diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW Applications.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW Applications.pdf index 1d2632cb..817d73f5 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW Applications.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW Applications.pdf differ diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW Disk Catalog.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW Disk Catalog.pdf index be15b018..95e1efc3 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW Disk Catalog.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW Disk Catalog.pdf differ diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW Hardware.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW Hardware.pdf index 3a192a64..00926ff5 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW Hardware.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW Hardware.pdf differ diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW Introduction.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW Introduction.pdf index 4a3ee5e4..877b5b3a 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW Introduction.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW Introduction.pdf differ diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW System Guide.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW System Guide.pdf index 7e7b7697..96127ac0 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW System Guide.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW System Guide.pdf differ diff --git a/Doc/RomWBW User Guide.pdf b/Doc/RomWBW User Guide.pdf index 19a8f214..61cb73f4 100644 Binary files a/Doc/RomWBW User Guide.pdf and b/Doc/RomWBW User Guide.pdf differ diff --git a/ReadMe.md b/ReadMe.md index 5610cbe4..7abca287 100644 --- a/ReadMe.md +++ b/ReadMe.md @@ -1,325 +1,306 @@ ---- -author: Wayne Warthen () -colorlinks: true -date: 23 Jan 2025 -fontsize: 12pt -geometry: -- top=1.5in -- bottom=1.5in -- left=1.5in -- right=1.5in -header-includes: -- -institution: RetroBrew Computers Group -monofont: roboto-mono -monofontoptions: Scale=0.75 -papersize: letter -sansfont: roboto -subtitle: Version 3.5 -title: RomWBW ReadMe ---- - - - -**RomWBW ReadMe** \ -Version 3.5 \ -Wayne Warthen ([wwarthen@gmail.com](mailto:wwarthen@gmail.com)) \ -23 Jan 2025 - -# Overview - -RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality implementation -of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and applications for modern -Z80/180/280 retro-computing hardware systems. A wide variety of -platforms are supported including those produced by these developer -communities: - -- [RetroBrew Computers](https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org) - () -- [RC2014](https://rc2014.co.uk) (), - [RC2014-Z80](https://groups.google.com/g/rc2014-z80) - () -- [Retro Computing](https://groups.google.com/g/retro-comp) - () -- [Small Computer Central](https://smallcomputercentral.com/) - () - -A complete list of the currently supported platforms is found in the -\[Installation\] section. - -General features include: - -- Z80 Family CPUs including Z80, Z180, and Z280 -- Banked memory services for several banking designs -- Disk drivers for RAM, ROM, Floppy, IDE ATA/ATAPI, CF, SD, USB, Zip, - Iomega -- Serial drivers including UART (16550-like), ASCI, ACIA, SIO -- Video drivers including TMS9918, SY6545, MOS8563, HD6445 -- Keyboard (PS/2) drivers via VT8242 or PPI interfaces -- Real time clock drivers including DS1302, BQ4845 -- OSes: CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS, CP/M 3, NZ-COM, ZPM3, QPM, p-System, and - FreeRTOS -- Built-in VT-100 terminal emulation support - -RomWBW is distributed as both source code and pre-built ROM and disk -images. Some of the provided software can be launched directly from the -ROM firmware itself: - -- System Monitor -- Operating Systems (CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS) -- ROM BASIC (Nascom BASIC and Tasty BASIC) -- ROM Forth - -A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping -operating system drive letters to any available disk media. -Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) -support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice -contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to -any drive letter. This overcomes the inherent size limitations in legacy -OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device. - -The pre-built ROM firmware images are generally suitable for most users. -However, it is also very easy to modify and build custom ROM images that -fully tailor the firmware to your specific preferences. All tools -required to build custom ROM firmware under Windows are included – no -need to install assemblers, etc. The firmware can also be built using -Linux or MacOS after confirming a few standard tools have been -installed. - -Multiple disk images are provided in the distribution. Most disk images -contain a complete, bootable, ready-to-run implementation of a specific -operating system. A “combo” disk image contains multiple slices, each -with a full operating system implementation. If you use this disk image, -you can easily pick whichever operating system you want to boot without -changing media. - -By design, RomWBW isolates all of the hardware specific functions in the -ROM chip itself. The ROM provides a hardware abstraction layer such that -all of the operating systems and applications on a disk will run on any -RomWBW-based system. To put it simply, you can take a disk (or CF/SD/USB -Card) and move it between systems transparently. - -A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. -The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW -slices or on stand-alone media. This makes exchanging files with modern -OSes such as Windows, MacOS, and Linux very easy. - -# Acquiring RomWBW - -The [RomWBW Repository](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW) -() on GitHub is the official -distribution location for all project source and documentation. The -fully-built distribution releases are available on the [RomWBW Releases -Page](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/releases) -() of the repository. On -this page, you will normally see a Development Snapshot as well as -recent stable releases. Unless you have a specific reason, I suggest you -stick to the most recent stable release. Expand the “Assets” drop-down -for the release you want to download, then select the asset named -RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip. The Package asset includes all pre-built ROM -and Disk images as well as full source code. The other assets contain -only source code and do not have the pre-built ROM or disk images. - -All source code and distributions are maintained on GitHub. Code -contributions are very welcome. - -# Installation & Operation - -In general, installation of RomWBW on your platform is very simple. You -just need to program your ROM with the correct ROM image from the RomWBW -distribution. Subsequently, you can write disk images on your disk -drives (IDE disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) which then provides even more -functionality. - -Complete instructions for installation and operation of RomWBW are found -in the [RomWBW User -Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20User%20Guide.pdf). -It is also a good idea to review the [Release -Notes](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/blob/master/RELEASE_NOTES.md) -for helpful release-specific information. - -## Documentation - -Documentation for RomWBW includes: - -- [RomWBW - Introduction](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Introduction.pdf) -- [RomWBW User - Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20User%20Guide.pdf) -- [RomWBW System - Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20System%20Guide.pdf) -- [RomWBW - Applications](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Applications.pdf) -- [RomWBW Disk - Catalog](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Disk%20Catalog.pdf) -- [RomWBW - Hardware](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Hardware.pdf) - -# Acknowledgments - -I want to acknowledge that a great deal of the code and inspiration for -RomWBW has been provided by or derived from the work of others in the -RetroBrew Computers Community. I sincerely appreciate all of their -contributions. The list below is probably missing many names – please -let me know if I missed you! - -- Andrew Lynch started it all when he created the N8VEM Z80 SBC which - became the first platform RomWBW supported. Some of his original code - can still be found in RomWBW. - -- Dan Werner wrote much of the code from which RomWBW was originally - derived and he has always been a great source of knowledge and advice. - -- Douglas Goodall contributed code, time, testing, and advice in “the - early days”. He created an entire suite of application programs to - enhance the use of RomWBW. Unfortunately, they have become unusable - due to internal changes within RomWBW. As of RomWBW 2.6, these - applications are no longer provided. - -- Sergey Kiselev created several hardware platforms for RomWBW including - the very popular Zeta. - -- David Giles created support for the Z180 CSIO which is now included SD - Card driver. - -- Phil Summers contributed the Forth and BASIC adaptations in ROM, the - AY-3-8910 sound driver, DMA support, and a long list of general code - and documentation enhancements. - -- Ed Brindley contributed some of the code that supports the RCBus - platform. - -- Spencer Owen created the RC2014 series of hobbyist kit computers which - has exponentially increased RomWBW usage. Some of his kits include - RomWBW. - -- Stephen Cousins has likewise created a series of hobbyist kit - computers at Small Computer Central and is distributing RomWBW with - many of them. - -- Alan Cox has contributed some driver code and has provided a great - deal of advice. - -- The CP/NET client files were developed by Douglas Miller. - -- Phillip Stevens contributed support for FreeRTOS. - -- Curt Mayer contributed the original Linux / MacOS build process. - -- UNA BIOS and FDISK80 are the products of John Coffman. - -- FLASH4 is a product of Will Sowerbutts. - -- CLRDIR is a product of Max Scane. - -- Tasty Basic is a product of Dimitri Theulings. - -- Dean Netherton contributed eZ80 CPU support, the sound driver - interface, and the SN76489 sound driver. - -- The RomWBW Disk Catalog document was produced by Mykl Orders. - -- Rob Prouse has created many of the supplemental disk images including - Aztec C, HiTech C, SLR Z80ASM, Turbo Pascal, Microsoft BASIC Compiler, - Microsoft Fortran Compiler, and a Games compendium. - -- Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the - User Guide and Applications documents. - -- Mark Pruden has contributed a great deal of content to the Disk - Catalog, User Guide, as well as creating the Introduction and Hardware - documents, and contributed the disk image for the Z3PLUS operating - system, the COPYSL utility, and also implemented a feature for RomWBW - configuration by NVRAM, and added the /B bulk mode of disk assignment - to the ASSIGN utility. - -- Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. - -- Jose Collado has contributed enhancements to the TMS driver including - compatibility with standard TMS register configuration. - -- Kevin Boone has contributed a generic HBIOS date/time utility (WDATE). - -- Matt Carroll has contributed a fix to XM.COM that corrects the port - specification when doing a send. - -- Dean Jenkins enhanced the build process to accommodate the Raspberry - Pi 4. - -- Tom Plano has contributed a new utility (HTALK) to allow talking - directly to HBIOS COM ports. - -- Lars Nelson has contributed several generic utilities such as a - universal (OS agnostic) UNARC application. - -- Dylan Hall added support for specifying a secondary console. - -- Bill Shen has contributed boot loaders for several of his systems. - -- Laszlo Szolnoki has contributed an EF9345 video display controller - driver. - -- Ladislau Szilagyi has contributed an enhanced version of CP/M Cowgol - that leverages RomWBW memory banking. - -- Les Bird has contributed support for the NABU w/ Option Board - -Contributions of all kinds to RomWBW are very welcome. - -# Licensing - -RomWBW is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under -the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free -Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your -option) any later version. - -RomWBW is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT -ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or -FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for -more details. - -You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along -with RomWBW. If not, see . - -Portions of RomWBW were created by, contributed by, or derived from the -work of others. It is believed that these works are being used in -accordance with the intentions and/or licensing of their creators. - -If anyone feels their work is being used outside of its intended -licensing, please notify: - -> Wayne Warthen -> - -RomWBW is an aggregate work. It is composed of many individual, -standalone programs that are distributed as a whole to function as a -cohesive system. Each program may have its own licensing which may be -different from other programs within the aggregate. - -In some cases, a single program (e.g., CP/M Operating System) is -composed of multiple components with different licenses. It is believed -that in all such cases the licenses are compatible with GPL version 3. - -RomWBW encourages code contributions from others. Contributors may -assert their own copyright in their contributions by annotating the -contributed source code appropriately. Contributors are further -encouraged to submit their contributions via the RomWBW source code -control system to ensure their contributions are clearly documented. - -All contributions to RomWBW are subject to this license. - -# Getting Assistance - -The best way to get assistance with RomWBW or any aspect of the -RetroBrew Computers projects is via one of the community forums: - -- [RetroBrew Computers Forum](https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org/forum/) -- [RC2014 Google - Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/rc2014-z80) -- [retro-comp Google - Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/retro-comp) - -Submission of issues and bugs are welcome at the [RomWBW GitHub -Repository](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW). - -Also feel free to email Wayne Warthen at . + + +**RomWBW ReadMe** \ +Version 3.5 \ +Wayne Warthen ([wwarthen@gmail.com](mailto:wwarthen@gmail.com)) \ +23 Jan 2025 + +# Overview + +RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality implementation +of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and applications for modern +Z80/180/280 retro-computing hardware systems. + +A wide variety of platforms are supported including those produced by +these developer communities: + +- [RetroBrew Computers](https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org) + () +- [RC2014](https://rc2014.co.uk) (), + [RC2014-Z80](https://groups.google.com/g/rc2014-z80) + () +- [Retro Computing](https://groups.google.com/g/retro-comp) + () +- [Small Computer Central](https://smallcomputercentral.com/) + () + +A complete list of the currently supported platforms is found in the +\[Installation\] section. + +Supported hardware features of RomWBW include: + +- Z80 Family CPUs including Z80, Z180, and Z280 +- Banked memory services for several banking designs +- Disk drivers for RAM, ROM, Floppy, IDE ATA/ATAPI, CF, SD, USB, Zip, + Iomega +- Serial drivers including UART (16550-like), ASCI, ACIA, SIO +- Video drivers including TMS9918, SY6545, MOS8563, HD6445 +- Keyboard (PS/2) drivers via VT8242 or PPI interfaces +- Real time clock drivers including DS1302, BQ4845 +- Built-in VT-100 terminal emulation support + +RomWBW is distributed as both source code and pre-built ROM and disk +images. Some of the provided software can be launched directly from the +ROM firmware itself: + +- System Monitor +- Operating Systems (CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS) +- ROM BASIC (Nascom BASIC and Tasty BASIC) +- ROM Forth + +A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping +operating system drive letters to any available disk media. +Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) +support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice +contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to +any drive letter. This overcomes the inherent size limitations in legacy +OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device, with +up to 128MB accessible at any one time. + +The pre-built ROM firmware images are generally suitable for most users. +However, it is also very easy to modify and build custom ROM images that +fully tailor the firmware to your specific preferences. All tools +required to build custom ROM firmware under Windows are included – no +need to install assemblers, etc. The firmware can also be built using +Linux or MacOS after confirming a few standard tools have been +installed. + +Multiple disk images are provided in the distribution. Most disk images +contain a complete, bootable, ready-to-run implementation of a specific +operating system. A “combo” disk image contains multiple slices, each +with a full operating system implementation. If you use this disk image, +you can easily pick whichever operating system you want to boot without +changing media. + +By design, RomWBW isolates all of the hardware specific functions in the +ROM chip itself. The ROM provides a hardware abstraction layer such that +all of the operating systems and applications on a disk will run on any +RomWBW-based system. To put it simply, you can take a disk (or CF/SD/USB +Card) and move it between systems transparently. + +A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. +The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW +slices or on stand-alone media. This makes exchanging files with modern +OSes such as Windows, MacOS, and Linux very easy. + +# Acquiring RomWBW + +The [RomWBW Repository](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW) +() on GitHub is the official +distribution location for all project source and documentation. The +fully-built distribution releases are available on the [RomWBW Releases +Page](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/releases) +() of the repository. On +this page, you will normally see a Development Snapshot as well as +recent stable releases. Unless you have a specific reason, I suggest you +stick to the most recent stable release. + +The asset named RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip includes all pre-built ROM and +Disk images as well as full source code. The other assets contain only +source code and do not have the pre-built ROM or disk images. + +All source code and distributions are maintained on GitHub. Code +contributions are very welcome. + +# Installation & Operation + +In general, installation of RomWBW on your platform is very simple. You +just need to program your ROM with the correct ROM image from the RomWBW +distribution. Subsequently, you can write disk images on your disk +drives (IDE disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) which then provides even more +functionality. + +Complete instructions for installation and operation of RomWBW are found +in the [RomWBW User +Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20User%20Guide.pdf). +It is also a good idea to review the [Release +Notes](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/blob/master/RELEASE_NOTES.md) +for helpful release-specific information. + +## Documentation + +Documentation for RomWBW includes: + +- [RomWBW + Introduction](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Introduction.pdf) +- [RomWBW User + Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20User%20Guide.pdf) +- [RomWBW System + Guide](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20System%20Guide.pdf) +- [RomWBW + Applications](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Applications.pdf) +- [RomWBW Disk + Catalog](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Disk%20Catalog.pdf) +- [RomWBW + Hardware](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/raw/master/Doc/RomWBW%20Hardware.pdf) + +# Acknowledgments + +I want to acknowledge that a great deal of the code and inspiration for +RomWBW has been provided by or derived from the work of others in the +RetroBrew Computers Community. I sincerely appreciate all of their +contributions. The list below is probably missing many names – please +let me know if I missed you! + +- Andrew Lynch started it all when he created the N8VEM Z80 SBC which + became the first platform RomWBW supported. Some of his original code + can still be found in RomWBW. + +- Dan Werner wrote much of the code from which RomWBW was originally + derived and he has always been a great source of knowledge and advice. + +- Douglas Goodall contributed code, time, testing, and advice in “the + early days”. He created an entire suite of application programs to + enhance the use of RomWBW. Unfortunately, they have become unusable + due to internal changes within RomWBW. As of RomWBW 2.6, these + applications are no longer provided. + +- Sergey Kiselev created several hardware platforms for RomWBW including + the very popular Zeta. + +- David Giles created support for the Z180 CSIO which is now included SD + Card driver. + +- Phil Summers contributed the Forth and BASIC adaptations in ROM, the + AY-3-8910 sound driver, DMA support, and a long list of general code + and documentation enhancements. + +- Ed Brindley contributed some of the code that supports the RCBus + platform. + +- Spencer Owen created the RC2014 series of hobbyist kit computers which + has exponentially increased RomWBW usage. Some of his kits include + RomWBW. + +- Stephen Cousins has likewise created a series of hobbyist kit + computers at Small Computer Central and is distributing RomWBW with + many of them. + +- Alan Cox has contributed some driver code and has provided a great + deal of advice. + +- The CP/NET client files were developed by Douglas Miller. + +- Phillip Stevens contributed support for FreeRTOS. + +- Curt Mayer contributed the original Linux / MacOS build process. + +- UNA BIOS and FDISK80 are the products of John Coffman. + +- FLASH4 is a product of Will Sowerbutts. + +- CLRDIR is a product of Max Scane. + +- Tasty Basic is a product of Dimitri Theulings. + +- Dean Netherton contributed eZ80 CPU support, the sound driver + interface, and the SN76489 sound driver. + +- The RomWBW Disk Catalog document was produced by Mykl Orders. + +- Rob Prouse has created many of the supplemental disk images including + Aztec C, HiTech C, SLR Z80ASM, Turbo Pascal, Microsoft BASIC Compiler, + Microsoft Fortran Compiler, and a Games compendium. + +- Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the + User Guide and Applications documents. + +- Mark Pruden has made a wide variety of contributions including: + + - significant content in the Disk Catalog and User Guide + - creation of the Introduction and Hardware documents + - Z3PLUS operating system disk image + - COPYSL utility + - a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM + - the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility + +- Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. + +- Jose Collado has contributed enhancements to the TMS driver including + compatibility with standard TMS register configuration. + +- Kevin Boone has contributed a generic HBIOS date/time utility (WDATE). + +- Matt Carroll has contributed a fix to XM.COM that corrects the port + specification when doing a send. + +- Dean Jenkins enhanced the build process to accommodate the Raspberry + Pi 4. + +- Tom Plano has contributed a new utility (HTALK) to allow talking + directly to HBIOS COM ports. + +- Lars Nelson has contributed several generic utilities such as a + universal (OS agnostic) UNARC application. + +- Dylan Hall added support for specifying a secondary console. + +- Bill Shen has contributed boot loaders for several of his systems. + +- Laszlo Szolnoki has contributed an EF9345 video display controller + driver. + +- Ladislau Szilagyi has contributed an enhanced version of CP/M Cowgol + that leverages RomWBW memory banking. + +- Les Bird has contributed support for the NABU w/ Option Board + +Contributions of all kinds to RomWBW are very welcome. + +# Licensing + +RomWBW is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under +the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free +Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your +option) any later version. + +RomWBW is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT +ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or +FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for +more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along +with RomWBW. If not, see . + +Portions of RomWBW were created by, contributed by, or derived from the +work of others. It is believed that these works are being used in +accordance with the intentions and/or licensing of their creators. + +If anyone feels their work is being used outside of its intended +licensing, please notify: + +> Wayne Warthen +> + +RomWBW is an aggregate work. It is composed of many individual, +standalone programs that are distributed as a whole to function as a +cohesive system. Each program may have its own licensing which may be +different from other programs within the aggregate. + +In some cases, a single program (e.g., CP/M Operating System) is +composed of multiple components with different licenses. It is believed +that in all such cases the licenses are compatible with GPL version 3. + +RomWBW encourages code contributions from others. Contributors may +assert their own copyright in their contributions by annotating the +contributed source code appropriately. Contributors are further +encouraged to submit their contributions via the RomWBW source code +control system to ensure their contributions are clearly documented. + +All contributions to RomWBW are subject to this license. + +# Getting Assistance + +The best way to get assistance with RomWBW or any aspect of the +RetroBrew Computers projects is via one of the community forums: + +- [RetroBrew Computers Forum](https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org/forum/) +- [RC2014 Google + Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/rc2014-z80) +- [retro-comp Google + Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/retro-comp) + +Submission of issues and bugs are welcome at the [RomWBW GitHub +Repository](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW). + +Also feel free to email Wayne Warthen at . diff --git a/ReadMe.txt b/ReadMe.txt index c725c80b..2ec1abda 100644 --- a/ReadMe.txt +++ b/ReadMe.txt @@ -1,305 +1,307 @@ -RomWBW ReadMe -Wayne Warthen (wwarthen@gmail.com) -23 Jan 2025 - - - -OVERVIEW - - -RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality implementation -of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and applications for modern -Z80/180/280 retro-computing hardware systems. A wide variety of -platforms are supported including those produced by these developer -communities: - -- RetroBrew Computers (https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org) -- RC2014 (https://rc2014.co.uk), - RC2014-Z80 (https://groups.google.com/g/rc2014-z80) -- Retro Computing (https://groups.google.com/g/retro-comp) -- Small Computer Central (https://smallcomputercentral.com/) - -A complete list of the currently supported platforms is found in the -[Installation] section. - -General features include: - -- Z80 Family CPUs including Z80, Z180, and Z280 -- Banked memory services for several banking designs -- Disk drivers for RAM, ROM, Floppy, IDE ATA/ATAPI, CF, SD, USB, Zip, - Iomega -- Serial drivers including UART (16550-like), ASCI, ACIA, SIO -- Video drivers including TMS9918, SY6545, MOS8563, HD6445 -- Keyboard (PS/2) drivers via VT8242 or PPI interfaces -- Real time clock drivers including DS1302, BQ4845 -- OSes: CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS, CP/M 3, NZ-COM, ZPM3, QPM, p-System, and - FreeRTOS -- Built-in VT-100 terminal emulation support - -RomWBW is distributed as both source code and pre-built ROM and disk -images. Some of the provided software can be launched directly from the -ROM firmware itself: - -- System Monitor -- Operating Systems (CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS) -- ROM BASIC (Nascom BASIC and Tasty BASIC) -- ROM Forth - -A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping -operating system drive letters to any available disk media. -Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) -support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice -contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to -any drive letter. This overcomes the inherent size limitations in legacy -OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device. - -The pre-built ROM firmware images are generally suitable for most users. -However, it is also very easy to modify and build custom ROM images that -fully tailor the firmware to your specific preferences. All tools -required to build custom ROM firmware under Windows are included – no -need to install assemblers, etc. The firmware can also be built using -Linux or MacOS after confirming a few standard tools have been -installed. - -Multiple disk images are provided in the distribution. Most disk images -contain a complete, bootable, ready-to-run implementation of a specific -operating system. A “combo” disk image contains multiple slices, each -with a full operating system implementation. If you use this disk image, -you can easily pick whichever operating system you want to boot without -changing media. - -By design, RomWBW isolates all of the hardware specific functions in the -ROM chip itself. The ROM provides a hardware abstraction layer such that -all of the operating systems and applications on a disk will run on any -RomWBW-based system. To put it simply, you can take a disk (or CF/SD/USB -Card) and move it between systems transparently. - -A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. -The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW -slices or on stand-alone media. This makes exchanging files with modern -OSes such as Windows, MacOS, and Linux very easy. - - - -ACQUIRING ROMWBW - - -The RomWBW Repository (https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW) on GitHub is -the official distribution location for all project source and -documentation. The fully-built distribution releases are available on -the RomWBW Releases Page (https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/releases) -of the repository. On this page, you will normally see a Development -Snapshot as well as recent stable releases. Unless you have a specific -reason, I suggest you stick to the most recent stable release. Expand -the “Assets” drop-down for the release you want to download, then select -the asset named RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip. The Package asset includes -all pre-built ROM and Disk images as well as full source code. The other -assets contain only source code and do not have the pre-built ROM or -disk images. - -All source code and distributions are maintained on GitHub. Code -contributions are very welcome. - - - -INSTALLATION & OPERATION - - -In general, installation of RomWBW on your platform is very simple. You -just need to program your ROM with the correct ROM image from the RomWBW -distribution. Subsequently, you can write disk images on your disk -drives (IDE disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) which then provides even more -functionality. - -Complete instructions for installation and operation of RomWBW are found -in the RomWBW User Guide. It is also a good idea to review the Release -Notes for helpful release-specific information. - - -Documentation - -Documentation for RomWBW includes: - -- RomWBW Introduction -- RomWBW User Guide -- RomWBW System Guide -- RomWBW Applications -- RomWBW Disk Catalog -- RomWBW Hardware - - -ACKNOWLEDGMENTS - - -I want to acknowledge that a great deal of the code and inspiration for -RomWBW has been provided by or derived from the work of others in the -RetroBrew Computers Community. I sincerely appreciate all of their -contributions. The list below is probably missing many names – please -let me know if I missed you! - -- Andrew Lynch started it all when he created the N8VEM Z80 SBC which - became the first platform RomWBW supported. Some of his original - code can still be found in RomWBW. - -- Dan Werner wrote much of the code from which RomWBW was originally - derived and he has always been a great source of knowledge and - advice. - -- Douglas Goodall contributed code, time, testing, and advice in “the - early days”. He created an entire suite of application programs to - enhance the use of RomWBW. Unfortunately, they have become unusable - due to internal changes within RomWBW. As of RomWBW 2.6, these - applications are no longer provided. - -- Sergey Kiselev created several hardware platforms for RomWBW - including the very popular Zeta. - -- David Giles created support for the Z180 CSIO which is now included - SD Card driver. - -- Phil Summers contributed the Forth and BASIC adaptations in ROM, the - AY-3-8910 sound driver, DMA support, and a long list of general code - and documentation enhancements. - -- Ed Brindley contributed some of the code that supports the RCBus - platform. - -- Spencer Owen created the RC2014 series of hobbyist kit computers - which has exponentially increased RomWBW usage. Some of his kits - include RomWBW. - -- Stephen Cousins has likewise created a series of hobbyist kit - computers at Small Computer Central and is distributing RomWBW with - many of them. - -- Alan Cox has contributed some driver code and has provided a great - deal of advice. - -- The CP/NET client files were developed by Douglas Miller. - -- Phillip Stevens contributed support for FreeRTOS. - -- Curt Mayer contributed the original Linux / MacOS build process. - -- UNA BIOS and FDISK80 are the products of John Coffman. - -- FLASH4 is a product of Will Sowerbutts. - -- CLRDIR is a product of Max Scane. - -- Tasty Basic is a product of Dimitri Theulings. - -- Dean Netherton contributed eZ80 CPU support, the sound driver - interface, and the SN76489 sound driver. - -- The RomWBW Disk Catalog document was produced by Mykl Orders. - -- Rob Prouse has created many of the supplemental disk images - including Aztec C, HiTech C, SLR Z80ASM, Turbo Pascal, Microsoft - BASIC Compiler, Microsoft Fortran Compiler, and a Games compendium. - -- Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the - User Guide and Applications documents. - -- Mark Pruden has contributed a great deal of content to the Disk - Catalog, User Guide, as well as creating the Introduction and - Hardware documents, and contributed the disk image for the Z3PLUS - operating system, the COPYSL utility, and also implemented a feature - for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM, and added the /B bulk mode of - disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility. - -- Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. - -- Jose Collado has contributed enhancements to the TMS driver - including compatibility with standard TMS register configuration. - -- Kevin Boone has contributed a generic HBIOS date/time utility - (WDATE). - -- Matt Carroll has contributed a fix to XM.COM that corrects the port - specification when doing a send. - -- Dean Jenkins enhanced the build process to accommodate the Raspberry - Pi 4. - -- Tom Plano has contributed a new utility (HTALK) to allow talking - directly to HBIOS COM ports. - -- Lars Nelson has contributed several generic utilities such as a - universal (OS agnostic) UNARC application. - -- Dylan Hall added support for specifying a secondary console. - -- Bill Shen has contributed boot loaders for several of his systems. - -- Laszlo Szolnoki has contributed an EF9345 video display controller - driver. - -- Ladislau Szilagyi has contributed an enhanced version of CP/M Cowgol - that leverages RomWBW memory banking. - -- Les Bird has contributed support for the NABU w/ Option Board - -Contributions of all kinds to RomWBW are very welcome. - - - -LICENSING - - -RomWBW is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under -the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free -Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your -option) any later version. - -RomWBW is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT -ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or -FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for -more details. - -You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along -with RomWBW. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. - -Portions of RomWBW were created by, contributed by, or derived from the -work of others. It is believed that these works are being used in -accordance with the intentions and/or licensing of their creators. - -If anyone feels their work is being used outside of its intended -licensing, please notify: - - Wayne Warthen - wwarthen@gmail.com - -RomWBW is an aggregate work. It is composed of many individual, -standalone programs that are distributed as a whole to function as a -cohesive system. Each program may have its own licensing which may be -different from other programs within the aggregate. - -In some cases, a single program (e.g., CP/M Operating System) is -composed of multiple components with different licenses. It is believed -that in all such cases the licenses are compatible with GPL version 3. - -RomWBW encourages code contributions from others. Contributors may -assert their own copyright in their contributions by annotating the -contributed source code appropriately. Contributors are further -encouraged to submit their contributions via the RomWBW source code -control system to ensure their contributions are clearly documented. - -All contributions to RomWBW are subject to this license. - - - -GETTING ASSISTANCE - - -The best way to get assistance with RomWBW or any aspect of the -RetroBrew Computers projects is via one of the community forums: - -- RetroBrew Computers Forum -- RC2014 Google Group -- retro-comp Google Group - -Submission of issues and bugs are welcome at the RomWBW GitHub -Repository. - -Also feel free to email Wayne Warthen at wwarthen@gmail.com. +RomWBW ReadMe +Wayne Warthen (wwarthen@gmail.com) +23 Jan 2025 + + + +OVERVIEW + + +RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality implementation +of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and applications for modern +Z80/180/280 retro-computing hardware systems. + +A wide variety of platforms are supported including those produced by +these developer communities: + +- RetroBrew Computers (https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org) +- RC2014 (https://rc2014.co.uk), + RC2014-Z80 (https://groups.google.com/g/rc2014-z80) +- Retro Computing (https://groups.google.com/g/retro-comp) +- Small Computer Central (https://smallcomputercentral.com/) + +A complete list of the currently supported platforms is found in the +[Installation] section. + +Supported hardware features of RomWBW include: + +- Z80 Family CPUs including Z80, Z180, and Z280 +- Banked memory services for several banking designs +- Disk drivers for RAM, ROM, Floppy, IDE ATA/ATAPI, CF, SD, USB, Zip, + Iomega +- Serial drivers including UART (16550-like), ASCI, ACIA, SIO +- Video drivers including TMS9918, SY6545, MOS8563, HD6445 +- Keyboard (PS/2) drivers via VT8242 or PPI interfaces +- Real time clock drivers including DS1302, BQ4845 +- Built-in VT-100 terminal emulation support + +RomWBW is distributed as both source code and pre-built ROM and disk +images. Some of the provided software can be launched directly from the +ROM firmware itself: + +- System Monitor +- Operating Systems (CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS) +- ROM BASIC (Nascom BASIC and Tasty BASIC) +- ROM Forth + +A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping +operating system drive letters to any available disk media. +Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) +support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice +contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to +any drive letter. This overcomes the inherent size limitations in legacy +OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device, with +up to 128MB accessible at any one time. + +The pre-built ROM firmware images are generally suitable for most users. +However, it is also very easy to modify and build custom ROM images that +fully tailor the firmware to your specific preferences. All tools +required to build custom ROM firmware under Windows are included – no +need to install assemblers, etc. The firmware can also be built using +Linux or MacOS after confirming a few standard tools have been +installed. + +Multiple disk images are provided in the distribution. Most disk images +contain a complete, bootable, ready-to-run implementation of a specific +operating system. A “combo” disk image contains multiple slices, each +with a full operating system implementation. If you use this disk image, +you can easily pick whichever operating system you want to boot without +changing media. + +By design, RomWBW isolates all of the hardware specific functions in the +ROM chip itself. The ROM provides a hardware abstraction layer such that +all of the operating systems and applications on a disk will run on any +RomWBW-based system. To put it simply, you can take a disk (or CF/SD/USB +Card) and move it between systems transparently. + +A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. +The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW +slices or on stand-alone media. This makes exchanging files with modern +OSes such as Windows, MacOS, and Linux very easy. + + + +ACQUIRING ROMWBW + + +The RomWBW Repository (https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW) on GitHub is +the official distribution location for all project source and +documentation. The fully-built distribution releases are available on +the RomWBW Releases Page (https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/releases) +of the repository. On this page, you will normally see a Development +Snapshot as well as recent stable releases. Unless you have a specific +reason, I suggest you stick to the most recent stable release. + +The asset named RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip includes all pre-built ROM and +Disk images as well as full source code. The other assets contain only +source code and do not have the pre-built ROM or disk images. + +All source code and distributions are maintained on GitHub. Code +contributions are very welcome. + + + +INSTALLATION & OPERATION + + +In general, installation of RomWBW on your platform is very simple. You +just need to program your ROM with the correct ROM image from the RomWBW +distribution. Subsequently, you can write disk images on your disk +drives (IDE disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) which then provides even more +functionality. + +Complete instructions for installation and operation of RomWBW are found +in the RomWBW User Guide. It is also a good idea to review the Release +Notes for helpful release-specific information. + + +Documentation + +Documentation for RomWBW includes: + +- RomWBW Introduction +- RomWBW User Guide +- RomWBW System Guide +- RomWBW Applications +- RomWBW Disk Catalog +- RomWBW Hardware + + + +ACKNOWLEDGMENTS + + +I want to acknowledge that a great deal of the code and inspiration for +RomWBW has been provided by or derived from the work of others in the +RetroBrew Computers Community. I sincerely appreciate all of their +contributions. The list below is probably missing many names – please +let me know if I missed you! + +- Andrew Lynch started it all when he created the N8VEM Z80 SBC which + became the first platform RomWBW supported. Some of his original + code can still be found in RomWBW. + +- Dan Werner wrote much of the code from which RomWBW was originally + derived and he has always been a great source of knowledge and + advice. + +- Douglas Goodall contributed code, time, testing, and advice in “the + early days”. He created an entire suite of application programs to + enhance the use of RomWBW. Unfortunately, they have become unusable + due to internal changes within RomWBW. As of RomWBW 2.6, these + applications are no longer provided. + +- Sergey Kiselev created several hardware platforms for RomWBW + including the very popular Zeta. + +- David Giles created support for the Z180 CSIO which is now included + SD Card driver. + +- Phil Summers contributed the Forth and BASIC adaptations in ROM, the + AY-3-8910 sound driver, DMA support, and a long list of general code + and documentation enhancements. + +- Ed Brindley contributed some of the code that supports the RCBus + platform. + +- Spencer Owen created the RC2014 series of hobbyist kit computers + which has exponentially increased RomWBW usage. Some of his kits + include RomWBW. + +- Stephen Cousins has likewise created a series of hobbyist kit + computers at Small Computer Central and is distributing RomWBW with + many of them. + +- Alan Cox has contributed some driver code and has provided a great + deal of advice. + +- The CP/NET client files were developed by Douglas Miller. + +- Phillip Stevens contributed support for FreeRTOS. + +- Curt Mayer contributed the original Linux / MacOS build process. + +- UNA BIOS and FDISK80 are the products of John Coffman. + +- FLASH4 is a product of Will Sowerbutts. + +- CLRDIR is a product of Max Scane. + +- Tasty Basic is a product of Dimitri Theulings. + +- Dean Netherton contributed eZ80 CPU support, the sound driver + interface, and the SN76489 sound driver. + +- The RomWBW Disk Catalog document was produced by Mykl Orders. + +- Rob Prouse has created many of the supplemental disk images + including Aztec C, HiTech C, SLR Z80ASM, Turbo Pascal, Microsoft + BASIC Compiler, Microsoft Fortran Compiler, and a Games compendium. + +- Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the + User Guide and Applications documents. + +- Mark Pruden has made a wide variety of contributions including: + + - significant content in the Disk Catalog and User Guide + - creation of the Introduction and Hardware documents + - Z3PLUS operating system disk image + - COPYSL utility + - a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM + - the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility + +- Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. + +- Jose Collado has contributed enhancements to the TMS driver + including compatibility with standard TMS register configuration. + +- Kevin Boone has contributed a generic HBIOS date/time utility + (WDATE). + +- Matt Carroll has contributed a fix to XM.COM that corrects the port + specification when doing a send. + +- Dean Jenkins enhanced the build process to accommodate the Raspberry + Pi 4. + +- Tom Plano has contributed a new utility (HTALK) to allow talking + directly to HBIOS COM ports. + +- Lars Nelson has contributed several generic utilities such as a + universal (OS agnostic) UNARC application. + +- Dylan Hall added support for specifying a secondary console. + +- Bill Shen has contributed boot loaders for several of his systems. + +- Laszlo Szolnoki has contributed an EF9345 video display controller + driver. + +- Ladislau Szilagyi has contributed an enhanced version of CP/M Cowgol + that leverages RomWBW memory banking. + +- Les Bird has contributed support for the NABU w/ Option Board + +Contributions of all kinds to RomWBW are very welcome. + + + +LICENSING + + +RomWBW is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under +the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free +Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your +option) any later version. + +RomWBW is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT +ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or +FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for +more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along +with RomWBW. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/. + +Portions of RomWBW were created by, contributed by, or derived from the +work of others. It is believed that these works are being used in +accordance with the intentions and/or licensing of their creators. + +If anyone feels their work is being used outside of its intended +licensing, please notify: + + Wayne Warthen + wwarthen@gmail.com + +RomWBW is an aggregate work. It is composed of many individual, +standalone programs that are distributed as a whole to function as a +cohesive system. Each program may have its own licensing which may be +different from other programs within the aggregate. + +In some cases, a single program (e.g., CP/M Operating System) is +composed of multiple components with different licenses. It is believed +that in all such cases the licenses are compatible with GPL version 3. + +RomWBW encourages code contributions from others. Contributors may +assert their own copyright in their contributions by annotating the +contributed source code appropriately. Contributors are further +encouraged to submit their contributions via the RomWBW source code +control system to ensure their contributions are clearly documented. + +All contributions to RomWBW are subject to this license. + + + +GETTING ASSISTANCE + + +The best way to get assistance with RomWBW or any aspect of the +RetroBrew Computers projects is via one of the community forums: + +- RetroBrew Computers Forum +- RC2014 Google Group +- retro-comp Google Group + +Submission of issues and bugs are welcome at the RomWBW GitHub +Repository. + +Also feel free to email Wayne Warthen at wwarthen@gmail.com. diff --git a/Source/Doc/Introduction.md b/Source/Doc/Introduction.md index 39d06f2f..b5105865 100644 --- a/Source/Doc/Introduction.md +++ b/Source/Doc/Introduction.md @@ -294,12 +294,13 @@ please let me know if I missed you! * Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the User Guide and Applications documents. -* Mark Pruden has contributed a great deal of content to the - Disk Catalog, User Guide, as well as creating the Introduction - and Hardware documents, and contributed the disk image - for the Z3PLUS operating system, the COPYSL utility, and also - implemented a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM, - and added the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility. +* Mark Pruden has made a wide variety of contributions including: + - significant content in the Disk Catalog and User Guide + - creation of the Introduction and Hardware documents + - Z3PLUS operating system disk image + - COPYSL utility + - a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM + - the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility * Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. diff --git a/Source/Doc/Makefile b/Source/Doc/Makefile index 17931114..1d2f688f 100644 --- a/Source/Doc/Makefile +++ b/Source/Doc/Makefile @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ all :: deploy pandoc $< -f markdown -t dokuwiki -s -o $@ --default-image-extension=pdf %.gfm : %.tmp - pandoc $< -f markdown -t gfm -s -o $@ --default-image-extension=pdf + pandoc $< -f markdown -t gfm-yaml_metadata_block -s -o $@ --default-image-extension=pdf %.txt : %.tmp pandoc $< -f markdown -t plain -s -o $@ --default-image-extension=pdf diff --git a/Source/Doc/ReadMe.md b/Source/Doc/ReadMe.md index 3687b5f8..d239ae7f 100644 --- a/Source/Doc/ReadMe.md +++ b/Source/Doc/ReadMe.md @@ -3,9 +3,10 @@ $include{"Basic.h"}$ # Overview -RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality -implementation of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and +RomWBW software provides a complete, commercial quality +implementation of CP/M (and workalike) operating systems and applications for modern Z80/180/280 retro-computing hardware systems. + A wide variety of platforms are supported including those produced by these developer communities: @@ -22,7 +23,7 @@ produced by these developer communities: A complete list of the currently supported platforms is found in the [Installation] section. -General features include: +Supported hardware features of RomWBW include: * Z80 Family CPUs including Z80, Z180, and Z280 * Banked memory services for several banking designs @@ -31,7 +32,6 @@ General features include: * Video drivers including TMS9918, SY6545, MOS8563, HD6445 * Keyboard (PS/2) drivers via VT8242 or PPI interfaces * Real time clock drivers including DS1302, BQ4845 -* OSes: CP/M 2.2, ZSDOS, CP/M 3, NZ-COM, ZPM3, QPM, p-System, and FreeRTOS * Built-in VT-100 terminal emulation support RomWBW is distributed as both source code and pre-built ROM and disk @@ -43,13 +43,14 @@ ROM firmware itself: * ROM BASIC (Nascom BASIC and Tasty BASIC) * ROM Forth -A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping -operating system drive letters to any available disk media. -Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) -support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice -contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to +A dynamic disk drive letter assignment mechanism allows mapping +operating system drive letters to any available disk media. +Additionally, mass storage devices (IDE Disk, CF Card, SD Card, etc.) +support the use of multiple slices (up to 256 per device). Each slice +contains a complete CP/M filesystem and can be mapped independently to any drive letter. This overcomes the inherent size limitations in legacy -OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device. +OSes and allows up to 2GB of accessible storage on a single device, +with up to 128MB accessible at any one time. The pre-built ROM firmware images are generally suitable for most users. However, it is also very easy to modify and build custom ROM @@ -72,25 +73,25 @@ such that all of the operating systems and applications on a disk will run on any RomWBW-based system. To put it simply, you can take a disk (or CF/SD/USB Card) and move it between systems transparently. -A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. -The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW +A tool is provided that allows you to access a FAT-12/16/32 filesystem. +The FAT filesystem may be coresident on the same disk media as RomWBW slices or on stand-alone media. This makes exchanging files with modern OSes such as Windows, MacOS, and Linux very easy. # Acquiring RomWBW The [RomWBW Repository](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW) -() on GitHub is the official -distribution location for all project source and documentation. The -fully-built distribution releases are available on the +() on GitHub is the official +distribution location for all project source and documentation. +The fully-built distribution releases are available on the [RomWBW Releases Page](https://github.com/wwarthen/RomWBW/releases) -() of the repository. On -this page, you will normally see a Development Snapshot as well as +() of the repository. +On this page, you will normally see a Development Snapshot as well as recent stable releases. Unless you have a specific reason, I suggest you - stick to the most recent stable release. Expand the "Assets" drop-down -for the release you want to download, then select the asset named -RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip. The Package asset includes all pre-built ROM -and Disk images as well as full source code. The other assets contain +stick to the most recent stable release. + +The asset named RomWBW-vX.X.X-Package.zip includes all pre-built ROM +and Disk images as well as full source code. The other assets contain only source code and do not have the pre-built ROM or disk images. All source code and distributions are maintained on GitHub. Code @@ -192,13 +193,14 @@ please let me know if I missed you! * Martin R has provided substantial help reviewing and improving the User Guide and Applications documents. - -* Mark Pruden has contributed a great deal of content to the - Disk Catalog, User Guide, as well as creating the Introduction - and Hardware documents, and contributed the disk image - for the Z3PLUS operating system, the COPYSL utility, and also - implemented a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM, - and added the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility. + +* Mark Pruden has made a wide variety of contributions including: + - significant content in the Disk Catalog and User Guide + - creation of the Introduction and Hardware documents + - Z3PLUS operating system disk image + - COPYSL utility + - a feature for RomWBW configuration by NVRAM + - the /B bulk mode of disk assignment to the ASSIGN utility * Jacques Pelletier has contributed the DS1501 RTC driver code. diff --git a/Source/ver.inc b/Source/ver.inc index 2638f36b..35e5e9d1 100644 --- a/Source/ver.inc +++ b/Source/ver.inc @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ #DEFINE RMN 5 #DEFINE RUP 0 #DEFINE RTP 0 -#DEFINE BIOSVER "3.5.0-beta.1" +#DEFINE BIOSVER "3.5.0-beta.2" #define rmj RMJ #define rmn RMN #define rup RUP diff --git a/Source/ver.lib b/Source/ver.lib index 4b055a6c..eef6f7f1 100644 --- a/Source/ver.lib +++ b/Source/ver.lib @@ -3,5 +3,5 @@ rmn equ 5 rup equ 0 rtp equ 0 biosver macro - db "3.5.0-beta.1" + db "3.5.0-beta.2" endm