This change signficantly improves header hygiene in the 3B2 project by
moving global symbols out of 3b2_defs.h and into the appropriate
individual module header files.
Each compilation unit now includes:
- its appropriate matching .h file
- any other .h files necessary for linting and compilation
Each header file in turn includes 3b2_defs.h, which contains truly
global symbols, and which pulls in sim_defs.h and exports global
devices.
This change introduces initial support for the AT&T 3B2 Rev 3 platform, based
around the WE32200 CPU with up to 64MB of RAM and SCSI disk and tape support.
This simulator is experimental and not yet supported. It will not be built by
default, but can be built with:
make 3b2-600
Or by using the 3B2-600 Windows Visual Studio project.
Refactor in preparation for the addition of a Rev 3 simulator for the
3B2/1000 system.
This change also includes a full cleanup of the rat's-nest of includes
and externs that plagued the 3B2 simulator and made it difficult to
understand and maintain. Headers are now required in the following
order:
compilation unit -> "3b2_defs.h" -> {... dependencies ...}
Finally, HELP has been added to the CPU device.
- The previous fix for STRCPY introduced a new bug. STRCPY must always
copy the final NULL terminator of the string, but must NOT increment
the source or destination pointers for the NULL terminator.
- The CTC simulation did not correctly support streaming mode, which
can in some cases request reads that are not on 512-byte block
boundaries.
- To begin to support System V Release 4 UNIX, the NI card (called EMD
under SVR4) needed to support several more CRC codes for pump code.
This change adds support for the WE32106 Math Acceleration Unit (MAU).
The WE32106 is an IEEE-754 1985 compatible floating point math
acceleration unit that was an optional component on the 3B2/310 and
3B2/400.
The MAU is implemented using software floating point routines. As
always, there may be bugs, but the MAU currently passes extensive
floating point tests with exactly the same results as a real 3B2/400
equipped with a physical MAU, so I hope these are few.
Adds a skeleton framework for CIO ("Common I/O") feature cards. The
first feature card to be implemented will be the "PORTS" serial MUX.
Part of this support involved reworking IRQ handling in the CPU. It
now respects both IRQ Vector and IPL.
This change also removes all 'assert(0)' calls from the simulator and
replaces them with generic "Simulator Error" halts. These should only
happen if there's a genuine logic error lurking somewhere.
Clock reset was not being handled gracefully at all, leading some
diagnostic tests not to pass, or not to pass consistently.
This change will "kick" the system clock whenever the timer divider is
reset, so the new divider is picked up immediately.