NetBSD doesn't have ncurses. Linking to curses doesn't seem to change anything. Tried on OpenBSD and Ubuntu.
2.6 KiB
Z80 emulation
This folder contains a couple of tools running under the [libz80][libz80] emulator.
Requirements
You need curses
to build the forth
executable.
For sms
and ti84
emulators, you need XCB and pkg-config.
Build
Running make
builds all targets described below
Vanilla Forth
The ./forth
executable here works like the one in /cvm
, except that it runs
under an emulated z80 machine instead of running natively. Refer to
/cvm/README.md
for details.
./forth
doesn't try to emulate real hardware
because the goal here is to facilitate "high level" development.
These apps run on imaginary hardware and use many cheats to simplify I/Os.
RC2014 emulation
This emulates a RC2014 classic with 8K of ROM, 32K of RAM and an ACIA hooked to stdin/stdout.
Run ./rc2014 /path/to/rom
(for example, os.bin
from RC2014's recipe).
Serial I/O is hooked to stdin/stdout. CTRL+D
to quit.
There are 2 options. -s
replaces the ACIA with a Zilog SIO and
-c/path/to/image
hooks up a SD card with specified contents.
You can press CTRL+E
to dump the whole 64K of memory into memdump
.
Sega Master System emulator
This emulates a Sega Master system with a monochrome screen and a Genesis pad hooked to port A.
Launch the emulator with ./sms /path/to/rom
(you can use the binary from the
sms
recipe.
This will show a window with the screen's content on it. The mappings to the pad are:
- W --> Up
- A --> Left
- S --> Down
- D --> Right
- H --> A
- J --> B
- K --> C
- L --> Start
If your ROM is configured with PS/2 keyboard input, run this emulator with the
-k
flag to replace SMS pad emulation with keyboard emulation.
The -c
option connects a SD card in the same way as the RC2014 emulator.
In both cases (pad or keyboard), only port A emulation is supported.
Press ESC to quit.
TI-84
This emulates a TI-84+ with its screen and keyboard. This is suitable for
running the ti84
recipe.
Launch the emulator with ./ti84 /path/to/rom
(you can use the binary from the
ti84
recipe. Use the small one, not the one having been filled to 1MB).
This will show a window with the LCD screen's content on it. Most applications, upon boot, halt after initialization and stay halted until the ON key is pressed. The ON key is mapped to the tilde (~) key.
Press ESC to quit.
As for the rest of the mappings, they map at the key level. For example, the 'Y' key maps to '1' (which yields 'y' when in alpha mode). Therefore, '1' and 'Y' map to the same calculator key. Backspace maps to DEL.
Left Shift maps to 2nd. Left Ctrl maps to Alpha. [libz80]: https://github.com/ggambetta/libz80