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Sxgo

From Just in Time

Revision as of 23:33, 28 June 2009 by Danny (talk | contribs)
Sxgo screenshot.png

sxgo is my C++-based, soon-to-be open source SX28 emulator.

I'm developing this emulator for my private purposes (mainly testing complex SX assembly projects before doing a burn-and-watch-the-leds-blink-cycle). The emulator is limited in it's functions and certainly not as versatile as the already existing and excellent sxsim for windows. In its simplicity, it's got two advantages though:

  • It is portable (I develop on Windows and Ubuntu Linux and have it running on both)
  • It is fast. On my 2.66 Ghz machine it runs at about 70 MIPS. Close to real time for most SX projects.


Features

supported

  • ram window
  • watch window
  • Outline window, showing clickable code labels

not supported

  • anything but the SX28
  • the option to map the W register onto address 0
  • Output panel
  • and much, much more...

Support

Ah. There's one catch: No guarantees. I could drop this project tomorrow. My dabbling in SXes is pure hobby-work and although I'm a professional programmer, this particular program is just an exercise on the side.

Python module

Sxgo comes with a python module, that allows a programmer to create extensive test-scripts. This feature is one that I'm currently putting much effort into, since complex SX firmwares tend to need some automated testing and python scripts are a very convenient way to do such a thing.

I have made no provisions to install this module into a python environment, since python is one of those areas that I have actually very little experience with. I believe though, that simply copying the module (.pyd file for windows, .so file for linux) to the right location (python scripts directory) should probably do the trick. I myself always use the module in the same directory as the test-scripts and that seems to work too...

Currently, the python module and the emulator GUI are completely separate programs: you can either write a python script to run your SX listings in or watch them in the GUI, not both.

As a teaser, here's a python script that runs a specific SX assembly program (one that reads a SPI temperature sensor and outputs the temperature to a serial port as ascii text). The script breaks the program execution to insert 'simulated' inputs and to retreive the outputs and write them to the PC console output.

# simple test script that runs the thermostat firmware, simulates some input and
# writes the program output to screen.

import sys
import pysix

# load a listing file
listing = pysix.ParseListingFile("../../test/thermostat.lst")

# create an emulator
sx = pysix.Simulator()

# load the listings program bytes into the sx rom
sx.load_rom( listing)

# some code labels
send_byte = 0x0405
after_spi_read = 0x0141

#some data labels
spi_value = 0x08

# the entry point to the send_byte function. At this
# point w will contain a character to be sent to output (LCD/rs-232)
sx.set_breakpoint( send_byte) 

# right after a temperature has been read from the spi device
# ram location spi_value will contain the temperature reading.
sx.set_breakpoint( after_spi_read)

while True:
	sx.run(10000) # do 10 000 instructions, or stop if we hit a breakpoint
	
	if		send_byte		== sx.state.pc:
		sys.stdout.write( chr(sx.state.w))
		
	elif	after_spi_read	== sx.state.pc:
		# Todo: simplify this. state can only be copied as a whole, not changed
		state = sx.state
		state.ram.set_absolute( spi_value, 100)
		state.ram.set_absolute( spi_value + 1, 0)
		sx.state = state


The sources

I will release the sources to this program, I promise. It's just that I need things cleaned up a little (mainly adding license information and big fat disclaimers to all the source-files). I intend to release the whole source under the boost license, which is a 'BSD-like' non-viral open source license. See also this explanation.

But I have to warn anybody that is interested in the sources beforehand: If you think that C++ templates are evil, you won't like reading the sources. Even I think that the current implementation of the instruction dispatcher is convoluted and requires unhealthy amounts of caffeine to comprehend, and since I originally intended this program for my personal use only, the source code documentation (comments) are only there to get me started on the project again after a month of real work.