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mima-tools

A set of tools and specifications related to the MiMa (Minimalmaschine).

Tools

The basic usage of these tools is as follows:

  1. Create and edit an assembly file: example.mimasm
  2. Assemble the file: $ mima-asm example.mimasm
  3. Execute the resulting file: $ mima-run example.mima

For example MiMa programs, see the examples folder.

mima-run

This tool is a MiMa emulator. It can load and execute .mima files. It can also load and use the corresponding .mima-flags and .mima-symbols files.

Basic usage: mima-run <.mima file> [-n <steps>]

mima-asm

This tool is a MiMa assembler. It can parse .mimasm files and convert them to .mima files. It can also generate the corresponding .mima-flags and .mima-symbols files.

Basic usage: mima-asm <.mimasm file> [-o <.mima file>]

Install

This project uses stack. Make sure you have at least stack version 2.1.

To install this project:

  1. Clone the repository
  2. cd into the working directory
  3. Run stack install

Specification

In the following sections, <a> means "the value at the address a". In the case of <<a>>, bits 19-0 of <a> are interpreted as the address.

The MiMa uses words of 24 bits and addresses of 20 bits.

Each step, the MiMa fetches the value at the address stored in the IAR, interprets it as an instruction and executes it. If the instruction does not explicitly modify the IAR, the IAR it is incremented by one automatically.

During execution, the following situations can be encountered where execution should not be continued:

  • The HALT instruction was executed
  • The value at <IAR> cannot be decoded to a valid instruction
  • The IAR is 0xFFFFF and an instruction was executed that did not modify the IAR

In these cases, a MiMa emulator should stop execution and show a suitable error message explaining why execution could not continue.

Instructions

An instruction has one of the following forms:

Small opcode:
+----+ +-----------------------+
| SO | |         Value/Address |
+----+ +-----------------------+
23  20 19                      0

Large opcode:
+----+ +----+ +----------------+
|  F | | LO | |          Value |
+----+ +----+ +----------------+
23  20 19  16 15               0

Small opcodes can range from 0 to E and have an address or 20-bit value as argument. Large opcodes can range from F0 to FF and have, if at all, a 16-bit value as argument.

For large opcodes without an argument, the 16 value bits are ignored. They don't have to be set to 0.

Registers

Name Size (bits) Function
IAR 20 Instruction Address Register
ACC 24 Accumulator
RA 20 Return Address
SP 20 Stack Pointer
FP 20 Frame Pointer

Opcodes

Opcode Name Function
0 LDC c (load constant) c -> ACC
1 LDV a (load value) <a> -> ACC
2 STV a (store value) ACC -> <a>
3 ADD a ACC + <a> -> ACC
4 AND a ACC and <a> -> ACC
5 OR a ACC or <a> -> ACC
6 XOR a ACC xor <a> -> ACC
7 EQL a (equal) (ACC == <a> ? -1 : 0) -> ACC
8 JMP a (jump) a -> IAR
9 JMN a (jump if negative) if (ACC < 0) {a -> IAR}
A LDIV a (load indirect value) <<a>> -> ACC
B STIV a (store indirect value) ACC -> <<a>>
C CALL a IAR -> RA; JMP a
D ADC c (add constant) ACC + c -> ACC
F0 HALT Halt execution
F1 NOT not ACC -> ACC
F2 RAR (rotate ACC right) ACC >> 1 -> ACC
F3 RET (return) RA -> IAR
F4 LDRA (load from RA) RA -> ACC
F5 STRA (store to RA) ACC -> RA
F6 LDSP (load from SP) SP -> ACC
F7 STSP (store to SP) ACC -> SP
F8 LDFP (load from FP) FP -> ACC
F9 STFP (store to FP) ACC -> FP
FA LDRS o (load relative to SP) <SP + o> -> ACC
FB STRS o (store relative to SP) ACC -> <SP + o>
FC LDRF o (load relative to FP) <FP + o> -> ACC
FD STRF o (store relative to FP) ACC -> <FP + o>
  • LDC c sets bits 23-20 of ACC to 0.
  • ADD a, AND a, OR a, XOR a and NOT are bitwise operations
  • ADC c interprets its 20-bit value as a signed integer, whose value is then added to the ACC's current value.
  • RAR shifts all bits in the ACC right by one. The rightmost bit wraps around to the leftmost position.
  • LDRS, STRS, LDRF and STRF interpret their 16-bit value as a signed integer, whose value is then added to the address in the respective register.

Extension memory flags

Memory flags are single characters associated with certain memory locations and ranges. They can be used to add supplemental information to a .mima file.

It is entirely up to a tool which flags it recognizes and implements, and what each of those flags do. Unknown flags are not errors. If a tool encounteres an unknown flag, it should ignore the flag.

The following table contains suggestions for the meanings of certain flags, in the hope that different tool's implementations of these flags are compatible.

Flag Name Description
b Breakpoint In an interactive execution environment, pause execution immediately before this instruction would have been executed.
e Executable If this flag is present, only instructions at memory locations marked with this flag can be executed.
r Read-only Any command that would modify a memory location marked with this flag fails.

Memory dump file format: .mima

All tools share a common memory dump file format with extension .mima. It contains the whole execution state of a MiMa, meaning the contents of its memory and all its registers. It also doubles as "MiMa excutable" format. It is supplemented by the .mima-flags and .mima-symbols file formats.

The file is split up into blocks of 3 bytes, which form MiMa words. The bytes within a word are ordered from most to least significant.

The values of registers which are only 20 bits long are stored in the lower 20 bits of a MiMa word, and the remaining bits 23-20 are filled with zeroes, like so:

+----+ +-----------------------+
|  0 | | 20-bit register value |
+----+ +-----------------------+
23  20 19                      0

The registers and memory are stored as follows:

Word Content
0 IAR
1 ACC
2 RA
3 SP
4 FP
starting at 6 Memory dump

The memory dump contains the words of the MiMa's memory, written in increasing order directly one after the other with nothing in-between. The dump always starts at address 0x00000, but may end before it reaches address 0xFFFFF. When reading a dump, all unspecified values are to be intialized as 0x000000.

A .mima file must always be a multiple of 3 bytes long. It must always be at least 15 bytes long (contains all register values).

Memory flag file format: .mima-flags

The memory flag file is a text-based file that assigns memory flags to ranges of memory. It has the file extension .mima-flags.

The format is line-based and uses LF as line endings. Other whitespace is ignored. A line can either be empty or have the following format:

<start address>-<end address>:<flags>

  • <start address> and <end address> are case-insensitive, hexadecimal, 5 digit numbers. The start and end addresses are inclusive. If the end address is smaller than the start address, their roles are swapped.
  • <flags> are multiple characters (at least one).

The format <address>:<flags> is also allowed and equivalent to <address>-<same address>:<flags>.

Here are some examples of valid lines:

  • 12345-54321: abc
  • 00005-00004: x
  • 54d3f:y
  • aa5b2 - aa67c : x y z

And here are some examples of invalid lines:

  • 12g6z: abc
  • 112-115: e
  • 34321 - 22345:
  • 34321 - 22345 abc
  • 34321 22345: abc

Symbol table file format: .mima-symbols

The symbol table file contains the addresses of various labels. It can be generated by an assembler in addition to the corresponding .mima file.

The format is line-based and uses LF as line endings. Other whitespace is ignored. A line can either be empty or have the following format:

<address>:<label name>[ <label name>]*

  • <address> is a case-insensitive, hexadecimal, 5 digit number.
  • <label name> is the name of a label. It conforms to the regex [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_-]*.

Here are some examples of valid lines:

  • 0a68c: some-label
  • 20980: label other-label third_label label_nr_4
  • 0a68c : label other-label

And here are some examples of invalid lines:

  • 1234: label
  • 12134:
  • 0033c label
  • 002d4: label-1, label-2, label-3

Conventions

In the source code, the name MiMa is spelled Mima. When displayed, it is spelled MiMa.

Executable names are all lowercase, and words are separated by a -.

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Tools for the Minimalmaschine (MiMa)

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