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BlastEm 0.6.0 ------------- Installation ------------ Extract this archive to a directory of your choosing. NOTE: Prior to version 0.4.1, BlastEm was still using Unixy locations for config and save files. If you're upgrading from a previous version on Windows, you will need to move them manually. For config files, the relevant paths are in the previous paragraph. For save files, move all the directories found in %userprofile%\.local\share\blastem to %localappdata%\blastem Usage ----- This version of BlastEm has a GUI that allows access to most configuration options. Simply start BlastEm without passing a ROM filename on the command line to access the main menu. You can also access the menu by hitting the button mapped to the ui.exit action (default Esc). If Open GL is disabled or unavaible, or you explicitly request it, the old ROM-based UI will be used instead. This UI does not support configuration so you will need to modify the configuration file manually if you use it. See the rest of this README for instructions on modifying the configuration file. Some operations are currently only supported through the command line. To get a list of supported command line options on Linux or OSX type: ./blastem -h From within your BlastEm directory. On Windows type: blastem.exe -h Lock-On Support --------------- This version of BlastEm has some preliminary support for Sonic & Knuckles lock on technology. This is available via both the menu and the command line. To use it from the menu, first load Sonic & Knuckles normally. Enter the menu (mapped to the Escape key by default) and select the "Lock On" option to select a ROM to lock on. The system will then reload with the combined game. To use it from the command line, specify the Sonic & Knuckles ROM as the primary ROM and specify the ROM to be locked on using the -o option. As an example: ./blastem ~/romz/sonic_and_knuckles.bin -o ~/romz/sonic3.bin Please note that Sonic 2 lock-on does not work at this time. Configuration ------------- Configuration is read from the file at $HOME/.config/blastem/blastem.cfg on Unix-like systems and %localappdata%\blastem\blastem.cfg if it exists. Othwerise it is read from default.cfg from the same directory as the BlastEm executable. Sections are denoted by a section name followed by an open curly bracket, the section's contents and a closing curly bracket. Individual configuration values are set by entering the value's name followed by a space or tab and followed by the desired value. Bindings -------- The keys subsection of bindings maps keyboard keys to gamepad buttons or UI actions. The key name goes on the left and the action is on the right. Most keys are named for the character they produce when pressed. For keys that don't correspond to a normal character, check the list below: Name | Description ----------------- up Up arrow down Down arrow left Left arrow right Right arrow space tab backspace Backspace on PC keyboards, Delete on Mac keyboards esc delete lshift Left shift rshift Right shift lctrl Left control rctrl Right control lalt Left alt on PC keyboards, Option on Mac keyboards ralt Right alt on PC keyboards, Option on Mac keyboards home end pageup pagedown f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 f7 f8 f9 f10 f11 f12 select play search back The pads subsection is used to map gamepads and joysticks. Gamepads that are recognized, can have their buttons and axes mapped with semantic names. Xbox 360, PS4 and PS3 style names are supported. Unrecognized gamepads can be mapped using numeric button and axis ids. The following button names are recognized by BlastEm: a, cross b, circle x, square y, trinagle start, options back, select, share guide leftbutton, l1 rightbutton, r1 leftstick, l3 rightstick, r3 The following axis names are recognized by BlastEm: leftx lefty rightx righty lefttrigger, l2 righttrigger, r2 The mice subsection is used to map mice to emulated Mega/Sega mice. The default configuration maps both the first and second host mice to the first emulated mouse. This should not need modification for most users. One special mapping deserves a mention. By default, the 'r' key is mapped to ui.release_mouse. When operating in windowed mode the mouse has a capture behavior. Mouse events are ignored until you click in the window. The mouse will then be "captured" and the cursor will be both made invisible and locked to the window. The ui.release_mouse binding releases the mouse so it can be used normally. UI Actions ---------- This section lists the various "UI" actions that can be triggered by a key or gamepad binding. ui.release_mouse Releases the mouse if it is currently captured ui.plane_debug Toggles the VDP plane debug view ui.vram_debug Toggles the VDP VRAM debug view ui.cram_debug Toggles the VDP CRAM debug view ui.compositing_debug Toggles the VDP compositing debug view ui.vdp_debug_mode Cycles the mode/palette of the VDP debug view that currently has focus ui.enter_debugger Enters the debugger for the main CPU of the currently emulated system ui.screenshot Takes an internal screenshot ui.exit Returns to the menu ROM if currently in a game that was launched from the menu. Exits otherwise ui.save_state Saves a savestate to the quicksave slot ui.set_speed.N Selects a specific machine speed specified by N which should be a number between 0-9. Speeds are specified in the "clocks" section of the config ui.next_speed Selects the next machine speed ui.prev_speed Selects the previous machine speed ui.toggle_fullscreen Toggles between fullscreen and windowed mode ui.soft_reset Resets a portion of the emulated machine Equivalent to pushing the reset button on the emulated device ui.reload Reloads the current ROM from a file and performs a hard reset of the emulated device ui.sms_pause Triggers a press of the pause button when in SMS mode ui.toggle_keyboard_captured Toggles the capture state of the host keyboard when an emulated keyboard is present IO -- This section controls which peripherals are attached to the emulated console. IO assignments can be overridden by the ROM database when appropriate. For instance, games with mouse support can automatically use the mouse and games that only support 3-button pads can automatically force an appropriate pad. Unforunately, the ROM database is not yet exhaustive so manual configuration may be needed here in some cases. Video ----- The video section contains settings that affect the visual output of BlastEm. "aspect" is used to control the aspect ratio of the emulated display. The default of 4:3 matches that of a standard definition television. "width" is used to control the window width when not in fullscreen mode. "height" is used to control the window height when not in fullscreen mode. If left unspecified, it will be calculated from "width" and "aspect". "vertex_shader" and "fragment_shader" define the GLSL shader program that produces the final image for each frame. Shaders can be used to add various visual effects or enhancements. Currently BlastEm only ships with the default shader and a "subtle" crt shader. If you write your own shaders, place them in $HOME/.config/blastem/shaders and then specify the basename of the new shader files in the "vertex_shader" and "fragment_shader" config options. Note that shaders are not available in the SDL fallback renderer. "scanlines" controls whether there is any emulation of the gaps between display lines that are present when driving a CRT television with a 240p signal. This emulation is very basic at the moment so this option is off by default. "vsync" controls whether the drawing of frames is synchronized to the monitor refresh rate. Valid values for this setting are "off", "on" and "tear". The latter will attempt to use the "late tear" option if it's available and normal vsync otherwise. Currently it's recommended to leave this at the default of "off" as it may not work well with the default "audio" sync method and the "video" sync method will automatically enable "vsync". See "Sync Source and VSync" for more details. "fullscreen" controls whether BlastEm starts in fullscreen or windowed mode. This can be overridden on the command line with the -f flag. If fullscreen is set to "off", -f will turn it on. Conversely, if fullscreen is set to "on" in the config, -f will turn it off. "gl" controls whether OpenGL is used for rendering. The default value is on. If it is set to off instead, the fallback renderer which uses SDL2's render API will be used instead. This option is mostly useful for users on hardware that lacks OpenGL 2 support. While BlastEm will fall back automatically even if gl is set to on there will be a warning. Disabling gl eliminates this warning. "scaling" controls the type of scaling used for textures in both the GL and SDL renderers. Valid values are "nearest" and "linear". Note that shaders also impact how pixels are scaled. The "ntsc" and "pal" sub-sections control overscan settings for the emulated video output for NTSC and PAL consoles respectively. More details are available in the Overscan section. Overscan -------- Analog televisions generally don't display the entirety of a video frame. Some portion is cropped at the edges of the display. This is called overscan. Unfortunately, the amount of cropping performed varies considerably and is even adjustable on many TV sets. To deal with this, BlastEm allows overscan to be customized. Overscan values are specified in the "ntsc" and "pal" sub-sections of the "video" section of the config file. The "overscan" sub-section contains four settings for specifying the number of pixels cropped on each side of the display: "top", "bottom", "left" and "right". The default settings hide the horizontal border completely for both NTSC and PAL consoles. For the vertical borders, the NTSC overscan settings are chosen to give square pixels with the default aspect ratio of 4:3. For PAL, the default settings are set so that the PAL-exclusive V30 mode will produce a visible border that is the same size as what is shown in V28 mode in NTSC. This results in a slightly squished picture compared to NTSC which is probably appropriate given that a PAL display has more lines than an NTSC one. Audio ----- The audio section contains settings that affect the audio output of BlastEm. "rate" selects the preferred sample rate for audio output. Your operating system may not accept this value in which case a different rate will be chosen. This should generally be either the native sample rate of your sound card or an integral divisor of it. Most modern sound cards have a native output rate that is a multiple of 48000 Hz so the default setting should work well for most users. "buffer size" controls how large of a buffer uses for audio data. Smaller values will reduce latency, but too small of a value can lead to dropouts. 512 works well for me, but a higher or lower value may be more appropriate for your system. "lowpass_cutoff" controls the cutoff, or knee, frequency of the RC-style low-pass filter. The default value of 3390 Hz is supposedly what is present in at least some Genesis/Megadrive models. Other models reportedly use an even lower value. "gain" specifies the gain in decibels to be applied to the overall output. "fm_gain" specifies the gain to be applied to the emulated FM output before mixing with the PSG. "psg_gain" specifies the gain to be applied to the emulated PSG output before mixing with the FM chip. "fm_dac" controls the characteristics of the DAC in the emulated FM chip. If this is set to "linear", then the DAC will have precise linear output similar to the integrated YM3438 in later Gen/MD consoles. If it is set to "zero_offset", there will be a larger gap between -1 and 0. This is commonly referred to as the "ladder effect". This will also cause "leakage" on channels that are muted or panned to one side in a similar manner to a discrete YM2612. Clocks ------ The clocks section contains settings that affect how fast things run. "m68k_divider" describes the relationsip between the master clock (which is 53693175 Hz for NTSC mode and 53203395 Hz for PAL mode). The default value of 7 matches the real hardware. Set this to a lower number to overclock the 68000 and set it to a higher number to underclock it. "max_cycles" controls how often the system is forced to synchronize all hardware. BlastEm generally uses a sync on demand approach to synchronizing components in the system. This can provide perfect synchronization for most components, but since the Z80 can steal cycles from the 68000 at unpredictable times 68000/Z80 synchronization is imperfect. The default value of 3420 corresponds to the number of master clock cycles per line. Larger numbers may produce a modest performance improvement whereas smaller numbers will improve 68000/Z80 synchronization. "speeds" controls the speed of the overall emulated console at different presets. Preset 0 is the default speed and should normally be set to 100. The other presets enable the slow/turbo mode functionality. UI -- The UI section contains settings that affect the user interface. "rom" determines the path of the Genesis/Megadrive ROM that implements the UI. Relative paths will be loaded relative to the BlastEm executable. "initial_path" specifies the starting path for the ROM browser. It can contain the following special variables: $HOME, $EXEDIR. Additionally, variables defined in the OS environment can be used. "remember_path" specifies whether BlastEm should remember the last path used in the file browser. When it is set to "on", the last path will be remembered and used instead of "initial_path" in subsequent runs. If it is set to "off", "initial_path" will always be used. "screenshot_path" specifies the directory "internal" screenshots will be saved in. It accepts the same special variables as "initial_path". "screenshot_template" specifies a template for creating screenshot filenames. It is specified as a format string for the C library function strftime "save_path" specifies the directory that savestates, SRAM and EEPROM data will be saved in for a given game. It can contain the following special variables: $HOME, $EXEDIR, $USERDATA, $ROMNAME. Like "initial_path" it can also reference variables from the environment. "extensions" specifies the file extensions that should be displayed in the file browser. "state_format" specifies the preferred format for saving save states. Valid values are "native" (the default) and "gst". "native" save states do a better job of preserving the state of the emulated system, but "gst" save states are compatible with other emulators like Kega and Gens. This setting has no effect for systems other than the Genesis/Mega Drive Path Variables -------------- This section explains the meaning of the special path variables referenced in the previous section. $HOME The home directory of the current user. On most Unix variants, it will be a subdirectory of /home. On Windows it will typically be a subdirectory of C:\Users $EXEDIR The directory the BlastEm executable is located in $USERDATA This is an OS-specific path used for storing application specific user data. On Unix variants, it will be $HOME/.local/share/blastem On Windows it will be %LOCALDATA%/blastem $ROMNAME The name of the currently loaded ROM file without the extension System ------ "ram_init" determines how the RAM in the emulated system is initialized. The default value of "zero" will cause all RAM to be zeroed out before the system is started. Alternatively, "random" can be used to initialize RAM with values from a pseudo-random number generator. This option is mostly useful for developers that want to debug initialization issues in their code. "default_region" determines the console region that will be used when region detection fails and when there are multiple valid regions. The default of 'U' specifies a 60Hz "foreign" console. "sync_source" controls whether BlastEm uses audio or video output to control execution speed. "video" can provide a smoother experience when your display has a similar refresh rate to the emulated system, but has some limitations in the current version. The default value is "audio". "megawifi" enables or disables support for MegaWiFi cart emulation. MegaWiFi is a cartridge that contains WiFi hardware for network functionality. Enabling this means that ROMs potentially have access to your network (and the internet) which obviously has security implications. For this reason, it is disabled by default. If you wish to try out MegaWiFi emulation, set this to "on". Note that the support for MegaWiFi hardware is preliminary in this release. Debugger -------- BlastEm has an integrated command-line debugger loosely based on GDB's interface. The interface is very rough at the moment. Available commands in the 68K debugger are: b ADDRESS - Set a breakpoint at ADDRESS d BREAKPOINT - Delete a 68K breakpoint co BREAKPOINT - Run a list of debugger commands each time BREAKPOINT is hit a ADDRESS - Advance to address n - Advance to next instruction o - Advance to next instruction ignoring branches to lower addresses (good for breaking out of loops) s - Advance to next instruction (follows bsr/jsr) c - Continue bt - Print a backtrace p[/(x|X|d|c)] VALUE - Print a register or memory location di[/(x|X|d|c)] VALUE - Print a register or memory location each time a breakpoint is hit vs - Print VDP sprite list vr - Print VDP register info zb ADDRESS - Set a Z80 breakpoint zp[/(x|X|d|c)] VALUE - Display a Z80 value q - Quit BlastEm Available commands in the Z80 debugger are: b ADDRESS - Set a breakpoint at ADDRESS de BREAKPOINT - Delete a Z80 breakpoint a ADDRESS - Advance to address n - Advance to next instruction c - Continue p[/(x|X|d|c)] VALUE - Print a register or memory location di[/(x|X|d|c)] VALUE - Print a register or memory location each time a breakpoint is hit q - Quit BlastEm The -d flag can be used to cause BlastEm to start in the debugger. Alternatively, you can use the ui.enter_debugger action (mapped to the 'u' key by default) to enter the debugger while a game is running. To debug the menu ROM, use the -dm flag. GDB Remote Debugging -------------------- In addition to the native debugger, BlastEm can also act as a GDB remote debugging stub. To use this, you'll want to configure your Makefile to produce both an ELF executable and a raw binary. Invoke an m68k-elf targeted gdb with the ELF file. Once inside the gdb session, type: target remote | BLASTEM_PATH/blastem ROM_FILE.bin -D where BLASTEM_PATH is the relative or absolute path to your BlastEm installation and ROM_FILE.bin is the name of the raw binary for your program. BlastEm will halt at the beginning of your program's entry point and return control to GDB. This will allow you to set breakpoints before your code runs. On Windows, the procedure is slightly different. First run blastem.exe ROM_FILE.bin -D This will cause BlastEm to wait for a socket connection on port 1234. It will appear to be frozen until gdb connects to it. Now open the ELF file in gdb and type: target remote :1234 Trace points and watch points are not currently supported. Included Tools -------------- BlastEm ships with a few small utilities that leverage portions of the emulator code. dis - 68K disassembler zdis - Z80 disassembler vgmplay - Very basic VGM player stateview - GST save state viewer Sync Source and VSync ----- This section includes information about using VSync with BlastEm. Currently, the best way to use VSync is to set the sync source to "video". This will force VSync on and use video output for controlling the speed of emulation. In this mode, audio will have it's rate automatically adjusted to keep pace with video. The code for this is still a bit immature, so you may experience dropouts or pitch changes in this mode. If you experience problems, please switch back to the "audio" sync source, which is the default. You can also enable vsync when using the "audio" sync source by changing the "vsync" setting. This will generally work okay as long as the emulated refresh rate is below your monitor refresh rate (even if only slightly), but you will occassionally get a doubled frame (or frequently if the refresh rates are very different). Turbo mode will currently not work when vsync is on, regardless of which sync source is used. Slow mode will work with "audio" sync, but not "video" sync. -------------- My work has been made much easier by the contributions of those in the Genesis community past and present. I'd like to thank the people below for their help. Nemesis - His work reverse engineering and documenting the VDP and YM-2612 has saved me an immeasurable amount of time. I've found both his sprite overflow test ROM and VDP FIFO Testing ROM to be quite helpful. Charles MacDonald - While it hasn't been updated in a while, I still find his VDP document to be my favorite reference. His Genesis hardware document has also come in handy. Eke-Eke - Eke-Eke wrote a great document on the use of I2C EEPROM in Genesis games and also left some useful very helpful comments about problematic games in Genesis Plus GX Sauraen - Sauraen has analyzed the YM2203 and YM2612 dies and written a VHDL operator implementation. These have been useful in improving the accuracy of my YM2612 core. Alexey Khokholov - Alexey (aka Nuke.YKT) has analyzed the YM3438 die and written a fairly direct C implementation from that analysis. This has been a useful reference for verifying and improving my YM2612 core. Bart Trzynadlowski - His documents on the Genecyst save-state format and the mapper used in Super Street Fighter 2 were definitely appreciated. KanedaFR - Kaneda's SpritesMind forum is a great resource for the Sega development community. Titan - Titan has created what are without a doubt the most impressive demos on the Megadrive. Additionally, I am very grateful for the documentation provided by Kabuto and the assistance of Kabuto, Sik and Jorge in getting Overdrive 2 to run properly in BlastEm. flamewing - flamewing created a very handy exhaustive test ROM for 68K BCD instructions and documented the proper behavior for certain BCD edge cases r57shell - r57shell created a test ROM for 68K instruction sizes that was invaluable in fixing the remaining bugs in my 68K instruction decoder I'd also like to thank the following people who have performed compatibility testing or submitted helpful bug reports micky, Sasha, lol-frank, Sik, Tim Lawrence, ComradeOj, Vladikcomper License ------- BlastEm is free software distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 or higher. This gives you the right to redistribute and/or modify the program as long as you follow the terms of the license. See the file COPYING for full license details. Binary releases of BlastEm are packaged with GLEW, SDL2 and zlib which have their own licenses. See GLEW-LICENSE and SDL-LICENSE for details. For zlib license information, please see zlib.h in the source code release.
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