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- (c) Copyright 1989-1999 Amiga, Inc. All rights reserved.
- The information contained herein is subject to change without notice, and
- is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied.
- The entire risk as to the use of this information is assumed by the user.
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- Avoiding Port, Task, and File Name Conflicts
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- by Carolyn Scheppner
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- Many developers are starting to use named tasks and ports to find
- and communicate with separate tasks within their program. In addition,
- some new applications make it possible for other independently developed
- software to find, communicate with, and direct them through named ports.
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- When such techniques are used, it is very important to use unique
- port and task names, so that name collisions with existing or future
- products may be avoided. We urge all developers to include their
- full developer number in their port and task names. Non-registered
- developers should include unique information such as their initials
- and company name.
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- We also urge you to use unique names for any logical assigns
- or additional files required by your application. Such files would
- include run-time libraries, script files, parameter or setup files,
- special fonts, drivers, handlers, devices, commands, and readmes.
- This is especially important for any files which must reside in one
- of the logical system directories such as LIBS:, DEVS:, S: or C:.
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- Commercial software products which can be directed and controlled by other
- applications through messages to a named MsgPort is an important capability
- of the Amiga computer - one that has not yet been fully realized. Externally
- controllable programs have a market with the consumer/amateur-programmer
- but can also be licensed for distribution with the products of other
- 3rd party developers.
-
- Here are some examples that I think other companies would license:
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- - An SMUS and 8SVX reader/player
- - An ILBM displayer with fades/dissolves, speech and text overlay
- - A general purpose database or expert system
- - A telecommunications handler which could Xmodem/Kermit files
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- These items could be sold as commercial products and packaged with a
- licensing agreement allowing other developers to use and distribute
- the software on a royalty, one-time, or yearly fee basis.
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- The packages could be designed so that more than one external program can
- use one running copy through the same named port. In some cases, a library,
- device, or handler might be a better implementation. In any case, there's
- a great deal of potential here for inventive developers. Just remember to
- make your names unique so you can multitask with anything that comes along.
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- 68010/68020 Compatibility
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- by Carolyn A. Scheppner
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- More Amiga owners will be installing 68020 boards, so it is more
- important than ever that your software work properly with this processor.
- The following programming practices are required for upward compatibility.
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- 1. Do not use the upper 8 bits of a pointer for storing unrelated
- information. The 68020 uses all 32 bits for addressing.
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- 2. Do not use signed variables or signed math for addresses.
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- 3. Do not use InitStruct() to initialize APTR fields. For 68020
- compatibility, InitStruct() does not support 24 bit APTRs.
- Use ULONGs instead.
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- 4. Do not use the MOVE SR,<ea> instruction. This is a priviledged
- instruction on the 68010/68020. Use the Exec function GetCC().
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- 5. Do not execute code on your stack.
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- 6. The assembler TAS instruction should not be used in any Amiga
- program. This instruction's indivisible read-modify-write
- cycle can conflict with system DMA.
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