads it in
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memory starting at address 0 and then run the code until it halts. The exit
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code of the program is the value of `A` when the program halts.
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This is used for unit tests.
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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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`kernel.bin` or `zasm.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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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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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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