When I was doing 68K development work in the 1990s we used the GNU C compiler 
to cross compile.  It was a popular choice, so you might want to give it a try.

-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Philip 
Pemberton
Sent: November 21, 2015 5:54 AM
To: cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
Subject: 1980s/1990s 68k C cross (and not so cross) compilers

Hi there,

I'm working on reverse engineering a radio navigation receiver (surprisingly 
not GPS, something else... Datatrak if anyone's heard of
it) for the purpose of either repurposing the hardware or building up some kind 
of demo rig.

A lot of my effort at the moment seems to be identifying C Library functions 
and naming them. Ideally, I'd like to identify the compiler and CLib and feed 
that into the disassembler to eliminate that work.

Does anyone know which 68000 compilers were available in 1993, and which could 
produce ROM code? Or a few?



I've looked at Aztec C68K but ruled it out on the basis that the _strlen 
library function doesn't match up -- this is the one from the ROM:

_strlen:
  movea.l  4(sp), a0
  move.l   a0, d0
_strlen_l001:
  tst.b    (a0+)
  bne.s    _strlen_l001
  sub.l    a0, d0
  not.l    d0
  rts


Aztec is identical up to the bne, then:

  sub.l    d0, a0
  move.l   a0, d0
  sub,l    #1, d0
  rts

Which is one instruction longer... so it's not Aztec.


Other parts of the system apparently used VME-bus modules... so this wasn't a 
small operation.

Anyway, whatever compiler this is, it pulls in Motorola's Fast Floating Point 
library.


Thanks,
--
Phil.
classic...@philpem.me.uk
http://www.philpem.me.uk/


---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus

Reply via email to