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- [ THE KAY*FOG RBBS | Filename=CPM-CC22.ART | posted 07/05/86 | 171 lines 10k ]
-
- The CP/M Connection Originally published in
- by Computer Currents
- Ted Silveira 5720 Hollis Street
- (copyright and all rights reserved) Emeryville, CA 94608
-
- March 11, 1986
- EMULATING CP/M
-
- Several times in the last few months, I've mentioned CP/M emulators
- that allow you to run CP/M programs on an IBM PC or clone. I've now had
- a chance to play with one of these emulators, a package called
- Acceler8/16 from Intersecting Concepts.
-
- [What a CP/M Emulator Does]
-
- A CP/M emulator is a program that makes an MS-DOS computer imitate
- a CP/M computer, by creating CP/M environment within the memory space of
- the MS-DOS computer. When a CP/M program runs, it sees nothing amiss
- and chugs merrily away. In the background, meanwhile, the emulator is
- running madly about, intercepting the CP/M program's instructions to its
- fictional CP/M computer and translating them into instructions the real
- MS-DOS computer can handle. Software emulators are usually cheap but
- slow.
-
- Recently, however, software emulators have gotten a hardware boost
- from the NEC V20 chip, a pin-for-pin replacement for the 8088 chip
- that's the brain of most MS-DOS computers. The NEC V20 not only runs
- the same instructions that the 8088 does (and 10-20% more efficiently to
- boot) but also can run the instructions used by the older 8080 chip.
- And the 8080 just happens to be the chip for which CP/M was written
- (though almost all CP/M computers now use the Z80 chip with its extended
- instruction set, which causes some problems I'll mention later). When
- the NEC V20 chip is flipped into its "8080 mode," it can execute 8080
- instructions directly, so the emulator software doesn't have to do
- nearly as much work. As a result, a CP/M emulator that takes advantage
- of this chip runs about 300% faster than a software-only emulator.
-
- [Acceler8/16]
-
- Intersecting Concept's Acceler8/16 package was one of the first of
- these software/hardware emulators, though there are now several others.
- The full package consists of Media Master (a disk conversion program),
- Accel (the emulator), and an NEC V20 chip to install in your MS-DOS
- computer.
-
- [Media Master] Media Master temporarily converts one or more of an
- MS-DOS computer's drives so that it can read a "foreign" disk, such as
- one from a Kaypro or Osborne CP/M computer. It can read and write a
- large number of formats, both single and double-sided, including all the
- common formats--Morrow, Kaypro, Osborne, Heath/Zenith, Televideo, Xerox,
- etc.--and some I've never heard of--Beehive Topper, Idea Bitelex, and
- Royal Alphatronic. It won't do Osborne or Xerox single-density, only
- double-density.
-
- Unlike some disk conversion programs, which convert a drive to a
- foreign format and then leave it converted while you run other programs,
- Media Master converts your drive only as long as Media Master itself is
- running. From the Media Master menu, you can get directories of any
- drive, erase files from any drive, type or print files, and of course
- copy files from one drive to another, all with one or more of your
- drives converted to a foreign format. But as soon as you exit Media
- Master, you're returned to your native format on all drives. That means
- you can't run the CP/M emulator, stick in a Kaypro disk, and run a CP/M
- program--you have to copy the program to an MS-DOS format disk.
-
- I tried out Media Master on several disk formats, and it handled
- them all, with one exception. I found that while Media Master handled
- single-sided Morrow CP/M disks without problems, on double-sided Morrow
- disks (formatted on my Morrow MD3), it sometimes reported the disk space
- used incorrectly (though the files and file sizes were correct). I also
- found that my Morrow MD3 refused to read disks formatted by Media Master
- in the Morrow format.
-
- I talked to Mark Graybill at Intersecting Concepts about this
- problem, and he quickly traced it to a bug in the Morrow MD3 format
- table, a bug that apparently exists only in the particular version I
- have (3.0) and not in earlier or later versions. The company's policy
- is to fix such bugs free (applause), so a new disk is on its way. Any
- of you who also have this problem should contact Intersecting Concepts.
-
- [Accel] Accel, the actual CP/M emulator program, comes in four
- versions. The first is a plain vanilla version. The other three
- emulate the video characteristics of a Kaypro, an Osborne, and a
- Heath/Zenith H19 terminal, respectively. This terminal emulation works
- well and lets you run CP/M programs without reinstalling them, if they
- originally were installed for the Kaypro, Osborne, or H19.
-
- When you run Accel, it creates a CP/M environment complete with the
- built-in commands like DIR and ERA. It also includes a few ZCPR-like
- enhancements such as automatic search of drive A for programs. The only
- noticeable difference from normal CP/M is that all your CP/M programs
- must be renamed using the filetype CPM instead of the usual COM (so MS-
- DOS won't confuse them with its own COM files).
-
- You can run Accel by itself, without the help of the V20 chip, but
- like all software-only emulators, it's so slow that it will drive you
- crazy. If you have the V20 chip installed, however, the performance
- isn't bad. While there's some argument about whether benchmark
- performance is slightly better or slightly worse than a typical Z80
- computer, what I noticed most was the screen speed (the speed with which
- the computer can fill up the screen with text or whatever). The screen
- speed using the Kaypro terminal emulation is slower than that of my CP/M
- Kaypro. And the Kaypro itself is not a speed demon, being slower than
- my Morrow (with a Televideo 925 terminal running at 19,200 bits per
- second). I found the results good enough to be usable, but I did get
- tired of waiting for things to happen on the screen.
-
- Accel runs pretty much everything it claims to, which means
- everything that's written for generic CP/M and uses only the 8080 chip
- instruction set, but it does have a few limitations. As I mentioned
- earlier, most CP/M computers now use the Z80 chip, which has some extra
- instructions that the 8080 doesn't. Programs that use these Z80-only
- instructions won't run under Accel, but fortunately, most CP/M programs
- stick to the 8080 instructions (so they can run on as many CP/M
- computers as possible). Accel also won't run programs that use certain
- BDOS and BIOS calls, mostly ones that work intimately with the disk
- drive (BDOS functions 27 and 31, and BIOS functions 8 through 16).
-
- Programs that will run include DDT, ASM, dBase II, and the new
- OutThink thought processor from Kamasoft. Programs that won't run
- include SD, NSWP207, UNERASE, and DU (or any other disk editor).
-
- WordStar will also run under Accel, but if you have the Kaypro
- factory-installed CP/M WordStar, be prepared for some problems, since
- Kaypro modifies the program. So far I haven't been able to get this
- version to run. When I first tried running the Kaypro WordStar, the
- computer would load it and then immediately reboot, returning me to the
- A> prompt without doing anything. I then remembered that Kaypro
- modifies its versions of WordStar to program the cursor keys, so I dug
- into it with DDT and disabled the offending code (at locations INISUB,
- UNISUB, and MORPAT).
-
- When I tried this new version of WordStar, it loaded and went to
- its first menu just as it should, but then it refused to do anything
- except exit. It acted as if it couldn't find its two overlay files,
- WSOVLY1.OVR and WSMSGS.OVR, even though I verified that they were on the
- disk. I haven't yet figured out what this second problem is--more
- information next time (I hope).
-
- Overall, both Media Master and Accel do what they claim to. Except
- for the quirk with Morrows, Media Master seems a solid program, and
- while Accel (when combined with the NEC V20 chip) won't blind you with
- its speed, it is usable . . . and miles ahead of any software-only
- emulator. I do wish it were possible to use "foreign" disks directly
- while in the CP/M mode, but I can work around that. (I've heard that a
- similar program, RUNCPM from Micro Interfaces, does allow this, but I
- haven't seen it.)
-
- If you're interested in CP/M emulators--and you must be if you've
- hung around this long--you might also want to look for a copy of the
- February 1986 Computer Shopper, which has an article comparing half a
- dozen emulators.
-
- Acceler8/16
- $99.95
- Intersecting Concepts, Inc.
- 4573 Heatherglen Ct.
- Moorpark, CA 93021
- 805/529-5073
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ted Silveira is a freelance writer and contributing editor to several
- computer-oriented publications. He appreciates suggestions or feedback
- and can be reached through the KAY*FOG RBBS (415)285-2687 and CompuServe
- (72135,1447) or by mail to 2756 Mattison Lane, Santa Cruz, CA 95065.
-
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