Gopher2600 is an emulator for the Atari 2600 written in Go.
See here for Current Status
Accuracy is very high and and there are no known problems with the emulation of the 6507, TIA or RIOT chips.
The key features of the emulator:
- Support for many of the known cartridge formats
- emulation of the Supercharger - supports loading from WAV files
- Emulation of the ARM7TDMI as found in the
Harmony
cartridge- Preliminary support for the ARMv7-M as used in the
UnoCart
andPlusCart
is also included
- Preliminary support for the ARMv7-M as used in the
- Network access through PlusROM emulation
- AtariVox and SaveKey support
- Speech support via
Festival
- Speech support via
- CRT TV Effects
- Flexible screenshot features
- Accurate audio reproduction (and optional stereo output)
- Support for common TIA revisions
- Implementation of Movie Cart
- Gameplay rewinding
- Tracker/Piano Keys visualisation
- Gameplay recording and playback
- Support for (and auto-detection of) the stick, paddle, keypad and also Sega Genesis style controllers
- ROM selector with live emulation preview and optional support for boxart and the standard stella.pro file
The graphical debugger:
- CPU and Color Clock level interaction
- Breakpoints, traps, watches on various CPU, TIA and RIOT targets
- Terminal interface (headless operation optional)
- Advanced ARM monitoring
- Performance profiling
- Source code inspection and breakpoints
- DWARF support (global & local variable inspection)
Logo is based on Gopherize.me which itself is based on the work of Ashley McNamara and is licensed under the Creative Commons.
User documentation for the emulator can be found in the Gopher2600-Docs repository and in particular the live wiki.
Development & Maintenance documentation can be found in the Gopher2600-Dev-Docs repository. Also, source level documentation (for the most recent release) can be found on go.dev.
The following screenshots were taken in playmode
with CRT effects enabled.
ROMs shown: Pitfall; Chiphead; Thrust; Man Goes Down; Soul of the Beast; Egypt 2600BC ; Draconian; Zookeeper
The Stella project (https://stella-emu.github.io/) was used as a visual reference for video output. In the absence of VCS hardware (which I didn't have during initial TIA development) Stella was a good alternative for checking the accuracy of video output.
In addition, Stella was used as reference in the following areas:
-
During the development of the CDF cartridge formats. These recent formats don't seem to be documented anywhere accept in the Stella source.
-
Cartridge fingerprints for ParkerBros, Wickstead Design, SCABS, UA and JANE.
-
As a reference for the audio implementation (the 6502.ts project was also referenced for this reason).
-
Fingerprint patterns for automated controller/peripheral selection.
In all these instances, primary sources of information could not be found.
(Earlier revision of Gopher2600 used Stella a reference for the EF cartridge format. However, the implementation has been vastly simplified by declaring EF to be a nothing more than a 64k Atari ROM. The discussion that led to this revelation can be found in the link below.)
Many notes and clues from the AtariAge message boards. Most significantly the following threads proved very useful indeed:
- "Cosmic Ark Star Field Revisited"
- "Properly model NUSIZ during player decode and draw"
- "Requesting help in improving TIA emulation in Stella"
- "3F Bankswitching"
- "TIA Sounding Off in the Digital Domain"
And from and old mailing list:
- "Games that do bad things to HMOVE..." https://www.biglist.com/lists/stella/archives/199804/msg00198.html
These mailing lists and forums have supplied me with many useful test ROMs. I aim to package these up and distribute them sometime in the future (assuming I can get the required permissions).
Extensive references have been made to Andrew Towers' "Atari 2600 TIA Hardware Notes v1.0"
Cartridge format information was found in Kevin Horton's "Cart Information v6.0" file (sometimes named bankswitch_sizes.txt)
The WF8 format discussed here on AtariAge
https://forums.atariage.com/topic/367157-smurf-rescue-alternative-rom-with-wf8-bankswitch-format/
The "Stella Programmer's Guide" by Steve Wright is of course a key document, used frequently throughout development.
Colour values for NTSC and PAL television signals taken from https://www.qotile.net/minidig/docs/tia_color.html
The TIA Audio implementation is based almost entirely on the work of Chris Brenner.
https://atariage.com/forums/topic/249865-tia-sounding-off-in-the-digital-domain/
Additional work on volume sampling a result of this thread:
https://forums.atariage.com/topic/370460-8-bit-digital-audio-from-2600/
Musical information as seen in the tracker window taken from Random Terrain.
https://www.randomterrain.com/atari-2600-memories-music-and-sound.html
The 6507 information was taken from Leventhal's "6502 Assembly Language Programming" and the text file "64doc.txt" v1.0, by John West and Marko Makela.
Undocumented 650x instructions and implementation details in "6502/6510/8500/8502 Opcode matrix"
http://www.oxyron.de/html/opcodes02.html
6502 functional tests from https://github.com/Klaus2m5/6502_65C02_functional_tests
US Patent Number 4,644,495 was referenced for the implementation of the DPC cartridge format (the format used in Pitfall 2) https://patents.google.com/patent/US4644495/en
US patent 4,485,457A was used to help implement the CBS cartridge format https://patents.google.com/patent/US4485457A/en
European patent 84300730.3 was used to help implement the SCABS cartridge format https://worldwide.espacenet.com/patent/search/family/023848640/publication/EP0116455A2?q=84300730.3
DPC+ format implemented according to notes provided by Spiceware https://atariage.com/forums/topic/163495-harmony-dpc-programming and https://atariage.com/forums/blogs/entry/11811-dpcarm-part-6-dpc-cartridge-layout/
DPC+ARM information on Spiceware's blog https://atariage.com/forums/blogs/entry/11712-dpc-arm-development/?tab=comments#comment-27116
The "Mostly Inclusive Atari 2600 Mapper / Selected Hardware Document" (dated 03/04/12) by Kevin Horton
Supercharger information from the Kevin Horton document above and also the sctech.txt
document
Reference for the ARM7TDMI-S, as used in the Harmony cartridge formats:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0234/b
For detail about the Thumb instruction set the following document was preferred. Mnemonics used in the ARM disassembly are from this document:
http://bear.ces.cwru.edu/eecs_382/ARM7-TDMI-manual-pt1.pdf
Further information from the ARM Architecture Reference Manual:
http://www.ecs.csun.edu/~smirzaei/docs/ece425/arm7tdmi_instruction_set_reference.pdf
https://www.cs.miami.edu/home/burt/learning/Csc521.141/Documents/arm_arm.pdf
Specific information about UXP ARM7TDMI-S
https://www.nxp.com/docs/en/user-guide/UM10161.pdf
Thumb-2 information in the ARM Architecture Reference Manual Thumb-2 Supplement
https://documentation-service.arm.com/static/5f1066ca0daa596235e7e90a
and the "ARMv7-M Architecture Reference Manual" can be found at:
https://documentation-service.arm.com/static/606dc36485368c4c2b1bf62f
Specific information about the STM32F407 used in the UnoCart and PlusCart can be found at:
In relation to ARM development, information about the DWARF format is being taken from the DWARF2 and DWARF4 standards:
https://dwarfstd.org/doc/dwarf-2.0.0.pdf
https://dwarfstd.org/doc/DWARF4.pdf
ARM specific DWARF information taken from:
https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/releases/download/2023Q1/aadwarf32.pdf
The following projects are used in the Gopher2600
project:
-
FontAwesome
- https://fontawesome.com/
- licensed under the Font Awesome Free License
-
Hack-Regular
- https://github.com/source-foundry/Hack
- licensed under the MIT License
-
JetBrainsMono
- https://github.com/JetBrains/JetBrainsMono
- licensed under the OFL-1.1 License
Both 6502.ts and Stella were used as reference for the Audio implementation.
Some ideas for the fragment shaders taken from:
- https://github.com/libretro/glsl-shaders/blob/master/crt/shaders/crt-pi.glsl
- https://www.shadertoy.com/view/ltB3zD
- https://github.com/mattiasgustavsson/crtview
- https://gist.github.com/Beefster09/7264303ee4b4b2086f372f1e70e8eddd
The Festival Speech Synthesis System is an optional program that can be run alongside the emulator for AtariVox support
http://www.festvox.org/docs/manual-2.4.0/festival_toc.html
At various times during the development of this project, the following people have provided advice and encouragement: Andrew Rice, David Kelly. And those from AtariAge who have provided testing, advice and most importantly, encouragement (alphabetically): alex_79; Al Nafuur; Andrew Davie; Batari; DirtyHairy; John Champeau; MarcoJ; MrSQL; Rob Bairos; Spiceware; Thomas Jenztsch; Zachary Scolaro; ZeroPageHomebrew