# MIT License # # Copyright (c) 2023 Neil Webber # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy # of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal # in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights # to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell # copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is # furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in # all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR # IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE # AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER # LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, # OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE # SOFTWARE. # FUNCTIONALITY DISCLAIMER: # This is NOT meant to recreate the entire idea of a PDP-11 assembler. # Rather, it is meant as an ad-hoc assistance for creating and # debugging small test programs, of the sort that are found in pdptest. # As such, the methods here are written on an "as-needed" basis and # are focused around helping to create hand-constructed test code. # import contextlib class PDP11InstructionAssembler: B6MODES = {} _rnames = [(f"R{_i}", _i) for _i in range(8)] + [("SP", 6), ("PC", 7)] for _rn, _i in _rnames: B6MODES[f"{_rn}"] = _i # register direct B6MODES[f"({_rn})"] = 0o10 | _i # register indirect B6MODES[f"({_rn})+"] = 0o20 | _i # autoincrement B6MODES[f"@({_rn})+"] = 0o30 | _i # autoincr deferred B6MODES[f"-({_rn})"] = 0o40 | _i # autodecrement B6MODES[f"@-({_rn})"] = 0o50 | _i # autodecr deferred del _i, _rn, _rnames @classmethod def newsequence(cls): return _Sequence() def append_seq(self, insts): return insts def immediate_value(self, s): base = 8 if s[-1] == '.': base = 10 s = s[:-1] val = int(s, base) # as a convenience, allow negative values and convert them if val < 0 and val >= -32768: val += 65536 if val > 65535 or val < 0: raise ValueError(f"illegal value '{s}' = {val}") return val # this is a notational convenience to create a f'*${i].' string # for an operand that is an immediate deferred (i.e., numeric pointer) def ptr(self, i): return f'*${i}.' def operand_parser(self, operand_string, /): """Parse operand_string ('r1', '-(sp)', '4(r5)', $177776, etc). Returns: sequence: [6 bit code, additional words ...] Raises ValueError for syntax errors. Literals that should become (pc)+ (mode 0o27) must start with '$' They will be octal unless they end with a '.' Literals that are pointers and should become @(pc)+ must start with '*$' and will be octal unless they end with a '.' An integer, i, can be passed in directly; it is becomes f"${i}." """ # NOTE: Not all forms implemented yet. See FUNCTIONALITY DISCLAIMER. # for convenience def valerr(): return ValueError(f"cannot parse '{operand_string}'") # normalize the operand, upper case for strings, turn ints back # into their corresponding string (roundabout, but easiest) try: operand = operand_string.upper() except AttributeError: operand = f"${operand_string}." # bail out if spaces in middle, and remove spaces at ends s = operand.split() if len(s) > 1: raise valerr() operand = s[0] # operand now fully normalized: upper case, no spaces. # the first/easiest to try is to see if it is an immediate. # It will (must) start with either '$', or '*$' if so. try: if operand[0] == '$': return [0o27, self.immediate_value(operand[1:])] elif operand.startswith('*$'): return [0o37, self.immediate_value(operand[2:])] except ValueError: raise valerr() from None # wasn't immediate, see if it matches the precomputed modes try: return [self.B6MODES[operand]] except KeyError: pass # last chance: X(Rn) and @X(rn) # see if X(Rn) or @X(Rn)... if operand[0] == '@': mode = 0o70 operand = operand[1:] else: mode = 0o60 # for starters, it must contain one '(' so should split to 2 s = operand.split('(') if len(s) != 2: raise valerr() idxval = self.immediate_value(s[0]) # the back end of this, with the '(' put back on, # must end with ')' and must parse if s[1][-1] != ')': raise valerr() try: b6 = self.B6MODES['(' + s[1]] except KeyError: raise valerr() from None seq = [mode | (b6 & 0o07), idxval] try: self.append_seq(seq) except AttributeError: pass return seq # no-op here, but overridden in _Sequence to track generated instructions def _seqwords(self, seq): return seq def _2op(self, operation, src, dst): src6, *src_i = self.operand_parser(src) dst6, *dst_i = self.operand_parser(dst) return self._seqwords([operation | src6 << 6 | dst6, *src_i, *dst_i]) def _1op(self, operation, dst): dst6, *dst_i = self.operand_parser(dst) return self._seqwords([operation | dst6, *dst_i]) def mov(self, src, dst): return self._2op(0o010000, src, dst) def cmp(self, src, dst): return self._2op(0o020000, src, dst) def add(self, src, dst): return self._2op(0o060000, src, dst) def sub(self, src, dst): return self._2op(0o160000, src, dst) def clr(self, dst): return self._1op(0o005000, dst) def inc(self, dst): return self._1op(0o005200, dst) def halt(self): return self.literal(0) def mtpi(self, dst): return self._1op(0o006600, dst) def mfpi(self, src): return self._1op(0o006500, src) def mtpd(self, dst): return self._1op(0o106600, dst) def mfpd(self, src): return self._1op(0o106500, src) def trap(self, tnum): return self.literal(0o104400 | tnum) # generally used for instructions not implemented by an explicit method # Allows for one (or none) operand in the low 6 bits def literal(self, inst, oprnd=None, /): if oprnd is not None: return self._1op(inst, oprnd) else: return self._seqwords(inst) # this is used for WITH ... it is mostly for the notational convenience # of being able to do thing like # with ASM.sequence() as u: # u.mov('r2','r6') # u.trap(0) # user_mode_instructions = u.sequence() class _Sequence(PDP11InstructionAssembler, contextlib.AbstractContextManager): def __init__(self): super().__init__() self._seq = [] def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, *args, **kwargs): return None def _seqwords(self, seq): """seq can be an iterable, or a naked (integer) instruction.""" if self._seq is not None: try: self._seq += seq except TypeError: self._seq += [seq] return seq def sequence(self): return self._seq