A skeleton for the Microsoft Jazz architecture, which was implemented in the MIPS Magnum 4000, Olivetti M700-10 and was the base/origin of several other MIPS ARC systems.
* added skeleton Inmos G300/G332/G364 device
* added skeleton NatSemi DP83932C SONIC device
* added skeleton MCT-ADR device
* hp9k_3xx: fix timer connection for /320 models
Signed-off-by: Sven Schnelle <svens@stackframe.org>
* hp9k_3xx: add HP9122C floppy
Remove HP9895 from the default configuration. 3.5" where
standard on /300 and there's almost no software on it available.
If a user really needs 8" floppy drives on /300, he can do that via
commandline.
Signed-off-by: Sven Schnelle <svens@stackframe.org>
* add Intel i8291a GPIB Talker/Listener
Required for the HP 9122C floppy, and used in many other devices.
Basic functionality was implemented to make the HP 9122C work, a few
things are still missing and will be added later. Most of the missing
things where simply not used in the HP9122C so i cannot test them.
Signed-off-by: Sven Schnelle <svens@stackframe.org>
* Add HP 9122C floppy drive
These drives where common on HP9000/300 workstations. With the current
implementation TD0's from hpmuseum can be used to boot, and initializing,
reading and writing discs in HP basic works. Tested both high and double
density media. Supported Media formats are TD0 and MFI.
Signed-off-by: Sven Schnelle <svens@stackframe.org>
* proposal: move z80daisy* to devices/machine
Seems to me this is a machine, not a CPU? Main reason was to stop the Z80 CPU from being dragged into systems that don't have one just because they use a Z80 family peripheral.
* missed this one (nw)
* missed a spot (nw)
- Use device_resolve_objects to resolve callbacks in output_latch_device (nw)
Note that this renaming is not just for human convenience; genie seems to get confused by modifications to a header called latch.h and decides to recompile everything involving gen_latch.h as well.
Implementation of 28F010 and family flash memory devices. These are not compatible with the JEDEC-standard flash command protocol implemented in intelfsh.
* Don't use device_serial_interface for transmit - it can't support sync modes, on-the-fly register updates, and other weirdness.
* Better modelling of 1-deep transmit queue.
* Better RTS/CTS behaviour.
* Completely overhauled interrupt logic - vectors should be correct for most async modes.
* Implemented different auto-reset receive errors in MPSC vs SIO.
* Implemented SDLC transmission including bit stuffing, transmit CRC, abort, and underrun/end-of-message behaviour.
Added an SDLC consumer device that logs SNA frame headers and data.
The analogue joystick is now emulated. Also fixed a few minor issues
with the memory map.
This also adds a generic Z80 dasisy chain device, for use in drivers
with non-Z80 peripherals.
These humble 16-pin logic devices were commonly used in 8-bit arcade games to control coin counters/lockouts, IRQ flipflops, graphics banking, slave CPU reset lines, discrete audio triggers, screen flipping, serial EEPROMs and much else. Over 100 drivers and a few bus devices have been updated to use the new implementation, and a great deal of research has gone into documenting the physical location of these devices on actual PCBs in the source. Write handlers have been provided for both orthodox and somewhat less conventional memory mappings.
Incidental to this update, coin counters and/or lockouts have been added to Atari System 1 games, Basketball, Gauntlet, Gyruss, Hana Yayoi, Hole Land, Jr. Pac-Man, Mahjong Sisters, Pooyan, Roc'n Rope, Squash, Thunder Hoop, Time Limit, Time Pilot '84 and many others. This also cleans up coin counter behavior in Sauro and Rally Bike.
(nw) The purpose of committing this change, which has been several months in the making, early in the 0.189GIT cycle will be to allow time for fixing potential regressions; I've fixed a number of drivers that lost sound from this for various reasons (hnayayoi.cpp having missing or garbage ADPCM was particularly painful, since the three games in that driver all work slightly differently), but I can't test all affected drivers exhaustively. @Tafoid, don't bother running automated screen capture comparison tests on this, as many drivers are now expected to have the screen flipped for the first few seconds after reset.