Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jmmv
30925b26c7 Bump revision due to SDL update, and sync versions in buildlink files where
needed.  This is required because esound has been droped as a dependancy.
2003-07-26 21:41:08 +00:00
grant
4083b24390 s/netbsd.org/NetBSD.org/ 2003-07-17 21:31:04 +00:00
wiz
43fa0c7cb6 PKGREVISION bump for libiconv update. 2003-07-13 13:50:19 +00:00
jschauma
e366d0c694 Use tech-pkg@ in favor of packages@ as MAINTAINER for orphaned packages.
Should anybody feel like they could be the maintainer for any of thewe packages,
please adjust.
2003-06-02 01:15:31 +00:00
wiz
7166660e08 Dependency bumps, needed because of devel/pth's major bump, and related
dependency bumps.
2003-05-02 11:53:34 +00:00
wiz
73b00bc567 Remove an empty line to please pkglint. 2003-03-07 08:59:48 +00:00
jmc
7f1cc470e5 Port to ports other than x86:
1. Only use the raze library on x86 (since it's x86 assembly). For all others
include the cmz80 library instead.
2. Check endianness and set defines needed based on it.
2003-03-07 08:47:06 +00:00
agc
d1771de5e9 Fix from Christian Biere in PR 18811 to remove the -malign-double
configuration parameter which was causing problems with the stat(2)
structure.
2002-11-19 20:54:20 +00:00
jlam
944d6c32d5 buildlink1 -> buildlink2 2002-08-27 18:29:35 +00:00
agc
ade1421093 Add patch from Michael Core's original mail to get the correct size of
the ROM.
2002-05-09 22:16:52 +00:00
agc
fdde4665dc Initial import of Generator-0.34 into the NetBSD Packages collection.
Generator is an open source emulator designed to emulate the Sega
Genesis / Mega Drive console, a popular games machine produced in the
early 1990s.  It is a portable program written in C and has been
ported to the Amiga, Macintosh, Windows and even pocket PCs such as
the iPAQ and Cassiopeia.  Natively it compiles under unix for X
Windows with either tcl/tk or gtk/SDL, for svgalib and even
cross-compiles to DOS with djgpp/allegro.

Generator uses its own custom 68000 processor emulation which is
designed for dynamic recompilation, and uses techniques from this such
as block-marking, flag calculation removal, operand pre-calculation,
endian pre-conversion etc.  There are approximately 1600 C routines
generated by the first stage of compilation to cope with the 67
instruction families.  These routines are used as a 'backup' when
dynamic recompilation isn't supported on your platform or the
recompiler doesn't support a particular instruction.  The CPU engine
is by all accounts very fast, whatever the mode.

There is a 'test' recompiler written for the ARM processor, but it is
no longer supported.  If someone with assembler knowledge wants to put
the effort into writing a recompiling back-end for a processor (and it
really is major effort), let me know - particularly if you know i386.
2002-05-09 19:08:39 +00:00