ack/plat/cpm
2018-06-22 23:43:15 +02:00
..
include Rearrange the libc config files, ready for adding new options. 2018-06-22 23:43:15 +02:00
libsys Enable the line editor in read() for CP/M. 2018-05-04 18:21:01 -04:00
boot.s Apply fix contributed by George Koehler: 2013-06-02 22:02:15 +01:00
build-pkg.lua Turns out I wasn't building the syscall libraries. Do so. 2016-08-14 11:23:57 +02:00
build-tools.lua Biggish refactor to break cycles; my build rules were full of them. cpm builds, 2016-08-14 01:39:40 +02:00
descr Teach i80 ncg to use libfp. Enable ack -mcpm -fp. 2018-04-25 16:09:56 -04:00
README Update cpm/README for console changes, ack -fp. 2018-05-07 16:08:44 -04:00

# $Source$
# $State$
# $Revision$


The cpm platform
=================

cpm is an i80-based BSP that generates CP/M executables that can be run on any
CP/M-compliant machine.

This port only implements a very limited set of syscalls --- and most of those
are stubs required to make the demo apps link. File descriptors 0, 1 and 2
represent the console. Each read() blocks and reads an entire line (it can't
read part of a line) from the CP/M line editor, then appends \n. Each write()
converts \n to \r\n. The line editor and \n conversion can't be turned off.

There's a special, if rather minimilist, interface to give applications access
to CP/M. See include/cpm.h for details.

Link with `ack -fp` to enable software floating point. Otherwise, attempts to
use floating-point numbers will cause the program to terminate.


Example command line
====================

ack -mcpm -O -o cpm.com examples/paranoia.c

The file cpm.com can then be run.

(Although note that Paranoia is very big, and you'll need a CP/M machine with
lots of memory for it to fit. Which it does, just.)


David Given
dg@cowlark.com