P8 Tech Ref Chapter 6
Contents
Chapter 6 - Adding Routines to ProDOS
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This chapter explains device-handling routines that can be used with
the ProDOS MLI. Because such routines are connected to and interact
with the MLI, they are essentially invisible to the BASIC system
program described in Appendix A of this manual and in BASIC
Programming With ProDOS.
Appendix A explains the rules for installing routines when the BASIC system program is active.
The types of routines described in this chapter are:
- clock/calendar routines
- interrupt handling routines
- disk driver routines.
Note: These routines must all begin with a CLD instruction and end with an RTS.
Clock/Calendar Routines
ProDOS has a built-in clock driver that queries a clock/calendar card for the date and time. After the routine stores that information in the ProDOS Global Page ($BF90-$BF93), either ProDOS or your own application programs can use it. See Figure 6-1.
Figure 6-1. ProDOS Date and Time Locations
49041 ($BF91) 49040 ($BF90)
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
DATE: | year | month | day |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
TIME: | hour | | minute |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
49043 ($BF93) 49042 ($BF92)
You can cause ProDOS to call the clock driver and to update the date and time by issuing a GET_TIME call (see Section 4.6.1).
ProDOS calls the clock driver routine for every call that might need the date and time: CREATE, DESTROY, RENAME SET_FILE_INFO CLOSE, and FLUSH.
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The ProDOS clock driver expects the clock card's firmware to return
information in a certain way. The ROM on the clock card must also
follow Apple's identification convention if it is to be recognized by
ProDOS at startup.
The ProDOS clock driver expects the clock card to send an ASCII string to the GETLN input buffer ($200). This string must have the following format (including the commas):
mo,da,dt,hr,mn where mo is the month (01 = January...12 = December) da is the day of the week (00 = Sunday...06 = Saturday) dt is the date (00 through 31) hr is the hour (00 through 23) mn is the minute (00 through 59) For example:
07,04,14,22,46
would represent Thursday, July 14, 10:46 p.m. The year is looked up in a table in the clock driver.
When the ProDOS system file is executed, it installs the address of the clock routine at $BF07, $BF08 -- whether there is a recognized clock card or not.
ProDOS recognizes a clock card if the following bytes are present in the Cn00 ROM:
$Cn00 = $08 $Cn02 = $28 $Cn04 = $58 $Cn06 = $70
The address is preceded by a $4C (JMP) if a clock card is recognized, or by a $60 (RTS) if not.
The ProDOS clock driver uses the following addresses for its I/O to the clock:
Cn08 - READ entry point Cn0B - WRITE entry point
The accumulator is loaded with an #A3 before the JSR to the WRITE entry point. This value could be used to let the clock card's firmware know in what format to leave the time.
The ProDOS driver takes the ASCII values sent by the clock, converts them to binary, and stores them in the ProDOS Global Page.
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The driver uses zero page locations $3A through $3E. It also saves and
restores the peripheral RAM card location $F8+n, where n is the slot
where the card resides.
Other Clock/Calendars
To support clock cards that do not follow the ProDOS protocol defined above, you can locate your code in a number of places. The cleanest solution is to replace the ProDOS routines with your own, if they fit.
If you look at $BF07,$BF08, you will find the location to put your code.
There is room for 125 bytes.
To install your code, simply write-enable the language card area, and move your code. Your relocation code must justify the absolute addresses as part of the relocation procedure. Finally, restore any soft switches you have changed. (There is no guarantee as to the absolute location of the clock-driver code on future revisions of ProDOS, only that its location can be found by examining the global page.) All that your code needs to do is get the time from the clock card, convert it to the ProDOS format, and store it in the date and time locations in the global page.
Your installation routine can be called either from an application program, or as part of the STARTUP program.
Interrupt Handling Routines
To aid the development of software that can handle interrupts, the MLI provides a convention for interfacing interrupt driven devices.
To use interrupts, you must install from one to four interrupt receiving routines somewhere in memory. It is up to you to check and update the system bit map to be sure that the routines do not conflict with ProDOS or other concurrently executing programs.
Once a routine is installed, you must use the ALLOC_INTERRUPT call to inform the MLI of the starting address of the receiving routine. After this call has been successfully completed, you may enable the hardware for interrupts.
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When an interrupt occurs, the MLI's interrupt handler preserves the
6502's registers, zero page locations $FA thru $ff, and, if the stack is
more than 3/4 full, 16 bytes of the stack. Then it calls each receiving
routine (via JSR), one by one, in the order in which they were
installed. Each installed routine must begin with a CLD instruction.
When the routine that can process the interrupt is called, it should carry out its task, clear the interrupt on the hardware, and return (via an RTS) with the carry flag clear. When a routine that cannot process the interrupt is called, it should return (via an RTS) with the carry flag set so that the MLI knows to call the next routine in the list.
As mentioned above, all 6502 registers, locations $FA thru $FF and if the stack is more than 3/4 full, 16 bytes of the stack, are preserved.
The interrupt routine may use these resources freely for temporary data storage.
Note: There is no general way for an interrupt routine to identify whether or not its device was the source of the interrupt. This task depends on the specific characteristics of the device; in fact, some devices provide no mechanism for interrupt verification. It is necessary to service such a device after all others have been polled.
If no installed and allocated routine claims a pending interrupt, a SYSTEM FAILURE message will be displayed and program execution will be halted.
When finished with a interrupt driven device, a DEALLOC_INTERRUPT call should be made, but only after the device itself is disabled.
Warning
This Warning does not apply to the Apple IIc nor to Apple IIe's with enhanced ROMs. Because the Apple II Monitor program relies on a zero-page location ($45) that is overwritten when an interrupt occurs, you should disable interrupts while you are using the Monitor program. The system also uses location $7F8 to store the I/O slot location that was in use before an interrupt occurred; do not use this location.
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Interrupts During MLI Calls
The preceding section does not discuss what a program should do if an interrupt were to occur during the execution of an MLI call and your interrupt handling routine itself makes calls to the MLI.
The interrupt routine must allow the MLI to complete its current call before initiating a new call to the MLI. The mechanism for doing this consists of changing the globals so that the MLI completes its call and returns to your routine rather than to the the routine that originally called it. Then your routine can use the MLI as needed. When it is finished, it must restore the 6502 registers to the state they would have been in at completion of the MLI call had the interrupt not occurred, and then jump back to the proper address in the original routine.
To do this, the interrupt handling routine should first check the status of the MLI. If the flag MLIACTV ($BF9B) has the high bit set, then the MLI was in the middle of a call. Your routine should then:
1. Save the return address of the original caller (CMDADR, $BF9C), replacing it with the address to which the MLI should return on completion of the current call.
2. Claim the interrupt by disabling interrupts on the hardware, and clearing the carry flag.
3. RTS
4. The MLI's interrupt handler believes that the interrupt has been processed, so it completes the current MLI call and returns to the address in CMDADR, which is actually in your routine. Your routine should now do this:
5. Save the A, X, Y, and P registers as the return state for the routine whose call just completed.
6. Use the MLI as needed.
7. Restore the A, X, Y, and P registers.
8. Jump to the original CMDADR.
The original program sees only that its MLI call was successfully completed, and it continues execution.
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Sample Interrupt Routine
Here is a sample interrupt routine that reads the date from a clock/calender card, and displays it in the upper-right corner of the screen once per second. It assumes the card is in slot 2.
SOURCE FILE #01 =>SHOWTIME ----- NEXT OBJECT FILE NAME IS SHOWTIME.0 0300: 0300 1 ORG $300 0300: C20B 2 WTTCP EQU $C20B ;CLOCK WRITE ENTRY PT (SLOT 2) 0300: C208 3 RDTCP EQU $C208 ;CLOCK READ ENTRY PT (SLOT 2) 0300; C080 4 TCICR EQU $C080 ;INTERRUPT CONTROL REG (SLOT 2) 0300: C088 5 TCMR EQU $C088 ;MYSTERY REGISTER (SLOT 2) 0300: 6 * 0300: 0200 7 IN EQU $200 ;WHERE CLOCK LEAVES THE TIME 0300: 8 * 0300: 0412 9 UPRIGHT EQU $412 ;THE UPPER RIGHT OF THE SCREEN 0300: 047A 10 INTONI EQU $47A ;LEAVE INTERRUPTS ON (SLOT 2) 0300: 07FA 11 INTON2 EQU $7FA ;LEAVE INTERRUPTS ON (SLOT 2) 0300: 12 * 0300: BF00 13 MLI EQU $BF00 ;ENTRY POINT TO THE PRODOS MLI 0300: 14 * 0300: 15 * CALLING INTERRUPTS, CALLING INTERRUPTS 0300: 16 * 0300:20 7E 03 17 JSR ALLOC.INT ;HAVE MLI INSTALL INT ROUTINE 0303:60 18 RTS ;THAT'S ALL FOLKS 0304: 19 * 0304: 20 * 0304: 0304 21 SHOWTIME EQU * 0304:D8 22 CLD 0305:08 23 PHP 0306:78 24 SEI ;DISABLE INTERRUPTS 0307:A0 20 25 LDY #$20 ; FOR SLOT 2 O3O9;B9 80 C0 26 LDA TCICR,Y ;GET VAL OF INT CONTROL REG 03OC:29 20 27 AND #$20 ;CHK BIT 5 - IS INT FROM CLK? 030E:F0 3C 034C 28 BEQ NOTCLK ;IF BIT 5 OFF, INT NOT FROM CLK 0310:B9 88 C0 29 LDA TCMR,Y ;CLEAR MYSTERY REGISTER 0313:B9 80 C0 30 LDA TCICR,Y ;CLEAR INTERRUPT ON HARDWARE 0316:CE 4F 03 31 DEC COUNTER ;ONLY PRINT TIME EVERY SECOND 0319:D0 2E 0349 32 BNE EXITCLK ; NOT TIME TO PRINT YET 031B: 33 * 031B:A2 27 34 LDX #39 ;SAVE THE INPUT BUFFER 031D:BD 00 02 35 DOIN LDA IN,X ; SINCE THE CLOCK WRITES OVER 0320:9D 56 03 36 STA INBUF,X ; IT WHEN IT IS CALLED 0323:CA 37 DEX ; 0324:10 F7 031D 38 BPL DOIN ; 0326: 39 0326:A9 A5 40 LDA #$A5 ;SET APPLESOFT STRING INPUT 0328:20 0B C2 41 JSR WTTCP ; MODE & SEND IT TO THE CARD 032B:20 08 C2 42 JSR RDTCP ;READ TIME INTO INPUT BUFFER 032E: 43 032E:A2 15 44 LDX #21 0330:BD 01 02 45 GETNEXT LDA IN+1,X ;PRINT TIME TO SCREEN 0333:9D 12 04 46 STA UPRIGHT,X ;CHARS 0-22 OF INPUT BUFFER 0336:CA 47 DEX ; 0337:10 F7 0330 48 BPL GETNEXT ; 0339: 49 0339:A9 40 50 SETCNTR LDA #64 ;SET UP COUNTER FOR NEXT TIME
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033B:8D 4F 03 51 STA COUNTER ; 033E: 52 033E:A2 27 53 LDX #39 ;RESTORE THE INPUT BUFFER 0340:BD 56 03 54 DOIN2 LDA INBUF,X ; 0343:9D 00 02 55 STA IN,X ; 0346:CA 56 DEX ; 0347:10 F7 0340 57 BPI DOIN2 ; 0349: 58 * 0349:28 59 EXITCLK PLP 034A:18 60 CLC ;TELL MLI INT WAS PROCESSED 034B:60 61 RTS 034C:28 62 NOTCLK PLP 034D:38 63 SEC ;TELL MLI IT ISN'T OURS 034E:60 64 RTS 034F: 65 * 034F: 0001 66 COUNTER DS 1,0 ; 0350; 67 * 0350:02 00 68 AIPARMS DFB 2,0 ;PUT ALLOCATE AND DEALLOCATE 0352:04 03 69 DW SHOWTIME ; INTERRUPT PARAMETERS HERE, 0354: 70 * 0354:01 00 71 DIPARMS DFB 1,0 ; SO BOTH ROUTINES CAN USE THEM 0356: 72 * 0356: 0028 73 INBUF DS 40,0 ;SAVE 40 BYTES IN HERE 037E: 74 * ; FOR INPUT BUFFER SAVE/RESTORE
Note the important features of this routine:
1. The routine begins with a CLD instruction (line 22).
2. The routine checks to see if the IRQ interrupt is being caused by the clock/calendar card (lines 25-28). If not, it returns with the carry set (lines 62-64).
3. If the interrupt belongs to the clock/calendar card, it clears the inter- rupt hardware (lines 29-30).
4. When it is done with the interrupt task, it returns with carry clear (lines 59-61).
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The following routine adds the interrupt routine to ProDOS using the
ALLOC_INTERRUPT call. Having done this, it then activates interrupts
on the clock/calendar card. Then a CLI instruction is executed to allow
the 6502 to process interrupts.
03A0:A9 00 94 DEALLOC.INT LDA #0 ;DISABLE INTERRUPTS 03A2:8D 7A 04 95 STA INTON1 ; IN THE THUNDERCLOCK 03A5:8D FA 07 96 STA INTON2 03A8:Ao 20 97 LDY #$20 03AA;99 80 C0 98 STA TCICR,Y 03AD: 99 * 03AD:AD 51 03 100 LDA AIPARMS+1 ;GET INT_NUM 03B0:8D 55 03 101 STA DIPARMS+1 ; FOR DEALLOCATION 03B3:20 00 BF 102 JSR MLI ;CALL THE MLI TO 03B6:41 103 DFB $41 ; DEALLOCATE INT ROUTINE 03B7:54 03 104 DW DIPARMS 03B9:D0 01 03BC 105 BNE OOPS2 ;BREAK ON ERROR 03BB:60 106 RTS ;DONE 03BC: 107 * 03BC:00 108 OOPS2 BRK ;BREAK ON ERROR
The next routine disables interrupts on the clock/calendar card before removing the interrupt routine from ProDOS with a DEALLOC_INTERRUPT call.
037E: 75 037E:20 00 BF 76 ALLOC.INT JSR MLI ;CALL THE MLI TO 0381:40 77 DFB $40 ; ALLOCATE THE INTERRUPT 0382:50 03 78 DW AIPARMS ; 0384:D0 19 039F 79 BNE OOPS ;BREAK ON ERROR 0386: 80 * 0386:A0 20 81 LDY #$20 0388:A9 AC 82 LDA #$AC ;SET 64HZ INTERRUPT RATE 038A:20 0B C2 83 JSR WTTCP ; BY WRITING A ',' To CLOCK 038D:A9 40 84 LDA #$40 ;NOW ENABLE THE SOFTWARE 038F:8D 7A 04 85 STA INTON1 ; AND TELL IT NOT TO DISABLE 0392:8D FA 07 86 STA INTON2 ; INTERRUPTS AFTER READS 0395:99 80 C0 87 STA TCICR,Y 0398:A9 01 88 LDA #1 ;PRINT TIME IMMEDIATELY 039A:8D 4F 03 89 STA COUNTER ; ONCE PER SECOND LATER 039D:58 90 CLI ;ALLOW THE 6502 TO SEE THE 039E:60 91 RTS ; INTERRUPTS 039F: 92 * 039F:00 93 OOPS BRK ;BREAK ON ERROR
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Disk Driver Routines
If a disk drive supplied by another manufacturer is to work with ProDOS, it must look and act just like a disk drive supplied by Apple Computer, Inc. Its boot ROM must have certain things in certain locations, and its driver routine must use certain zero-page locations for its call parameters.
ROM Code Conventions
During startup, ProDOS searches for block storage devices. If it finds the following three bytes in the ROM of a particular slot, ProDOS assumes it has found a disk drive (n represents slot number):
$Cn01 = $20
$Cn03 = $00
$Cn05 = $03
If $CnFF = $00, ProDOS assumes it has found a Disk II with 16-sector ROMs and marks the device driver table in the ProDOS global page with the address of the Disk II driver routines. The Disk II driver routines support any drive that emulates Apple's 16-sector Disk II (280 blocks, single volume, and so on).
If $CnFF = $FF, ProDOS assumes it has found a Disk II with 13-sector ROMs, which ProDOS does not support.
If ProDOS finds a value other than $00 or $FF at $CnFF, it assumes it has found an intelligent disk controller. If the STATUS byte at $CnFE indicates that the device supports READ and STATUS requests, ProDOS marks the global page with a device-driver address whose high-byte is equal to $Cn and whose low-byte is equal to the value found at $CnFF.
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The only calls to the disk driver are STATUS, READ, WRITE, and
FORMAT. The STATUS call should perform a check to verify that the
device is ready for a READ or WRITE. If it is not, the carry should be
set and the appropriate error code returned in the accumulator. If the
device is ready for a READ or WRITE, then the driver should clear the
carry, place a zero in the accumulator, and return the number of
blocks on the device in the X-register (low-byte) and Y-register
(high-byte).
If you wish to interface a disk controller card with more than two drives (or a device with more than two volumes), additional device driver vectors for disk controllers plugged into slot 5 or 6 may be installed in slot 1 or 2 locations. There will be no conflict with character devices physically present in these slots.
Device numbers for four drives in slot 5 or 6 are listed below.
Physical Slot Five: S5,D1 = $50 S5,D2 = $D0 S1,D1 = $10 S1,D2 = $90 Physical Slot Six: S6,D1 = $60 S6,D2 = $E0 S2,D1 = $20 S2,D2 = $A0
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The special locations in the ROM code are:
$CnFC-$CnFD
The total number of blocks on the device. Used for writing the disk's bit map and directory header after formatting. (If this location is $0000, it indicates that the number of blocks must be obtained by making a STATUS request.)
$CnFE
The status byte (bits 0 and 1 must be set for ProDOS to install the driver vector.) bit 7 - Medium is removable. bit 6 - Device is interruptable. bit 5-4 - Number of volumes on the device (0-3). bit 3 - The device supports formatting. bit 2 - The device can be written to. bit 1 - The device can be read from (must be on). bit 0 - The device's status can be read -- (must be on). $CnFF The low-byte of entry to the driver routines. ProDOS will place $Cn + this byte in the global page.
Call Parameters
parameters are passed to the driver are: $42 Command: 0 = STATUS request 1 = READ request 2 = WRITE request 3 = FORMAT request
Note: The FORMAT code in the driver need only lay down address marks if required. The calling routine should write the virgin directory and bit map.
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$43
Unit Number:
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ |DR| SLOT | NOT USED | +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
Note: The UNIT_NUMBER that appears in the device list (DEVLST) in the system globals will include the high nibble of the status byte ($CnFE) as an ID in its low nibble.
$44-$45 Buffer Pointer: Indicates the start of a 512-byte memory buffer for data transfer. $46-$47 Block Number: Indicates the block on the disk for data transfer. The device driver should report errors by setting the carry flag and loading the error code into the accumulator. The error codes that should be implemented are: $27 - I/O error $28 - No device connected $2B - Write protected
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