Writing emulators (was Re: VCF PNW 2018: Pictures!)

Henk Gooijen henk.gooijen at hotmail.com
Wed Feb 21 13:44:33 CST 2018


Van: Paul Koning via cctalk<mailto:cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Verzonden: woensdag 21 februari 2018 20:37
Aan: Guy Sotomayor Jr<mailto:ggs at shiresoft.com>
CC: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts<mailto:cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Onderwerp: Re: Writing emulators (was Re: VCF PNW 2018: Pictures!)


> However, it is my belief (and I think others have also stated) that assuming infinitely fast I/O (e.g. no delays what so ever) can cause issues because in many cases the SW expects to be able to do some work between the time that the I/O is started and when it completes.

True, that is unfortunately a fairly common type of software bug.  And because it is, emulators have to work around those bugs.  I make it a point to call it a bug, though, because I don't want anyone to get the impression that OS programmers who wrote such things were doing the right thing.

        paul

Yeah, I found that out when I was working on the PDP8/e emulation running on a 6809. OS/8 does that as well. After issueing the disk I/O it executes a few more instructions, because it “knows” that the requested disk data cannot yet have been loaded into memory. I solved that problem with a counter that can be preset to some TBD value. The value defines the number of extra emulated instructions before it jumps to the (now) loaded data from disk – at least, that is how I remember it doing over 10 years ago. I have an extensive webpage on pdp8 emulation on 6809. I succeeded in finishing it: booting OS/8 and running spacewr on it!
Don’t ask how “fast” it ran …


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