mirror of https://github.com/bsnes-emu/bsnes.git
35 Commits
Author | SHA1 | Message | Date |
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Tim Allen | 55f19c3e0d |
Update to v103r32 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - Master System: merged Bus into CPU - Mega Drive: merged BusCPU into CPU; BusAPU into AU - Mega Drive: added TMSS emulation; disabled by default [hex\_usr] - VDP lockout not yet emulated - processor/arm7tdmi: renamed interrupt() to exception() - processor/arm7tdmi: CPSR.F (FIQ disable) flag is set on reset - processor/arm7tdmi: pipeline decode stage caches CPSR.T (THUMB mode) [MerryMage] - fixes `msr_tests.gba` test F - processor/arm7tdmi/disassembler: add PC address to left of currently executing instruction - processor/arm7tdmi: stop forcing CPSR.M (mode flags) bit 4 high (I don't know what really happens here) - processor/arm7tdmi: undefined instructions now generate Undefined 0x4 exception - processor/arm7tdmi: thumbInstructionAddRegister masks PC by &~3 instead of &~2 - hopefully this is correct; &~2 felt very wrong - processor/arm7tdmi: thumbInstructionStackMultiple can use sequential timing for PC/LR PUSH/POP [Cydrak] - systems/Mega Drive.sys: added tmss.rom; enable with cpu version=1 - tomoko: detect when a ruby video/audio/input driver crashes higan; disable it on next program startup v104 blockers: - Mega Drive: support 8-bit SRAM (even if we don't support 16-bit; don't force 8-bit to 16-bit) - Mega Drive: add region detection support to icarus - ruby: add default audio device information so certain drivers won't default to silence out of the box |
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Tim Allen | ed5ec58595 |
Update to v103r13 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - gb/interface: fix Game Boy Color extension to be "gbc" and not "gb" [hex\_usr] - ms/interface: move Master System hardware controls below controller ports - sfc/ppu: improve latching behavior of BGnHOFS registers (not hardware verified) [AWJ] - tomoko/input: rework port/device mapping to support non-sequential ports and devices¹ - todo: should add move() to inputDevice.mappings.append and inputPort.devices.append - note: there's a weird GCC 4.9 bug with brace initialization of InputEmulator; have to assign each field separately - tomoko: all windows sans the main presentation window can be dismissed with the escape key - icarus: the single file selection dialog ("Load ROM Image...") can be dismissed with the escape key - tomoko: do not pause emulation when FocusLoss/Pause is set during exclusive fullscreen mode - hiro/(windows,gtk,qt): implemented Window::setDismissable() function (missing from cocoa port, sorry) - nall/string: fixed printing of largest possible negative numbers (eg `INT_MIN`) [Sintendo] - only took eight months! :D ¹: When I tried to move the Master System hardware port below the controller ports, I ran into a world of pain. The input settings list expects every item in the `InputEmulator<InputPort<InputDevice<InputMapping>>>>` arrays to be populated with valid results. But these would be sparsely populated based on the port and device IDs from inside higan. And that is done so that the Interface::inputPoll can have O(1) lookup of ports and devices. This worked because all the port and device IDs were sequential (they left no gaps in the maps upon creating the lists.) Unfortunately by changing the expectation of port ID to how it appears in the list, inputs would not poll correctly. By leaving them alone and just moving Hardware to the third position, the Game Gear would be missing port IDs of 0 and 1 (the controller ports of the Master System). Even by trying to make separate MasterSystemHardware and GameGearHardware ports, things still fractured when the devices were no longer contigious. I got pretty sick of this and just decided to give up on O(1) port/device lookup, and moved to O(n) lookup. It only knocked the framerate down by maybe one frame per second, enough to be in the margin of error. Inputs aren't polled *that* often for loops that usually terminate after 1-2 cycles to be too detrimental to performance. So the new input system now allows non-sequential port and device IDs. Remember that I killed input IDs a while back. There's never any reason for those to need IDs ... it was easier to just order the inputs in the order you want to see them in the user interface. So the input lookup is still O(1). Only now, everything's safer and I return a maybe<InputMapping&>, and won't crash out the program trying to use a mapping that isn't found for some reason. Errata: the escape key isn't working on the browser/message dialogs on Windows, because of course nothing can ever just be easy and work for me. If anyone else wouldn't mind looking into that, I'd greatly appreciate it. Having the `WM_KEYDOWN` test inside the main `Application_sharedProc`, it seems to not respond to the escape key on modal dialogs. If I put the `WM_KEYDOWN` test in the main window proc, then it doesn't seem to get called for `VK_ESCAPE` at all, and doesn't get called period for modal windows. So I'm at a loss and it's past 4AM here >_> |
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Tim Allen | 7af270aa59 |
Update to v103r09 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - gba/apu: fixed wave RAM nibble ordering (fixes audio in Castlevania, PocketNES) - emulator: restructured video information to just a single videoResolution() → VideoResolution function - returns "projected size" (between 160x144 and 320x240) - "internal buffer size" (up to 1280x480) - returns aspect correction multiplier that is to be applied to the width field - the value could be < 1.0 to handle systems with taller pixels; although higan doesn't emulate such a system - tomoko: all calculations for scaling and overscan masking are done by the GUI now - tomoko: aspect correction can be enabled in either windowed or fullscreen mode separately; moved to Video settings panel - tomoko: video scaling multipliers (against 320x240) can now me modified from the default (2,3,4) via the configuration file - use this as a really barebones way of supporting high DPI monitors; although the GUI elements won't scale nicely - if you set a value less than two, or greater than your resolution divided by 320x240, it's your own fault when things blow up. I'm not babysitting anyone with advanced config-file only options. - tomoko: added new adaptive windowed mode - when enabled, the window will shrink to eliminate any black borders when loading a game or changing video settings. The window will not reposition itself. - tomoko: added new adaptive fullscreen mode - when enabled, the integral scaling will be disabled for fullscreen mode, forcing the video to fill at least one direction of the video monitor completely. I expect we will be bikeshedding for the next month on how to describe the new video options, where they should appear in the GUI, changes people want, etc ... but suffice to say, I'm happy with the functionality, so I don't intend to make changes to -what- things do, but I will entertain better ways to name things. |
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Tim Allen | 191a71b291 |
Update to v103r08 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - emulator: improved aspect correction accuracy by using floating-point calculations - emulator: added videoCrop() function, extended videoSize() to take cropping parameters¹ - tomoko: the overscan masking function will now actually resize the viewport² - gba/cpu: fixed two-cycle delay on triggering DMAs; not running DMAs when the CPU is stopped - md/vdp: center video when overscan is disabled - pce/vce: resize video output from 1140x240 to 1120x240 - tomoko: resize window scaling from 326x240 to 320x240 - tomoko: changed save slot naming and status bar messages to indicate quick states vs managed states - tomoko: added increment/decrement quick state hotkeys - tomoko: save/load quick state hotkeys now save to slots 1-5 instead of always to 0 - tomoko: increased overscan range from 0-16 to 0-24 (in case you want to mask the Master System to 240x192) ¹: the idea here was to decouple raw pixels from overscan masking. Overscan was actually horrifically broken before. The Famicom outputs at 256x240, the Super Famicom at 512x480, and the Mega Drive at 1280x480. Before, a horizontal overscan mask of 8 would not reduce the Super Famicom or Mega Drive by nearly as much as the Famicom. WIth the new videoCrop() function, the internals of pixel size distortions can be handled by each individual core. ²: furthermore, by taking optional cropping information in videoSize(), games can scale even larger into the viewport window. So for example, before the Super Famicom could only scale to 1536x1440. But by cropping the vertical resolution by 6 (228p effectively, still more than NTSC can even show), I can now scale to 1792x1596. And wiht aspect correction, that becomes a perfect 8:7 ratio of 2048x1596, giving me perfectly crisp pixels without linear interpolation being required. Errata: for some reason, when I save a new managed state with the SFC core, the default description is being set to a string of what looks to be hex numbers. I found the cause ... I'll fix this in the next release. Note: I'd also like to hide the "find codes..." button if cheats.bml isn't present, as well as update the SMP TEST register comment from smp/timing.cpp |
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Tim Allen | 40802b0b9f |
Update to v103r05 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - fc/controller: added ControllerPort class; removed Peripherals class - md/controller/gamepad: removed X,Y,Z buttons since this isn't a 6-button controller - ms/controller: added ControllerPort class (not used in Game Gear mode); removed Peripherals class - pce/controller: added ControllerPort class; removed Peripherals class - processor/spc700: idle(address) is part of SMP class again, contains flag to detect mov (x)+ edge case - sfc/controller/super-scope,justifier: use CPU frequency instead of hard-coding NTSC frequency - sfc/cpu: move 4x8-bit SMP ports to SMP class - sfc/smp: move APU RAM to DSP class - sfc/smp: improved emulation of TEST registers bits 4-7 [information from nocash] - d4,d5 is RAM wait states (1,2,5,10) - d6,d7 is ROM/IO wait states (1,2,5,10) - sfc/smp: code cleanup to new style (order from lowest to highest bits; use .bit(s) functions) - sfc/smp: $00f8,$00f9 are P4/P5 auxiliary ports; named the registers better |
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Tim Allen | ecc7e899e0 |
Update to v103r01 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - nall/dsp: improve one pole coefficient calculations [Fatbag] - higan/audio: reworked filters to support selection of either one pole (first-order) or biquad (second-order) filters - note: the design is not stable yet; so forks should not put too much effort into synchronizing with this change yet - fc: added first-order filters as per NESdev wiki (90hz lowpass + 440hz lowpass + 14khz highpass) - fc: created separate NTSC-J and NTSC-U regions - NESdev wiki says the Japanese Famicom uses a separate audio filtering strategy, but details are fuzzy - there's also cartridge audio output being disabled on NES units; and differences with controllers - this stuff will be supported in the future, just adding the support for it now - gba: corrected serious bugs in PSG wave channel emulation [Cydrak] - note that if there are still bugs here, it's my fault - md/psg,ym2612: added first-order low-pass 2840hz filter to match VA3-VA6 Mega Drives - md/psg: lowered volume relative to the YM2612 - using 0x1400; multiple people agreed it was the closest to the hardware recordings against a VA6 - ms,md/psg: don't serialize the volume levels array - md/vdp: Hblank bit acts the same during Vblank as outside of it (it isn't always set during Vblank) - md/vdp: return isPAL in bit 0 of control port reads - tomoko: change command-line option separator from : to | - [Editor's note: This change was present in the public v103, but it's in this changelog because it was made after the v103 WIP] - higan/all: change the 20hz high-pass filters from second-order three-pass to first-order one-pass - these filters are meant to remove DC bias, but I honestly can't hear a difference with or without them - so there's really no sense wasting CPU power with an extremely powerful filter here Things I did not do: - change icarus install rule - work on 8-bit Mega Drive SRAM - work on Famicom or Mega Drive region detection heuristics in icarus My long-term dream plan is to devise a special user-configurable filtering system where you can set relative volumes and create your own list of filters (any number of them in any order at any frequency), that way people can make the systems sound however they want. Right now, the sanest place to put this information is inside the $system.sys/manifest.bml files. But that's not very user friendly, and upgrading to new versions will lose these changes if you don't copy them over manually. Of course, cluttering the GUI with a fancy filter editor is probably supreme overkill for 99% of users, so maybe that's fine. |
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Tim Allen | b7006822bf |
Update to v103 WIP release.
byuu says (in the WIP forum): Changelog: - higan: cheat codes accept = and ? separators now - the new preferred code format is: address=value or address=if-match?value - the old code format of address/value and address/if-match/value will continue to work - higan: cheats.bml is no longer included with the base distribution - mightymo stopped updating it in 2015, and it's not source code; it can still be pulled in from older releases - fc: improved PAL mode timing; use PAL APU timing tables; fix PAL noise period table [hex\_usr] - md: support aborting a Z80 bus wait in order to capture save states without freezing - note that this will violate accuracy; but in practice a slight desync is better than an emulator deadlock - sfc: revert DSP ENDX randomization for now (want to research it more before deploying in an official release) - sfc: fix Super Famicom.sys/manifest.bml APU RAM size [hex\_usr] - tomoko: cleaned up make install rules - hiro/cocoa: use ABGR for pixel data [Sintendo] Note: I forgot to change the command-line and drag-and-drop separator from : to | in this WIP. However, it is corrected in the v103 official binary and source published on download.byuu.org. Sorry about that, I know it makes the Git repository history more difficult. I'm not concerned whether the : → | change is part of v103 or v103r01 in the repository, and will leave this to your discretion, Screwtape. I also still need to set the VDP bit to indicate PAL mode in the Mega Drive core. This is what happens when I have 47 things I have to do, given how lousy my memory is. I miss things. |
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Tim Allen | 8476f35153 |
Update to v102r28 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - higan: `Emulator::<Platform::load>()` now returns a struct containing both a path ID and a string option - higan: `Emulator::<Platform::load>()` now takes an optional final argument of string options - fc: added PAL emulation (finally, only took six years) - md: added PAL emulation - md: fixed address parameter to `VDP::Sprite::write()`; fixes missing sprites in Super Street Fighter II - md: emulated HIRQ counter; fixes many games - Super Street Fighter II - status bar - Altered Beast - status bar - Sonic the Hedgehog - Labyrinth Zone - water effect - etc. - ms: added PAL emulation - sfc: added the ability to override the default region auto-detection - sfc: removed "system.region" override setting from `Super Famicom.sys` - tomoko: added options list to game folder load dialog window - tomoko: added the ability to specify game folder load options on the command-line So, basically ... Sega forced a change with the way region detection works. You end up with games that can run on multiple regions, and the content changes accordingly. Bare Knuckle in NTSC-J mode will become Streets of Rage in NTSC-U mode. Some games can even run in both NTSC and PAL mode. In my view, there should be a separate ROM for each region a game was released in, even if the ROM content were identical. But unfortunately that's not how things were done by anyone else. So to support this, the higan load dialog now has a drop-down at the bottom-right, where you can choose the region to load games from. On the SNES, it defaults to "Auto", which will pull the region setting from the manifest, or fall back on NTSC. On the Mega Drive ... unfortunately, I can't auto-detect the region from the ROM header. $1f0 is supposed to contain a string like "JUE", but instead you get games like Maui Mallard that put an "A" there, and other such nonsense. Sega was far more lax than Nintendo with the ROM header validity. So for now at least, you have to manually select your region every time you play a Mega Drive game, thus you have "NTSC-J", "NTSC-U", and "PAL". The same goes for the Master System for the same reason, but there's only "NTSC" and "PAL" here. I'm not sure if games have a way to detect domestic vs international consoles. And for now ... the Famicom is the same as well, with no auto-detection. I'd sincerely hope iNES has a header bit for the region, but I didn't bother with updating icarus to support that yet. The way to pass these parameters on the command-line is to prefix the game path with "option:", so for example: higan "PAL:/path/to/Sonic the Hedgehog (USA, Europe).md" If you don't provide a prefix, it uses the default (NTSC-J, NTSC, or Auto.) Obviously, it's not possible to pass parameters with drag-and-drop, so you will always get the default option in said case. |
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Tim Allen | 8af3e4a6e2 |
Update to v102r22 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - higan: Emulator::Interface::videoSize() renamed to videoResolution() - higan: Emulator::Interface::rtcsync() renamed to rtcSynchronize() - higan: added video display rotation support to Video - GBA: substantially improved audio mixing - fixed bug with FIFO 50%/100% volume setting - now properly using SOUNDBIAS amplitude to control output frequencies - reduced quantization noise - corrected relative volumes between PSG and FIFO channels - both PSG and FIFO values cached based on amplitude; resulting in cleaner PCM samples - treating PSG volume=3 as 200% volume instead of 0% volume now (unverified: to match mGBA) - GBA: properly initialize ALL CPU state; including the vital prefetch.wait=1 (fixes Classic NES series games) - GBA: added video rotation with automatic key translation support - PCE: reduced output resolution scalar from 285x242 to 285x240 - the extra two scanlines won't be visible on most TVs; and they make all other cores look worse - this is because all other cores output at 240p or less; so they were all receiving black bars in windowed mode - tomoko: added "Rotate Display" hotkey setting - tomoko: changed hotkey multi-key logic to OR instead of AND - left support for flipping it back inside the core; for those so inclined; by uncommenting one line in input.hpp - tomoko: when choosing Settings→Configuration, it will automatically select the currently loaded system - for instance, if you're playing a Game Gear game, it'll take you to the Game Gear input settings - if no games are loaded, it will take you to the hotkeys panel instead - WS(C): merged "Hardware-Vertical", "Hardware-Horizontal" controls into combined "Hardware" - WS(C): converted rotation support from being inside the core to using Emulator::Video - this lets WS(C) video content scale larger now that it's not bounded by a 224x224 square box - WS(C): added automatic key rotation support - WS(C): removed emulator "Rotate" key (use the general hotkey instead; I recommend F8 for this) - nall: added serializer support for nall::Boolean (boolean) types - although I will probably prefer the usage of uint1 in most cases |
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Tim Allen | 04072b278b |
Update to v102r16 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - Emulator::Stream now allows adding low-pass and high-pass filters dynamically - also accepts a pass# count; each pass is a second-order biquad butterworth IIR filter - Emulator::Stream no longer automatically filters out >20KHz frequencies for all streams - FC: added 20Hz high-pass filter; 20KHz low-pass filter - GB: removed simple 'magic constant' high-pass filter of unknown cutoff frequency (missed this one in the last WIP) - GB,SGB,GBC: added 20Hz high-pass filter; 20KHz low-pass filter - MS,GG,MD/PSG: added 20Hz high-pass filter; 20KHz low-pass filter - MD: added save state support (but it's completely broken for now; sorry) - MD/YM2612: fixed Voice#3 per-operator pitch support (fixes sound effects in Streets of Rage, etc) - PCE: added 20Hz high-pass filter; 20KHz low-pass filter - WS,WSC: added 20Hz high-pass filter; 20KHz low-pass filter So, the point of the low-pass filters is to remove frequencies above human hearing. If we don't do this, then resampling will introduce aliasing that results in sounds that are audible to the human ear. Which basically an annoying buzzing sound. You'll definitely hear the improvement from these in games like Mega Man 2 on the NES. Of course, these already existed before, so this WIP won't sound better than previous WIPs. The high-pass filters are a little more complicated. Their main role is to remove DC bias and help to center the audio stream. I don't understand how they do this at all, but ... that's what everyone who knows what they're talking about says, thus ... so be it. I have set all of the high-pass filters to 20Hz, which is below the limit of human hearing. Now this is where it gets really interesting ... technically, some of these systems actually cut off a lot of range. For instance, the GBA should technically use an 800Hz high-pass filter when output is done through the system's speakers. But of course, if you plug in headphones, you can hear the lower frequencies. Now 800Hz ... you definitely can hear. At that level, nearly all of the bass is stripped out and the audio is very tinny. Just like the real system. But for now, I don't want to emulate the audio being crushed that badly. I'm sticking with 20Hz everywhere since it won't negatively affect audio quality. In fact, you should not be able to hear any difference between this WIP and the previous WIP. But theoretically, DC bias should mostly be removed as a result of these new filters. It may be that we need to raise the values on some cores in the future, but I don't want to do that until we know for certain that we have to. What I can say is that compared to even older WIPs than r15 ... the removal of the simple one-pole low-pass and high-pass filters with the newer three-pass, second-order filters should result in much better attenuation (less distortion of audible frequencies.) Probably not enough to be noticeable in a blind test, though. |
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Tim Allen | 7e7003fd29 |
Update to v102r15 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - nall: added DSP::IIR::OnePole (which is a first-order IIR filter) - FC/APU: removed strong highpass, weak hipass filters (and the dummied out lowpass filter) - MS,GG,MD/PSG: removed lowpass filter - MS,GG,MD/PSG: audio was not being centered properly; removed centering for now - MD/YM2612: fixed clipping of accumulator from 18 signed bits to 14 signed bits (-0x2000 to +0x1fff) [Cydrak] - MD/YM2612: removed lowpass filter - PCE/PSG: audio was not being centered properly; removed centering for now First thing is that I've removed all of the ad-hoc audio filtering. Emulator::Stream intrinsically provides a three-pass, second-order biquad IIR butterworth lowpass filter that clips frequencies above 20KHz with very good attenuation (as good as IIR gets, anyway.) It doesn't really make sense to have the various cores running additional lowpass filters. If we want to filter frequencies below 20KHz, then I can adapt Emulator::Audio::createStream() to take a cutoff frequency value, and we can do it all at once, with much better quality. Right now, I don't know what frequencies are best to cut off the various other audio cores, so they're just gone for now. As for the highpass filters for the Famicom core, well ... you don't get aliasing from resampling low frequencies. And generally speaking, too low a frequency will be inaudible anyway. All these were doing was killing possible bass (if they were too strong.) We can add them again, but only if someone can convert Ryphecha's ad-hoc magic integers into a frequency cutoff. In which case, I'll use my biquad IIR filter to do it even better. On this note, it may prove useful to do this for the MD PSG as well, to try and head off unnecessary clamping when mixing with the YM2612. Finally, there was the audio centering issue that affected the MS,GG,MD,PCE,SG cores. It was flooring the "silent" audio level, which was resulting in extremely heavy distortion if you tried listening to higan and, say, audacious at the same time. Without the botched centering, this distortion is completely gone now. However, without any centering, we've halved the potential volume range. This means the audio slider in higan's audio settings panel will start clamping twice as quickly. So ultimately, we need to figure out how to fix the centering. This isn't as simple as just subtracting less. We will probably have to center every individual audio channel before summing them to do this properly. Results: On the Mega Drive, Altered Beast sounds quite a bit better, a lot less distortion now. But it's still not perfect, especially sound effects. Further, Bare Knuckle / Streets of Rage still has really bad sound effects. It looks like I broke something in Cydrak's code when trying to adapt it to my style =( |
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Tim Allen | 89d47914b9 |
Update to v102r14 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - (MS,GG,MD)/PSG: flip output bit from noise channel [TmEE] - MD/YM2612: rewrite YM2612::Channel functions to YM2612::Channel::Operator functions¹ - MD/YM2612: pitch/octave I/O registers should set reload, not value (fixes sound in most games) - MD/YM2612: don't try to sign-extend raw PCM values (fixes Shining Force opening music) - MD/YM2612: various algorithm simplifications; conversions from `*`, `/`, `%` to `<<`, `>>`; etc. Overall ... Sonic the Hedgehog sounds really, really great. Almost perfect, but there's a bit of clamping going on in the special zones. Langrisser II sounds really great. Shining Force sounds pretty much perfect. Bare Knucles (Streets of Rage) does pretty badly ... punches sound more like dinging a salad fork on a wine glass, heh. Altered Beast is extremely broken ... no music at the title screen, very distorted in-game music. I suspect a bug outside of the YM2612 is affecting this game. So, the YM2612 emulation isn't perfect, but it's a really good start to the most complex sound chip in all of higan. Hopefully the VRC7 and YM2413 will prove to be less ferocious ... not that I'm in any rush to work on either. The former is going to need the NES mapper rewrite to be done first, and the latter is cool but not very necessary since all those games have fallbacks to the inferior PSG audio. But really ... I can't thank Cydrak enough for doing this for me. It would have probably taken me months to parse through all of the documentation on this chip (most of which is in a 55-page thread on spritesmind that is filled with wrong/outdated information at the start, and corrections as you go deeper.) Not to mention, learning about what the hell detuning, low-frequency oscillation, tremolo, vibrato, etc were all about. Or how those algorithms to compute the final output work. Or the dozens of special cases littered in there to make everything sound good. Fierce, nasty chip that. Now the last real problem is save states ... the Mega Drive is going to be the trickiest of all to implement with libco. There are lots of areas where one chip will deadlock another chip while it completes some operation. We don't have a choice but to force those stalls to abort anyway, in order to let libco reach the start of its entry point once again. I don't know what kind of impact that'll have on states ... I suspect they'll work almost as reliably as the SNES does, but I can't know that until I implement it. It's going to be pretty nasty, though. ¹: this basically removes a lot of unnecessary op. prefixes and the need to capture `auto& op = operators[index]` at the start of every function. I wanted to have subfunctions like `YM2612::Channel::Operator::Envelope::run()`, etc but unfortunately, pretty much all of the envelope, phase, pitch, level functions need to access each other's state. |
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Tim Allen | 0bf2c9d4e1 |
Update to v102r13 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - removed Emulator::Interface::videoFrequency(), audioFrequency()¹ - (MS,GG,MD)/PSG: removed inversion on noise channel LFSR update [mic_] - MD/PSG: lowered volume to match YM2612 volume - MD/YM2612: added Cydrak's emulation of FM channels and LFO² ¹: These were no longer used by the UI. The video frequency is adaptive on many systems. And the audio frequency is meaningless due to Emulator::Audio always outputting a consistent frequency specified by the UI. Plus, take the Genesis where there's two sound chips running at different frequencies. So, these had to go. ²: Due to some lurking bugs, the audio is completely broken unfortunately. Will need to be debugged :( First pass looking for any typos didn't yield any obvious results. |
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Tim Allen | 4c3f9b93e7 |
Update to v102r12 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - MD/PSG: fixed 68K bus Z80 status read address location - MS, GG, MD/PSG: channels post-decrement their counters, not pre-decrement [Cydrak]¹ - MD/VDP: cache screen width registers once per scanline; screen height registers once per frame - MD/VDP: support 256-width display mode (used in Shining Force, etc) - MD/YM2612: implemented timers² - MD/YM2612: implemented 8-bit PCM DAC² - 68000: TRAP instruction should index the vector location by 32 (eg by 128 bytes), fixes Shining Force - nall: updated hex(), octal(), binary() functions to take uintmax instead of template<typename T> parameter³ ¹: this one makes an incredible difference. Sie noticed that lots of games set a period of 0, which would end up being a really long period with pre-decrement. By fixing this, noise shows up in many more games, and sounds way better in games even where it did before. You can hear extra sound on Lunar - Sanposuru Gakuen's title screen, the noise in Sonic The Hedgehog (Mega Drive) sounds better, etc. ²: this also really helps sound. The timers allow PSG music to play back at the correct speed instead of playing back way too quickly. And the PCM DAC lets you hear a lot of drum effects, as well as the "Sega!!" sound at the start of Sonic the Hedgehog, and the infamous, "Rise from your grave!" line from Altered Beast. Still, most music on the Mega Drive comes from the FM channels, so there's still not a whole lot to listen to. I didn't implement Cydrak's $02c test register just yet. Sie wasn't 100% certain on how the extended DAC bit worked, so I'd like to play it a little conservative and get sound working, then I'll go back and add a toggle or something to enable undocumented registers, that way we can use that to detect any potential problems they might be causing. ³: unfortunately we lose support for using hex() on nall/arithmetic types. If I have a const Pair& version of the function, then the compiler gets confused on whether Natural<32> should use uintmax or const Pair&, because compilers are stupid, and you can't have explicit arguments in overloaded functions. So even though either function would work, it just decides to error out instead >_> This is actually really annoying, because I want hex() to be useful for printing out nall/crypto keys and hashes directly. But ... this change had to be made. Negative signed integers would crash programs, and that was taking out my 68000 disassembler. |
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Tim Allen | 1cab2dfeb8 |
Update to v102r11 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - MD: connected 32KB cartridge RAM up to every Genesis game under 2MB loaded¹ - MS, GG, MD: improved PSG noise channel emulation, hopefully² - MS, GG, MD: lowered PSG volume so that the lowpass doesn't clamp samples³ - MD: added read/write handlers for VRAM, VSRAM, CRAM - MD: block VRAM copy when CD4 is clear⁴ - MD: rewrote VRAM fill, VRAM copy to be byte-based⁵ - MD: VRAM fill byte set should fall through to regular data port write handler⁶ ¹: the header parsing for backup RAM is really weird. It's spaces when not used, and seems to be 0x02000001-0x02003fff for the Shining games. I don't understand why it starts at 0x02000001 instead of 0x02000000. So I'm just forcing every game to have 32KB of RAM for now. There's also special handling for ROMs > 2MB that also have RAM (Phantasy Star IV, etc) where there's a toggle to switch between ROM and RAM. For now, that's not emulated. I was hoping the Shining games would run after this, but they're still dead-locking on me :( ²: Cydrak pointed out some flaws in my attempt to implement what he had. I was having trouble understanding what he meant, so I went back and read the docs on the sound chip and tried implementing the counter the way the docs describe. Hopefully I have this right, but I don't know of any good test ROMs to make sure my noise emulation is correct. The docs say the shifted-out value goes to the output instead of the low bit of the LFSR, so I made that change as well. I think I hear the noise I'm supposed to in Sonic Marble Zone now, but it seems like it's not correct in Green Hill Zone, adding a bit of an annoying buzz to the background music. Maybe it sounds better with the YM2612, but more likely, I still screwed something up :/ ³: it's set to 50% range for both cores right now. For the MD, it will need to be 25% once YM2612 emulation is in. ⁴: technically, this deadlocks the VDP until a hard reset. I could emulate this, but for now I just don't do the VRAM copy in this case. ⁵: VSRAM fill and CRAM fill not supported in this new mode. They're technically undocumented, and I don't have good notes on how they work. I've been seeing conflicting notes on whether the VRAM fill buffer is 8-bits or 16-bits (I chose 8-bits), and on whether you write the low byte and then high byte of each words, or the high byte and then low byte (I chose the latter.) The VRAM copy improvements fix the opening text in Langrisser II, so that's great. ⁶: Langrisser II sets the transfer length to one less than needed to fill the background letter tile on the scenario overview screen. After moving to byte-sized transfers, a black pixel was getting stuck there. So effectively, VRAM fill length becomes DMA length + 1, and the first byte uses the data port so it writes a word value instead of just a byte value. Hopefully this is all correct, although it probably gets way more complicated with the VDP FIFO. |
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Tim Allen | 68f04c3bb8 |
Update to v102r10 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - removed Emulator::Interface::Capabilities¹ - MS: improved the PSG emulation a bit - MS: added cheat code support - MS: added save state support² - MD: emulated the PSG³ ¹: there's really no point to it anymore. I intend to add cheat codes to the GBA core, as well as both cheat codes and save states to the Mega Drive core. I no longer intend to emulate any new systems, so these values will always be true. Further, the GUI doesn't respond to these values to disable those features anymore ever since the hiro rewrite, so they're double useless. ²: right now, the Z80 core is using a pointer for HL-\>(IX,IY) overrides. But I can't reliably serialize pointers, so I need to convert the Z80 core to use an integer here. The save states still appear to work fine, but there's the potential for an instruction to execute incorrectly if you're incredibly unlucky, so this needs to be fixed as soon as possible. Further, I still need a way to serialize array<T, Size> objects, and I should also add nall::Boolean serialization support. ³: I don't have a system in place to share identical sound chips. But this chip is so incredibly simple that it's not really much trouble to duplicate it. Further, I can strip out the stereo sound support code from the Game Gear portion, so it's even tinier. Note that the Mega Drive only just barely uses the PSG. Not at all in Altered Beast, and only for a tiny part of the BGM music on Sonic 1, plus his jump sound effect. |
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Tim Allen | 8071da4c6a |
Update to v102r09 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - MD: restructured DMA to a subclass of VDP - MD: implemented VRAM copy mode (fixes Langrisser II ... mostly) - MS: implemened PSG support [Cydrak] - GG: implemented PSG stereo sound support - MS: use the new struct Model {} design that other cores use The MS/GG PSG should be feature complete, but I don't have good tests for Game Gear stereo mode, nor for the noise channel. There's also a really weird behavior with when to reload the channel counters on volume register writes. I can confirm what Cydrak observed in that following the docs and reloading always creates serious audio distortion problems. So, more research is needed there. To get the correct sound out of the PSG, I have to run it at 3.58MHz / 16, which seems really weird to me. The docs make it sound like it's supposed to run at the full 3.58MHz. If we can really run it at 223.7KHz, then that's help reduce the overhead of PSG emulation, which will definitely come in handy for Mega Drive, and possibly later Mega CD, emulation. I have not implemented the PSG into the Mega Drive just yet. Nor have I implemented save states or cheat code support into the MS/GG cores yet. The latter is next on my list. |
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Tim Allen | fa6cbac251 |
Update to v102r06 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - added higan/emulator/platform.hpp (moved out Emulator::Platform from emulator/interface.hpp) - moved gmake build paramter to nall/GNUmakefile; both higan and icarus use it now - added build=profile mode - MD: added the region select I/O register - MD: started to add region selection support internally (still no external select or PAL support) - PCE: added cycle stealing when reading/writing to the VDC or VCE; and when using ST# instructions - PCE: cleaned up PSG to match the behavior of Mednafen (doesn't improve sound at all ;_;) - note: need to remove loadWaveSample, loadWavePeriod - HuC6280: ADC/SBC decimal mode consumes an extra cycle; does not set V flag - HuC6280: block transfer instructions were taking one cycle too many - icarus: added code to strip out PC Engine ROM headers - hiro: added options support to BrowserDialog The last one sure ended in failure. The plan was to put a region dropdown directly onto hiro::BrowserDialog, and I had all the code for it working. But I forgot one important detail: the system loads cartridges AFTER powering on, so even though I could technically change the system region post-boot, I'd rather not do so. So that means we have to know what region we want before we even select a game. Shit. |
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Tim Allen | ee7662a8be |
Update to v102r04 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - Super Game Boy support is functional once again - new GameBoy::SuperGameBoyInterface class - system.(dmg,cgb,sgb) is now Model::(Super)GameBoy(Color) ala the PC Engine - merged WonderSwanInterface, WonderSwanColorInterface shared functions to WonderSwan::Interface - merged GameBoyInterface, GameBoyColorInterface shared functions to GameBoy::Interface - Interface::unload() now calls Interface::save() for Master System, Game Gear, Mega Drive, PC Engine, SuperGrafx - PCE: emulated PCE-CD backup RAM; stored per-game as save.ram (2KiB file) - this means you can now save your progress in games like Neutopia - the PCE-CD I/O registers like BRAM write protect are not emulated yet - PCE: IRQ sources now hold the IRQ line state, instead of the CPU holding it - this fixes most SuperGrafx games, which were fighting over the VDC IRQ line previously - PCE: CPU I/O $14xx should return the pending IRQ bits even if IRQs are disabled - PCE: VCE and the VDCs now synchronize to each other; fixes pixel widths in all games - PCE: greatly increased the accuracy of the VPC priority selection code (windows may be buggy still) - HuC6280: PLA, PLX, PLY should set Z, N flags; fixes many game bugs [Jonas Quinn] The big thing I wanted to do was enslave the VDC(s) to the VCE. But unfortunately, I forgot about the asynchronous DMA channels that each VDC supports, so this isn't going to be possible I'm afraid. In the most demanding case, Daimakaimura in-game, we're looking at 85fps on my Xeon E3 1276v3. So ... not great, and we don't even have sound connected yet. We are going to have to profile and optimize this code once sound emulation and save states are in. Basically, think of it like this: the VCE, VDC0, and VDC1 all have the same overhead, scheduling wise (which is the bulk of the performance loss) as the dot-renderer for the SNES core. So it's like there's three bsnes-accuracy PPU threads running just for video. ----- Oh, just a fair warning ... the hooks for the SGB are a work in progress. If anyone is working on higan or a fork and want to do something similar to it, don't use it as a template, at least not yet. Right now, higan looks like this: - Emulator::Video handles the platform→videoRefresh calls - Emulator::Audio handles the platform→audioSample calls - each core hard-codes the platform→inputPoll, inputRumble calls - each core hard-codes calls to path, open, load to process files - dipSettings and notify are specialty hacks, neither are even hooked up right now to anything With the SGB, it's an emulation core inside an emulation core, so ideally you want to hook all of those functions. Emulator::Video and Emulator::Audio aren't really abstractions over that, as the GB core calls them and we have to special case not calling them in SGB mode. The path, open, load can be implemented without hooks, thanks to the UI only using one instance of Emulator::Platform for all cores. All we have to do is override the folder path ID for the "Game Boy.sys" folder, so that it picks "Super Game Boy.sfc/" and loads its boot ROM instead. That's just a simple argument to GameBoy::System::load() and we're done. dipSettings, notify and inputRumble don't matter. But we do also have to hook inputPoll as well. The nice idea would be for SuperFamicom::ICD2 to inherit from Emulator::Platform and provide the desired functions that we need to overload. After that, we'd just need the GB core to keep an abstraction over the global Emulator::platform\* handle, to select between the UI version and the SFC::ICD2 version. However ... that doesn't work because of Emulator::Video and Emulator::Audio. They would also have to gain an abstraction over Emulator::platform\*, and even worse ... you'd have to constantly swap between the two so that the SFC core uses the UI, and the GB core uses the ICD2. And so, for right now, I'm checking Model::SuperGameBoy() -> bool everywhere, and choosing between the UI and ICD2 targets that way. And as such, the ICD2 doesn't really need Emulator::Platform inheritance, although it certainly could do that and just use the functions it needs. But the SGB is even weirder, because we need additional new signals beyond just Emulator::Platform, like joypWrite(), etc. I'd also like to work on the Emulator::Stream for the SGB core. I don't see why we can't have the GB core create its own stream, and let the ICD2 just use that instead. We just have to be careful about the ICD2's CPU soft reset function, to make sure the GB core's Stream object remains valid. What I think that needs is a way to release an Emulator::Stream individually, rather than calling Emulator::Audio::reset() to do it. They are shared\_pointer objects, so I think if I added a destructor function to remove it from Emulator::Audio::streams, then that should work. |
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Tim Allen | bdc100e123 |
Update to v102r02 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - I caved on the `samples[] = {0.0}` thing, but I'm very unhappy about it - if it's really invalid C++, then GCC needs to stop accepting it in strict `-std=c++14` mode - Emulator::Interface::Information::resettable is gone - Emulator::Interface::reset() is gone - FC, SFC, MD cores updated to remove soft reset behavior - split GameBoy::Interface into GameBoyInterface, GameBoyColorInterface - split WonderSwan::Interface into WonderSwanInterface, WonderSwanColorInterface - PCE: fixed off-by-one scanline error [hex_usr] - PCE: temporary hack to prevent crashing when VDS is set to < 2 - hiro: Cocoa: removed (u)int(#) constants; converted (u)int(#) types to (u)int_(#)t types - icarus: replaced usage of unique with strip instead (so we don't mess up frameworks on macOS) - libco: added macOS-specific section marker [Ryphecha] So ... the major news this time is the removal of the soft reset behavior. This is a major!! change that results in a 100KiB diff file, and it's very prone to accidental mistakes!! If anyone is up for testing, or even better -- looking over the code changes between v102r01 and v102r02 and looking for any issues, please do so. Ideally we'll want to test every NES mapper type and every SNES coprocessor type by loading said games and power cycling to make sure the games are all cleanly resetting. It's too big of a change for me to cover there not being any issues on my own, but this is truly critical code, so yeah ... please help if you can. We technically lose a bit of hardware documentation here. The soft reset events do all kinds of interesting things in all kinds of different chips -- or at least they do on the SNES. This is obviously not ideal. But in the process of removing these portions of code, I found a few mistakes I had made previously. It simplifies resetting the system state a lot when not trying to have all the power() functions call the reset() functions to share partial functionality. In the future, the goal will be to come up with a way to add back in the soft reset behavior via keyboard binding as with the Master System core. What's going to have to happen is that the key binding will have to send a "reset pulse" to every emulated chip, and those chips are going to have to act independently to power() instead of reusing functionality. We'll get there eventually, but there's many things of vastly greater importance to work on right now, so it'll be a while. The information isn't lost ... we'll just have to pull it out of v102 when we are ready. Note that I left the SNES reset vector simulation code in, even though it's not possible to trigger, for the time being. Also ... the Super Game Boy core is still disconnected. To be honest, it totally slipped my mind when I released v102 that it wasn't connected again yet. This one's going to be pretty tricky to be honest. I'm thinking about making a third GameBoy::Interface class just for SGB, and coming up with some way of bypassing platform-> calls when in this mode. |
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Tim Allen | c40e9754bc |
Update to v102r01 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - MS, MD, PCE: remove controllers from scheduler in destructor [hex_usr] - PCE: no controller should return all bits set (still causing errant key presses when swapping gamepads) - PCE: emulate MDR for hardware I/O $0800-$17ff - PCE: change video resolution to 1140x242 - PCE: added tertiary background Vscroll register (secondary cache) - PCE: create classes out of VDC VRAM, SATB, CRAM for cleaner access and I/O registers - PCE: high bits of CRAM read should be set - PCE: partially emulated VCE display registers: color frequency, HDS, HDW, VDS, VDW - PCE: 32-width sprites now split to two 16-width sprites to handle overflow properly - PCE: hopefully emulated sprite zero hit correctly (it's not well documented, and not often used) - PCE: trigger line coincidence interrupts during the previous scanline's Hblank period - tomoko: raise viewport from 320x240 to 326x242 to accommodate PC Engine's max resolution - nall: workaround for Clang compilation bug that can't figure out that a char is an integral data type |
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Tim Allen | 26bd7590ad |
Update to v101r32 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: fixed controller connection bug - SMS: fixed Z80 reset bug - PCE: emulated HuC6280 MMU - PCE: emulated HuC6280 RAM - PCE: emulated HuCard ROM reading - PCE: implemented 178 instructions - tomoko: removed "soft reset" functionality - tomoko: moved "power cycle" to just above "unload" option I'm not sure of the exact number of HuC6280 instructions, but it's less than 260. Many of the ones I skipped are HuC6280-originals that I don't know how to emulate just yet. I'm also really unsure about the zero page stuff. I believe we should be adding 0x2000 to the addresses to hit page 1, which is supposed to be mapped to the zero page (RAM). But when I look at turboEMU's source, I have no clue how the hell it could possibly be doing that. It looks to be reading from page 0, which is almost always ROM, which would be ... really weird. I also don't know if I've emulated the T mode opcodes correctly or not. The documentation on them is really confusing. |
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Tim Allen | bf90bdfcc8 |
Update to v101r31 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - converted Emulator::Interface::Bind to Emulator::Platform - temporarily disabled SGB hooks - SMS: emulated Game Gear palette (latching word-write behavior not implemented yet) - SMS: emulated Master System 'Reset' button, Game Gear 'Start' button - SMS: removed reset() functionality, driven by the mappable input now instead - SMS: split interface class in two: one for Master System, one for Game Gear - SMS: emulated Game Gear video cropping to 160x144 - PCE: started on HuC6280 CPU core—so far only registers, NOP instruction has been implemented Errata: - Super Game Boy support is broken and thus disabled - if you switch between Master System and Game Gear without restarting, bad things happen: - SMS→GG, no video output on the GG - GG→SMS, no input on the SMS I'm not sure what's causing the SMS\<-\>GG switch bug, having a hard time debugging it. Help would be very much appreciated, if anyone's up for it. Otherwise I'll keep trying to track it down on my end. |
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Tim Allen | 0ad70a30f8 |
Update to v101r30 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: added cartridge ROM/RAM mirroring (fixes Alex Kidd) - SMS: fixed 8x16 sprite mode (fixes Wonder Boy, Ys graphics) - Z80: emulated "ex (sp),hl" instruction - Z80: fixed INx NF (should be set instead of cleared) - Z80: fixed loop condition check for CPxR, INxR, LDxR, OTxR (fixes walking in Wonder Boy) - SFC: removed Debugger and sfc/debugger.hpp - icarus: connected MS, GG, MD importing to the scan dialog - PCE: added emulation skeleton to higan and icarus At this point, Master System games are fairly highly compatible, sans audio. Game Gear games are running, but I need to crop the resolution and support the higher color palette that they can utilize. It's really something else the way they handled the resolution shrink on that thing. The last change is obviously going to be the biggest news. I'm very well aware it's not an ideal time to start on a new emulation core, with the MS and MD cores only just now coming to life with no audio support. But, for whatever reason, my heart's really set on working on the PC Engine. I wanted to write the final higan skeleton core, and get things ready so that whenever I'm in the mood to work on the PCE, I can do so. The skeleton is far and away the most tedious and obnoxious part of the emulator development, because it's basically all just lots of boilerplate templated code, lots of new files to create, etc. I really don't know how things are going to proceed ... but I can say with 99.9% certainty that this will be the final brand new core ever added to higan -- at least one written by me, that is. This was basically the last system from my childhood that I ever cared about. It's the last 2D system with games that I really enjoy playing. No other system is worth dividing my efforts and reducing the quality and amount of time to work on the systems I have. In the future, there will be potential for FDS, Mega CD and PCE-CD support. But those will all be add-ons, and they'll all be really difficult and challenge the entire design of higan's UI (it's entirely cartridge-driven at this time.) None of them will be entirely new cores like this one. |
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Tim Allen | 79c83ade70 |
Update to v101r29 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: background VDP clips partial tiles on the left (math may not be right ... it's hard to reason about) - SMS: fix background VDP scroll locks - SMS: fix VDP sprite coordinates - SMS: paint black after the end of the visible display - todo: shouldn't be a brute force at the end of the main VDP loop, should happen in each rendering unit - higan: removed emulator/debugger.hpp - higan: removed privileged: access specifier - SFC: removed debugger hooks - todo: remove sfc/debugger.hpp - Z80: fixed disassembly of (fd,dd) cb (displacement) (opcode) instructions - Z80: fix to prevent interrupts from firing between ix/iy prefixes and opcodes - todo: this is a rather hacky fix that could, if exploited, crash the stack frame - Z80: fix BIT flags - Z80: fix ADD hl,reg flags - Z80: fix CPD, CPI flags - Z80: fix IND, INI flags - Z80: fix INDR, INIT loop flag check - Z80: fix OUTD, OUTI flags - Z80: fix OTDR, OTIR loop flag check |
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Tim Allen | a3aea95e6b |
Update to v101r28 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: emulated the remaining 240 instructions in the (0xfd, 0xdd) 0xcb (displacement) (opcode) set - 1/8th of these were "legal" instructions, and apparently games use them a lot - SMS: emulated the standard gamepad controllers - reset button not emulated yet The reset button is tricky. In every other case, reset is a hardware thing that instantly reboots the entire machine. But on the SMS, it's more like a gamepad button that's attached to the front of the device. When you press it, it fires off a reset vector interrupt and the gamepad polling routine lets you query the status of the button. Just having a reset option in the "Master System" hardware menu is not sufficient to fully emulate the behavior. Even more annoying is that the Game Gear doesn't have such a button, yet the core information structs aren't flexible enough for the Master System to have it, and the Game Gear to not have it, in the main menu. But that doesn't matter anyway, since it won't work having it in the menu for the Master System. So as a result, I'm going to have to have a new "input device" called "Hardware" that has the "Reset" button listed under there. And for the sake of consistency, I'm not sure if we should treat the other systems the same way or not :/ |
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Tim Allen | 569f5abc28 |
Update to v101r27 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: emulated the generic Sega memory mapper (none of the more limited forms of it yet) - (missing ROM shift, ROM write enable emulation -- no commercial games use either, though) - SMS: bus I/O returns 0xff instead of 0x00 so games don't think every key is being pressed at once - (this is a hack until I implement proper controller pad reading) - SMS: very limited protection against reading/writing past the end of ROM/RAM (todo: should mirror) - SMS: VDP background HSCROLL subtracts, rather than adds, to the offset (unlike VSCROLL) - SMS: VDP VSCROLL is 9-bit, modulates voffset+vscroll to 224 in 192-line mode (32x28 tilemap) - SMS: VDP tiledata for backgrounds and sprites use `7-(x&7)` rather than `(x&7)` - SMS: fix output color to be 6-bit rather than 5-bit - SMS: left clip uses register `#7`, not palette color `#7` - (todo: do we want `color[reg7]` or `color[16 + reg7]`?) - SMS: refined handling of 0xcb, 0xed prefixes in the Z80 core and its disassembler - SMS: emulated (0xfd, 0xdd) 0xcb opcodes 0x00-0x0f (still missing 0x10-0xff) - SMS: fixed 0xcb 0b-----110 opcodes to use direct HL and never allow (IX,IY)+d - SMS: fixed major logic bug in (IX,IY)+d displacement - (was using `read(x)` instead of `operand()` for the displacement byte fetch before) - icarus: fake there always being 32KiB of RAM in all SMS cartridges for the time being - (not sure how to detect this stuff yet; although I've read it's not even really possible `>_>`) TODO: remove processor/z80/dissassembler.cpp code block at line 396 (as it's unnecessary.) Lots of commercial games are starting to show trashed graphical output now. |
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Tim Allen | 5bdf55f08f |
Update to v101r25 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: emulated VDP mode 4 graphical output (background, sprites) - added $(windres) to icarus as well I'm sure the VDP emulation is still really, really buggy, but essentially I handle: - mode 4 rendering - background scrolling - background hscroll lock - background vscroll lock - background nametable relocation - sprite nametable relocation - sprite tiledata relocation - sprite 192-line y=0xd0 edge case (end sprite rendering) - sprite 8-pixel x-coordinate displacement - sprite extended size (height only in mode 4) - sprite overflow - sprite collision - left column masking - display disable - backdrop color - 192, 224, 240 height I do not support: - mode 2 rendering - sprite zoom - disallowing 240 height in NTSC mode - PAL mode - probably lots more |
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Tim Allen | e30780bb72 |
Update to v101r25 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - Makefile: added $(windres), -lpthread to Windows port - GBA: WAITCNT.prefetch is not writable (should fix Donkey Kong: King of Swing) \[endrift\] - SMS: fixed hcounter shift value \[hex\_usr\] - SMS: emulated interrupts (reset button isn't hooked up anywhere, not sure where to put it yet) This WIP actually took a really long time because the documentation on SMS interrupts was all over the place. I'm hoping I've emulated them correctly, but I honestly have no idea. It's based off my best understanding from four or five different sources. So it's probably quite buggy. However, a few interrupts fire in Sonic the Hedgehog, so that's something to start with. Now I just have to hope I've gotten some games far enough in that I can start seeing some data in the VDP VRAM. I need that before I can start emulating graphics mode 4 to get some actual screen output. Or I can just say to hell with it and use a "Hello World" test ROM. That'd probably be smarter. |
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Tim Allen | bab2ac812a |
Update to v101r24 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - SMS: extended bus mapping of in/out ports: now decoding them fully inside ms/bus - SMS: moved Z80 disassembly code from processor/z80 to ms/cpu (cosmetic) - SMS: hooked up non-functional silent PSG sample generation, so I can cap the framerate at 60fps - SMS: hooked up the VDP main loop: 684 clocks/scanline, 262 scanlines/frame (no PAL support yet) - SMS: emulated the VDP Vcounter and Hcounter polling ... hopefully it's right, as it's very bizarre - SMS: emulated VDP in/out ports (data read, data write, status read, control write, register write) - SMS: decoding and caching all VDP register flags (variable names will probably change) - nall: \#undef IN on Windows port (prevent compilation warning on processor/z80) Watching Sonic the Hedgehog, I can definitely see some VDP register writes going through, which is a good sign. Probably the big thing that's needed before I can get enough into the VDP to start showing graphics is interrupt support. And interrupts are never fun to figure out :/ What really sucks on this front is I'm flying blind on the Z80 CPU core. Without a working VDP, I can't run any Z80 test ROMs to look for CPU bugs. And the CPU is certainly too buggy still to run said test ROM anyway. I can't find any SMS emulators with trace logging from reset. Such logs vastly accelerate tracking down CPU logic bugs, so without them, it's going to take a lot longer. |
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Tim Allen | 4c3f58150c |
Update to v101r15 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - added (poorly-named) castable<To, With> template - Z80 debugger rewritten to make declaring instructions much simpler - Z80 has more instructions implemented; supports displacement on (IX), (IY) now - added `Processor::M68K::Bus` to mirror `Processor::Z80::Bus` - it does add a pointer indirection; so I'm not sure if I want to do this for all of my emulator cores ... |
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Tim Allen | d91f3999cc |
Update to v101r14 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - rewrote the Z80 core to properly handle 0xDD (IX0 and 0xFD (IY) prefixes - added Processor::Z80::Bus as a new type of abstraction - all of the instructions implemented have their proper T-cycle counts now - added nall/certificates for my public keys The goal of `Processor::Z80::Bus` is to simulate the opcode fetches being 2-read + 2-wait states; operand+regular reads/writes being 3-read. For now, this puts the cycle counts inside the CPU core. At the moment, I can't think of any CPU core where this wouldn't be appropriate. But it's certainly possible that such a case exists. So this may not be the perfect solution. The reason for having it be a subclass of Processor::Z80 instead of virtual functions for the MasterSystem::CPU core to define is due to naming conflicts. I wanted the core to say `in(addr)` and have it take the four clocks. But I also wanted a version of the function that didn't consume time when called. One way to do that would be for the core to call `Z80::in(addr)`, which then calls the regular `in(addr)` that goes to `MasterSystem::CPU::in(addr)`. But I don't want to put the `Z80::` prefix on all of the opcodes. Very easy to forget it, and then end up not consuming any time. Another is to use uglier names in the `MasterSystem::CPU` core, like `read_`, `write_`, `in_`, `out_`, etc. But, yuck. So ... yeah, this is an experiment. We'll see how it goes. |
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Tim Allen | 7c96826eb0 |
Update to v101r13 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - MS: added ms/bus - Z80: implemented JP/JR/CP/DI/IM/IN instructions - MD/VDP: added window layer emulation - MD/controller/gamepad: fixed d2,d3 bits (Altered Beast requires this) The Z80 is definitely a lot nastier than the LR35902. There's a lot of table duplication with HL→IX→IY; and two of them nest two levels deep (eg FD CB xx xx), so the design may change as I implement more. |
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Tim Allen | 0b70a01b47 |
Update to v101r10 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - 68K: MOVEQ is 8-bit signed - 68K: disassembler was print EOR for OR instructions - 68K: address/program-counter indexed mode had the signed-word/long bit backward - 68K: ADDQ/SUBQ #n,aN always works in long mode; regardless of size - 68K→VDP DMA needs to use `mode.bit(0)<<22|dmaSource`; increment by one instead of two - Z80: added registers and initial two instructions - MS: hooked up enough to load and start running games - Sonic the Hedgehog can execute exactly one instruction... whoo. |
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Tim Allen | 043f6a8b33 |
Update to v101r08 release.
byuu says: Changelog: - 68K: fixed read-modify-write instructions - 68K: fixed ADDX bug (using wrong target) - 68K: fixed major bug with SUB using wrong argument ordering - 68K: fixed sign extension when reading address registers from effective addressing - 68K: fixed sign extension on CMPA, SUBA instructions - VDP: improved OAM sprite attribute table caching behavior - VDP: improved DMA fill operation behavior - added Master System / Game Gear stubs (needed for developing the Z80 core) |