* new NOT WORKING
----
Lexibook Compact Cyber Arcade - Star Wars [Team Europe]
Unknown M&D Handheld [zhongtiao1]
- hooked up controls for shredmjr, now runs the ame as taikeegr [David Haywood]
* new NOT WORKING
----
BBL380 - 180 in 1 [zhongtiao1]
* (nw)
* unkmandd contains some unsp code (nw)
* same hardware these are not (nw)
* tidy unused (nw)
* comment (nw)
* (nw)
* stuff from Sean, will credit later (nw)
* (nw)
* (nw)
* some more SunPlus stuff with NAND type roms (gpnandnand strings in them, need bootstrap)
* possible hardware names (nw)
* some kind of ARM based GeneralPlus (nw)
* proper names (nw)
* (nw0
* this is some kind of enhanced chipset, not 100% sure it's VT tho (nw)
* new NOT WORKING machines
---
Lexibook JG7425 221-in-1 [TeamEurope]
* comments (nw)
* acknowledge that there is S+Core code in here at least (nw)
* mapping the code from ROM to RAM at 500000 after skipping the first 0x20 bytes means a lot of jumps go to the word after a 'br r3' so is probably where it gets copied to
ioport.cpp:
* better than 50% reduction in compile time, and better locality for static data
* better encapsulation, const correctness and noexcept usage
* vt1682 alu is now a device (nw)
* prepare to make times devices (nw)
* push timer logic into devices (nw)
* naming fixes (nw)
* useful trampoline (nw)
* (nw)
* hmm timer math, I'm not sure about timer math (nw)
* messing with rasters (nw)
* move zone40 to vt1682, while it definitely isn't plain 1682 I think it's more likely closer to it than it is to SunPlus
* When a switch-type input is selected, show feedback when it's pressed
* If an invalid code is entered (e.g. only negatives) abandon the change rather than cycling default/none
* If an invalid code is entered display a message until the user takes some other action
input.cpp updates:
* constexpr crusade on input_code and input_seq and some very slight optimisation to input_seq
* seq_poll* is a frontend function and had no business being in the core, so it's a utility class now
* seq_poll* now exposes a bit more detail, enabling improved interaction on the UI inputs menu
* global state is reduced a little, but the poll_* functions are still members of the input manager with global state
(nw) The Lua engine has been updated in a way that maintains source compatibility with existing Lua
scripts. This is less than ideal, but it minimises impact. Ideally someone (possibly me) will be
able to expose the input sequence poller helper properly. I tested the changes with the cheat and
autofire plugins and I was able to assign sequences. However I found two issues: it's seems
impossible to assign a more complex sequence than a single key/button in the autofire plugin (i.e.
no AND or NOT conditions, I confirmed this is pre-existing, not a regression), and in both the cheat
and autofire plugins I found it a bit unwieldy trying to enter a complex sequence without live
feedback of the sequence as it's built (this was also applicable to MAME's own input mapping menu
until I added the live display yesterday).
* reference table (nw)
* move some machine specific stuff into different class (nw)
* put things behind log macros (nw)
* add in some controls, that work for the 32-in-1 at least (nw)
* note (nw)
* hide excessive logging (nw)
* dma fix for tetris (nw)
* alu work (nw)
* clean up some palettes
* clean up some bitscanning and indentation in olibuchu
* rename machine/epos.cpp to machine/pacman.cpp as it's unrelated to drivers/epos.cpp
* move epos-on-pacman members from pacman_state to derived epospm_state
-sun4.cpp: Various changes: [Ryan Holtz]
* Split sun4 and sun4c hardware emulation into separate derived classes.
* Hooked up Sbus IRQs.
* Removed now-unnecessary duplicate MMU code.
-cgsix.cpp: Added VSync IRQ, cleaned up save state usage, and added THC MISC register. [Ryan Holtz]
-sparc.cpp: Renamed MB86901 to SPARCV7, and added a separate class for SPARCV8. [Ryan Holtz]
-bt45x.cpp: Made logmacro.h usage more consistent. [Ryan Holtz]
* Made DIP switch display scale with UI font and improved layout
* Improved analog control display giving an indication of neutral position
* Fixed menu heading sizes not being recalculated after font is changed
* elan sound stuff (nw)
* move more audio bits into audio file (nw)
* new NOT WORKING machines
-----
Texas Hold'em TV Poker - 6 Player Edition (UK) [David Haywood, Morten Kirkegaard, Peter Wilhelmsen]
need to emulate the controllers etc. (currently requires debug hack to boot past initial logo)
* start moving some more elan stuff around (nw)
* add (non-working) CM-32P driver
* CM-32P: make booting test mode sort of work (nw)
* CM-32P: fix initialization, working test mode (nw)
- test mode now boots properly and shows error report
- test mode can be enabled/disabled
- RCC-CPU check passes
- PCM ROM check passes, PCM card check fails (requires SN-U110-04 card)
* CM-32P: add research notes (nw)
* hp80: refactored optional ROM device as requested in issue #5839
* hp9825: refactored optional ROM device as requested in issue #5839
* hp9845: refactored optional ROM device as requested in issue #5839
- Added slot interface for internal expansion boards.
- Added BBC Master cartridge slot interface to allow implementation of more complex cartridges, including Electron cartridge devices.
- Removed Sideways RAM configuration option, to be re-implemented as internal boards.
- Empty BBC Master cartridge sockets return video data on data bus.
* elan eu3a05 / eu3a14 - identify some common bits (nw)
* some elan refactoring baed on current knowledge / standards (nw)
* elan refactoring (nw)
* elan splitting / refactoring (nw)
* validate (nw)
* note used areas (nw)
* register observations (nw)
* another observation (nw)
* add the sprite double feature (nw)
* rendering tweaks (nw)
* rendering improvements for air blaster 3d stages (nw)
* refactoring (nw)
* galaga: Implement accurate starfield based on reverse eng. 05xx
----------------------------------------------------------------
This commit implements an accurate starfield for Galaga and
Bosconian based on reverse engineering the Namco 05xx chip.
Documentation and notes have been added inline to the code
for the galaga video driver.
Changes in this commit:
1. Regenerates starfield colors based on LFSR state for every frame
2. Pixel accurate to Namco original 05xx
3. Restores one line horizontal starfield shift for every 256
vertical pixel shifts
4. Properly handles LFSR reset (_STARCLR)
5. Restores missing 4 stars from previous implementations
6. Fixes potential issue with the number of stars on screen at any
one time
7. Restores 4 pixel/line scrolling capability (not currently used
for any driver)
* galaga: inplement accurate starfield - change request 1
-------------------------------------------------------
1. Remove stdlib.h from src/mame/video/galaga.cpp
* galaga: inplement accurate starfield - change request 2
-------------------------------------------------------
1. Refactor starfield generator into stand-alone video
device
2. Simplify Bosconian and Galaga video drivers
3. Add in documentation about different LFSR form used
by Wolfgang Scherr and Jindřich Makovička.
* galaga: inplement accurate starfield - change request 3
---------------------------------------------------------
Minor changes from pull request review
--------------------
RS-232 DCE-DCE Bridge
(nw) This is a simple machine for wiring together two things that want
to plug into an RS-232 port. This means that for DCE-like things (e.g.
serial printers) there's no need to create an extra machine to allow
them to talk to the outside world with the null_modem device. (Also
added some asserts, removed a FIXME, and put the swtpc8212 terminal in
the default RS-232 devices.)
* Changed emu_fatalerror to use util::string_format semantics
* Fixed some incorrectly marked up stuff in build scripts
* Make internal layout compression type a scoped enum (only zlib is supported still, but at least the values aren't magic numbers now)
* Fixed memory leaks in Xbox USB
* There can only be one "perfect quantum" device - enforce that only the root machine can set it, as allowing subdevices to will cause weird issues with slot cards overiding it
* Allow multiple devices to set maximum quantum and use the most restrictive one (it's maximum quantum, it would be minimum interleave)
* Got rid of device_slot_card_interface as it wasn't providing value
* Added a helper template to reduce certain kinds of boilerplate in slots/buses
* Cleaned up some particularly bad slot code (plenty more of that to do), and made some slots more idiomatic
This patch gets it running, and splits it into two front ends, one
being a rs232 bus slot so that is can be used as a terminal option. It
adds the MCM66750 character generator, and implements the MC6845 row
update function. Most of the I/O has been worked out with help from
the CT-82 user manual. The various screen formats and the graphics
modes appear to be working and plausible. Printer support has been
added, and a beeper.
- Removed code no longer used
- Add noexcept where appropriate
- split pparser.[c|h] into ppreprocessor and ptokenizer
- smaller optimizations, e.g. use of std::size_t
- fix lint warnings
fundamental change to show device delegates are configured.
Device delegates are now aware of the current device during
configuration and will resolve string tags relative to it. This means
that device delegates need a device to be supplied on construction so
they can find the machine configuration object. There's a
one-dimensional array helper to make it easier to construct arrays of
device delegates with the same owner. (I didn't make an n-dimensional
one because I didn't hit a use case, but it would be a simple addition.)
There's no more bind_relative_to member - just call resolve() like you
would for a devcb. There's also no need to cast nullptr when creating a
late bind device delegate. The flip side is that for an overloaded or
non-capturing lambda you'll need to cast to the desired type.
There is one less conditional branch in the hot path for calls for
delegates bound to a function pointer of member function pointer. This
comes at the cost of one additional unconditional branch in the hot
path for calls to delegates bound to functoids (lambdas, functions that
don't take an object reference, other callable objects). This applies
to all delegates, not just device delegates.
Address spaces will now print an error message if a late bind error is
encountered while installing a handler. This will give the range and
address range, hopefully making it easier to guess which memory map is
faulty.
For the simple case of allowing a device_delegate member to be
configured, use a member like this:
template <typename... T> void set_foo(T &&...args) { m_foo_cb.set(std::forward<T>(args)...); }
For a case where different delegates need to be used depending on the
function signature, see src/emu/screen.h (the screen update function
setters).
Device delegates now take a target specification and function pointer.
The target may be:
* Target omitted, implying the current device being configured. This
can only be used during configuration. It will work as long as the
current device is not removed/replaced.
* A tag string relative to the current device being configured. This
can only be used during configuration. It will not be callable until
.resolve() is called. It will work as long as the current device is
not removed/replaced.
* A device finder (required_device/optional_device). The delegate will
late bind to the current target of the device finder. It will not
be callable until .resolve() is called. It will work properly if the
target device is replaced, as long as the device finder's base object
isn't removed/replaced.
* A reference to an object. It will be callable immediately. It will
work as long as the target object is not removed/replaced.
The target types and restrictions are pretty similar to what you already
have on object finders and devcb, so it shouldn't cause any surprises.
Note that dereferencing a device finder will changes the effect. To
illustrate this:
...
required_device<some_device> m_dev;
...
m_dev(*this, "dev")
...
// will late bind to "dev" relative to *this
// will work if "dev" hasn't been created yet or is replaced later
// won't work if *this is removed/replaced
// won't be callable until resolve() is called
cb1.set(m_dev, FUNC(some_device::w));
...
// will bind to current target of m_dev
// will not work if m_dev is not resolved
// will not work if "dev" is replaced later
// will be callable immediately
cb2.set(*m_dev, FUNC(some_device::w));
...
The order of the target and name has been reversed for functoids
(lambdas and other callable objects). This allows the NAME macro to
be used on lambdas and functoids. For example:
foo.set_something(NAME([this] (u8 data) { m_something = data; }));
I realise the diagnostic messages get ugly if you use NAME on a large
lambda. You can still give a literal name, you just have to place it
after the lambda rather than before. This is uglier, but it's
intentional. I'm trying to drive developers away from a certain style.
While it's nice that you can put half the driver code in the memory map,
it detracts from readability. It's hard to visualise the memory range
mappings if the memory map functions are punctuated by large lambdas.
There's also slightly higher overhead for calling a delegate bound to a
functoid.
If the code is prettier for trivial lambdas but uglier for non-trivial
lambdas in address maps, it will hopefully steer people away from
putting non-trivial lambdas in memory maps.
There were some devices that were converted from using plain delegates
without adding bind_relative_to calls. I fixed some of them (e.g.
LaserDisc) but I probably missed some. These will likely crash on
unresolved delegate calls.
There are some devices that reset delegates at configuration complete or
start time, preventing them from being set up during configuration (e.g.
src/devices/video/ppu2c0x.cpp and src/devices/machine/68307.cpp). This
goes against the design principles of how device delegates should be
used, but I didn't change them because I don't trust myself to find all
the places they're used.
I've definitely broken some stuff with this (I know about asterix), so
report issues and bear with me until I get it all fixed.