mirror of https://github.com/bsnes-emu/bsnes.git
2 Commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Tim Allen | 406b6a61a5 |
Update to v103r31 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - gba/cpu: slight speedup to CPU::step() - processor/arm7tdmi: fixed about ten bugs, ST018 and GBA games are now playable once again - processor/arm: removed core from codebase - processor/v30mz: code cleanup (renamed functions; updated instruction() for consistency with other cores) It turns out on my much faster system, the new ARM7TDMI core is very slightly slower than the old one (by about 2% or so FPS.) But the CPU::step() improvement basically made it a wash. So yeah, I'm in really serious trouble with how slow my GBA core is now. Sigh. As for higan/processor ... this concludes the first phase of major cleanups and rewrites. There will always be work to do, and I have two more phases in mind. One is that a lot of the instruction disassemblers are very old. One even uses sprintf still. I'd like to modernize them all. Also, the ARM7TDMI core (and the ARM core before it) can't really disassemble because the PC address used for instruction execution is not known prior to calling instruction(), due to pipeline reload fetches that may occur inside of said function. I had a nasty hack for debugging the new core, but I'd like to come up with a clean way to allow tracing the new ARM7TDMI core. Another is that I'd still like to rename a lot of instruction function names in various cores to be more descriptive. I really liked how the LR35902 core came out there, and would like to get that level of detail in with the other cores as well. |
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Tim Allen | 6e8406291c |
Update to v102r24 release.
byuu says Changelog: - FC: fixed three MOS6502 regressions [hex\_usr] - GBA: return fetched instruction instead of 0 for unmapped MMIO (passes all of endrift's I/O tests) - MD: fix VDP control port read Vblank bit to test screen height instead of hard-code 240 (fixes Phantasy Star IV) - MD: swap USP,SSP when executing an exception (allows Super Street Fighter II to run; but no sprites visible yet) - MD: grant 68K access to Z80 bus on reset (fixes vdpdoc demo ROM from freezing immediately) - SFC: reads from $00-3f,80-bf:4000-43ff no longer update MDR [p4plus2] - SFC: massive, eight-hour cleanup of WDC65816 CPU core ... still not complete The big change this time around is the SFC CPU core. I've renamed everything from R65816 to WDC65816, and then went through and tried to clean up the code as much as possible. This core is so much larger than the 6502 core that I chose cleaning up the code to rewriting it. First off, I really don't care for the BitRange style functionality. It was an interesting experiment, but its fatal flaw are that the types are just bizarre, which makes them hard to pass around generically to other functions as arguments. So I went back to the list of bools for flags, and union/struct blocks for the registers. Next, I renamed all of the functions to be more descriptive: eg `op_read_idpx_w` becomes `instructionIndexedIndirectRead16`. `op_adc_b` becomes `algorithmADC8`. And so forth. I eliminated about ten instructions because they were functionally identical sans the index, so I just added a uint index=0 parameter to said functions. I added a few new ones (adjust→INC,DEC; pflag→REP,SEP) where it seemed appropriate. I cleaned up the disaster of the instruction switch table into something a whole lot more elegant without all the weird argument decoding nonsense (still need M vs X variants to avoid having to have 4-5 separate switch tables, but all the F/I flags are gone now); and made some things saner, like the flag clear/set and branch conditions, now that I have normal types for flags and registers once again. I renamed all of the memory access functions to be more descriptive to what they're doing: eg writeSP→push, readPC→fetch, writeDP→writeDirect, etc. Eliminated some of the special read/write modes that were only used in one single instruction. I started to clean up some of the actual instructions themselves, but haven't really accomplished much here. The big thing I want to do is get rid of the global state (aa, rd, iaddr, etc) and instead use local variables like I am doing with my other 65xx CPU cores now. But this will take some time ... the algorithm functions depend on rd to be set to work on them, rather than taking arguments. So I'll need to rework that. And then lastly, the disassembler is still a mess. I want to finish the CPU cleanups, and then post a new WIP, and then rewrite the disassembler after that. The reason being ... I want a WIP that can generate identical trace logs to older versions, in case the CPU cleanup causes any regressions. That way I can more easily spot the errors. Oh ... and a bit of good news. v102 was running at ~140fps on the SNES core. With the new support to suspend/resume WAI/STP, plus the internal CPU registers not updating the MDR, the framerate dropped to ~132fps. But with the CPU cleanups, performance went back to ~140fps. So, hooray. Of course, without those two other improvements, we'd have ended up at possibly ~146-148fps, but oh well. |