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Trap
Registered: Jul 2010 Posts: 222 |
Best practice IRQ recovery
Hi,
Here's a little newbie question. Sorry, I'm still learning this shit and it's really complicated :(
I have kernel off ($01=$35) and I am running IRQ's using the normal $fffe/$ffff vectors.
I want to exit from this and call a prepacked piece of code (in this case something packed with TinyCrunch).
I tried restoring the IRQ vectors and jump to the packer. However, it just hangs. I tried some other things but all gave the same result. The only thing that worked was when I did this:
sei
lda #$36
sta $01
jsr $ff81
jmp unpacker
The problem of course is that it resets the VIC which isn't really great for my situation.
So, my question:
What is the correct/proper way to exit from a part and go to the next? preferably not using kernal routines :|
Thank you.
Trap |
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TheRyk
Registered: Mar 2009 Posts: 2070 |
F...ing around with $01 reg just to use KERNAL routines is hardly ever worth the trouble if you don't want KERNAL banked in other parts of your code.
Just look into KERNAL ROM routines to see what they do, for example here: http://unusedino.de/ec64/technical/aay/c64/krnromma.htm and then take the few things you need, normally that would be what you find at $EA81 = restoring accumulator and x/y registers and use them somewhere in RAM. |
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Six
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 287 |
Where does it hang, before or after the depacker starts? |
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chatGPZ
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 11114 |
Quote:What is the correct/proper way to exit from a part and go to the next?
that raises the question what you are doing there... a trackmo? classic "press space" stuff? |
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Trap
Registered: Jul 2010 Posts: 222 |
It crashes before it gets to the unpacking |
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MagerValp
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 1055 |
Set a breakpoint at unpacker and then step through the code and see where it crashes? There's no one answer here, it makes some assumption about things and you'll have to figure out what it is. |
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chatGPZ
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 11114 |
the first thing that comes to mind is... don't use SEI. disable the irq sources instead. then set the pointers to their defaults. |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2839 |
Without further information, my bet is on pending interrupts that wreak havoc as soon as the I flag is cleared. =)
Then wrong vectors/memory configuration usually cause crashes, or with the ROM interrupt handler restored, an infinite IRQ-handling loop (as the ROM interrupt handler only acknowledges CIA1 interrupts, but not VIC interrupts).
Bottom line being that properly disabling any interrupt sources (not just executing SEI) is good practice for cleanly exiting a demo part (in a classical spacemo, that is).
Edit: Oh yeah, what Groepaz said. :D |
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Trap
Registered: Jul 2010 Posts: 222 |
Well, I'm just learning stuff right now :)
ok, I will re-visit setting the IRQ vectors back. What would be the perfect sequence for this?
Should I just modify the running IRQ code to go to the default IRQ handler and then wait a few frames for it to catch it? |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2839 |
It's common practice to check for space during an interrupt handler that's executed once a video frame. The I flag is usually still set (because you're in an interrupt) and the interrupt itself was triggered by VIC.
When detecting the keypress, just write 0 to $d01a to disable any VIC interrupts, then write $ff to $d019 to acknowledge any pending VIC interrupts. Resetting any interrupt vectors should not be required. Directly exit to whatever code to unpack and run the next part. |
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Trap
Registered: Jul 2010 Posts: 222 |
So
set IRQ vector to default handler
$d01a=0
$d019=$ff
wait a frame or two
go to unpacker
Is that what you meant? |
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