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 Readme for:  Emulation » Computer » oricutron_v12.i386-aros.lha

Oricutron_aros_v12

Description: Oric-1/Atmos/Telestrat/Pravetz 8D emulator
Download: oricutron_v12.i386-aros.lha       (TIPS: Use the right click menu if your browser takes you back here all the time)
Size: 2Mb
Version: 1.2
Date: 10 Nov 14
Author: Peter Gordon
Submitter: Stefan Haubenthal
Email: polluks/sdf lonestar org
Homepage: http://code.google.com/p/oriculator/
Category: emulation/computer
Replaces: emulation/computer/oricutron_i386-aros_v11.lha
License: GPL
Distribute: yes
FileID: 1425
 
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Oricutron 1.2
-------------

(c)2009-2014 Peter Gordon (pete()petergordon.org.uk)

This is a work in progress.


Current status
==============

  6502:  100% done (apart from any unknown bugs :)
  VIA:   95% done.
  AY:    99% done.
  Video: 100% done
  Tape:  99% done (.TAP, .ORT and .WAV supported)
  Disk:  Reading/Writing sectors works. No track read/write.



Credits
=======

  Programming
  -----------

  Peter Gordon


  Additional Programming
  ----------------------

  Francois Revol
  Alexandre Devert
  Stefan Haubenthal
  Ibisum
  Kamel Biskri
  Iss
  Christian from defence-force forum


  Amiga & Windows ports
  ---------------------

  Peter Gordon


  MacOS X port
  ------------

  Francois Revol
  Kamel Biskri
  Patrice Torguet


  MorphOS & AROS ports
  --------------------

  Stefan Haubenthal


  Linux port
  ----------

  Francois Revol
  Ibisum
  Alexandre Devert


  Pandora port
  ------------

  Ibisum


  ACIA & Pravetz disk support
  ---------------------------

  Iss




Thanks
======

Thanks to DBug and Twilighte for letting me distribute their demos and
games with Oricutron.

Thanks to DBug, Twilighte, Chema, kamelito, Yicker, JamesD, Algarbi, ibisum,
jede, thrust26 and everyone else for their help and feedback!



AVI export notes
================

The AVI export uses the MRLE codec. Your favourite player might not support
it, but MPlayer plays it, ffmpeg converts it and you can upload it directly
to youtube.

Note that the MRLE codec shows up some endian-issues on the Amiga OS4 port
of MPlayer, so it will sound crappy and have wrong colours until those bugs
are fixed :-(


Command line
============

You can specify certain options on the command line. All options have
both short and long versions. For example:

  -mblah

  or

  --machine blah

Is the same thing. Note that the short version doesn't have a space, but
the long version does.

Here are all the options:


  -m / --machine     = Specify machine type. Valid types are:

                       "atmos" or "a" for Oric atmos
                       "oric1" or "1" for Oric-1
                       "o16k" for Oric-1 16k
                       "telestrat" or "t" for Telestrat
                       "pravetz", "pravetz8d" or "p" for Pravetz 8D

  -d / --disk        = Specify a disk image to use in drive 0
  -t / --tape        = Specify a tape image to use
  -k / --drive       = Specify a disk drive controller. Valid types are:

                       "microdisc" or "m" for Microdisc
                       "jasmin" or "j" for Jasmin

  -s / --symbols     = Load symbols from a file
  -f / --fullscreen  = Run oricutron fullscreen
  -w / --window      = Run oricutron in a window
  -R / --rendermode  = Render mode. Valid modes are:

                       "soft" for software rendering
                       "opengl" for OpenGL

  -b / --debug       = Start oricutron in the debugger
  -r / --breakpoint  = Set a breakpoint
  -h / --help        = Print command line help and quit

  --turbotape on|off = Enable or disable turbotape
  --lightpen on|off  = Enable or disable lightpen
  --vsynchack on|off = Enable or disable VSync hack
  --scanlines on|off = Enable or disable scanline simulation

NOTE: If you are not sure what machine or drive type is required for a disk or
tape image, just pass the filename without any options and Oricutron will
try and autodetect for you.


Examples:

oricutron tapes/tape_image.tap
oricutron disks/disk_image.dsk
oricutron --machine atmos --tape "tape files/foo.tap" --symbols "my
files/symbols"
oricutron -m1 -tBUILD/foo.tap -sBUILD/symbols -b
oricutron --drive microdisc --disk demos/barbitoric.dsk --fullscreen
oricutron -ddemos/barbitoric.dsk -f
oricutron --turbotape off tapes/hobbit.tap



Keys
====

  In emulator
  -----------

  F1       - Bring up the menu
  F2       - Go to debugger/monitor
  F3       - Reset button (NMI)
  F4       - Hard reset
  Shift+F4 - Jasmin reset
  F5       - Toggle FPS
  F6       - Toggle warp speed
  F7       - Save all modified disks
  Shift+F7 - Save all modified disks to new disk images
  F9       - Save tape output
  F10      - Start/Stop AVI capture
  F11      - Copy text screen to clipboard (BeOS, Linux & Windows)
  F12      - Paste (BeOS, Linux & Windows)
  Help     - Show guide (Amiga, MorphOS and AROS)
  AltGr    - Additional modifier


  In menus
  --------

  Cursors   - Navigate
  Enter     - Perform option
  Backspace - Go back
  Escape    - Exit menus
  (or use the mouse)


  In Debugger/Monitor
  -------------------

  F1      - Go to the menu
  F2      - Return to the emulator
  F3      - Toggle console/debug output/memwatch
  F4      - Toggle VIA/AY/disk information
  F9      - Reset cycle count
  F10     - Step over code
  F11     - Step over code without tracing into
            subroutines.
  F12     - Skip instruction


  In the console:
  ---------------

  Up/Down - Command history


  In memwatch:
  ------------

  Up/Down           - Scroll (+shift for page up/down)
  Page Up/Page Down - Page up/down
  Hex digits        - Enter address
  S                 - Toggle split mode
  Tab               - Switch windows in split mode



Monitor instructions
====================

In the monitor, number arguments are decimal by default, or prefixed with $ for
hex or % for binary. Pretty much everything is output in hex.

In most places where you can enter a number or address, you can pass a CPU or
VIA register. (VIA registers are prefixed with V, e.g. VDDRA). Anywhere you can
pass an address, you can also use a symbol.

Commands:

  ?                     - Help
  a <addr>              - Assemble
  bc <bp id>            - Clear breakpoint
  bcm <bp id>           - Clear mem breakpoint
  bl                    - List breakpoints
  blm                   - List mem breakpoints
  bs <addr>             - Set breakpoint
  bsm <addr> [rwc]      - Set mem breakpoint
  bz                    - Zap breakpoints
  bzm                   - Zap mem breakpoints
  d <addr>              - Disassemble
  df <addr> <end> <file>- Disassemble to file
  m <addr>              - Dump memory
  mm <addr> <value>     - Modify memory
  mw <addr>             - Memory watch at addr
  nl <file>             - Load snapshot
  ns <file>             - Save snapshot
  r <reg> <val>         - Set <reg> to <val>
  q, x or qm            - Quit monitor
  qe                    - Quit emulator
  sa <name> <addr>      - Add or move user symbol
  sk <name>             - Kill user symbol
  sc                    - Symbols not case-sensitive
  sC                    - Symbols case-sensitive
  sl <file>             - Load user symbols
  sx <file>             - Export user symbols
  sz                    - Zap user symbols
  wm <addr> <len> <file>- Write mem to disk



Breakpoints
===========

There are two types of breakpoints. "Normal" breakpoints trigger when the CPU
is about to execute an instruction at the breakpoint address. "Memory"
breakpoints
trigger when the breakpoint address is accessed or modified.

There are three ways a memory breakpoint can be triggered; when the CPU is about
to read the address (r), and the CPU is about to write the address (w), or after
the
value at the address changes for any reason (c).

You specify which ways you'd like the breakpoint to trigger when you set the
memory
breakpoint:

bsm $0c00 r        <-- Break when the CPU is about to read from $0c00
bsm $0c00 rw       <-- Break when the CPU is about to access $0c00
bsm $0c00 c        <-- Break after then contents of $0c00 change
bsm $0c00 rwc      <-- Break just before the CPU accesses $0c00, or just after
it
                       changes for any reason.



International Keyboards under Linux and Mac OS X
================================================

There are lots of problems with some international keyboards under Linux and Mac
OS X.
The best way to cope with them is to install an UK or US keyboard definition and
to
switch to it *before* starting oricutron.

Under Mac OS X you can do that in the "System Preferences", "Keyboard", "Input
sources".
Click on the + and search for the UK or US keyboard.

Under Ubuntu you can do that in the System menu, select Preferences, and then
select
Keyboard. In the Keyboard Preferences dialog, select the Layouts tab, and click
Add.

For a better solution look under "Visual Keyboard" down here.



Visual Keyboard
===============

Oricutron can display a visual keyboard which also adds a keyboard mapping
redefinition feature.

It's accessible through a submenu called "Keyboard options".

In the submenu you can find:
- a toggle that shows/hides the visual keyboard (you can click on the keyboard
keys to enter key presses/releases) ;
- a toggle that gets you in the key mapping definition mode (you can then click
on a visual keyboard key ; press a real key on your keyboard and the mapping
will work) ;
- a toggle that allows mod keys (ctrl, shift, funct) to be sticky (ie you first
click on a key to press it and then either re-click it to release it or click on
another key and it will generate a modded key press - e.g. a Ctrl-T instead of T
- and then auto release the key) ;
- an option to save a keyboard mapping (.kma file) ;
- an option to load a keyboard mapping ;
- an option that resets the keyboard mapping to the default one.

You can also add the following in your oricutron.cfg to autoload a keyboard
mapping (here Test.kma in the keymap directory found in Oricutron's directory):

; automatically load a keyboard mapping file
autoload_keyboard_mapping = 'keymap/Test.kma'

Other options let you display the keyboard and activate sticky mod keys
automatically:
show_keyboard = yes
sticky_mod_keys = yes



Serial card (ACIA) emulation
============================

Oricutron can emulate ACIA at address #31C (standard address for Telestrat).
The emulation works for Oric, Atmos, Telestrat and Pravetz and can be used
together with any disk type.

The emulated ACIA communicates with the out-side world trough back-ends.
Back-ends can be configured from 'oricutron.cfg' or from command line
(see default 'oricutron.cfg' for usage).

Back-ends are:
- none      - disables ACIA support
- loopback  - every transmitted byte is returned to receive buffer (for testing
purposes)
- com       - Oricutron uses any real or virtual COM port in the host machine
and communicates with the hardware attached to this serial port
- modem     - unites ACIA with attached modem linked to internet with server and
client sockets

In 'modem' mode are available folowing 'AT' commands:
AT          - returns 'OK'
ATZ         - initialize the modem
AT&F        - initialize the modem
ATS0=0      - disable auto answering (close sever socket)
ATS0=1      - enable auto answering (open sever socket and start listening on
selected port (default is telnet port 23))
ATA         - same as 'ATS0=1'
ATS0?       - returns 'AUTOANSWER OFF' or 'AUTOANSWER ON' depend on current
sever socket state
ATH0        - disconnect currently connected sockets
+++         - if connected switches to command mode
ATO         - returns from command mode to online
ATD ip:port - connects as client to ip:port. 'ip' can be any host name
(ex.:localhost) or the real IP (ex.:127.0.0.1) on LAN or in Internet. ADTP and
ATDT are alternative for compatibility.



ROM patch files
===============

For detailed usage see included '.pch' files in roms subdirectory.

Additionaly unlimited number of binary patches can be added:

$XXXX:00112233445566778899AABBCCDDEEFF....
$YYYY:AA55AA55....
$ZZZZ:FF00FF00....

where XXXX,YYYY,ZZZZ - are hex addresses relative to ROM start address
(i.e. to set byte at C000 to 00 use: $0000:00)




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