BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
some M/L monitor functions execute code snippets in RAM
'kay, that makes sense. Given that peculiarity (specific to the POC), you'd need some way to
mask the
non-maskable interrupt... except during times you're sure it's the test code whose opcode you're about to fetch.
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
Dr Jefyll wrote:
Same here. But the hardware to support it is minimal -- basically a NAND gate and a SPST switch.
That would allow one to halt the '816 on each opcode fetch (VDA && VPA), but it wouldn't do anything else. If the programmer is curious about register contents at each step in the program, then the circuit has to do much more. Otherwise, all that could be done is watch the address and data buses with a probe, logic analyzer or 'scope
Hmph!
It's remarkable that you're willing to tell us a technique deployed by MOS Technology and used by thousands of KIM-1 owners wouldn't work. KIM-1 is a different context than POC, but your comments about the need for logic analyzers and 'scopes have no bearing in
either case -- you don't seem to have grasped the point, and were perhaps talking about something else entirely (maybe your "circuit to do it with POC at one time, but it wasn't trivial").
In
another thread you said, "I type faster than I think, so words sometimes get lost in the process." Maybe it'd be a good idea for you to type (and hit Submit) a little more slowly next time.
Thanks for sharing SUPERMON 816 with us, though.
-- Jeff
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In 1988 my 65C02 got six new registers and 44 new full-speed instructions!
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