1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2 MOTOROLA MICROPROCESSOR & MEMORY TECHNOLOGY GROUP
3 M68000 Hi-Performance Microprocessor Division
4 M68060 Software Package
5 Production Release P1.00 -- October 10, 1994
7 M68060 Software Package Copyright © 1993, 1994 Motorola Inc. All rights reserved.
9 THE SOFTWARE is provided on an "AS IS" basis and without warranty.
10 To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law,
11 MOTOROLA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
12 INCLUDING IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
13 and any warranty against infringement with regard to the SOFTWARE
14 (INCLUDING ANY MODIFIED VERSIONS THEREOF) and any accompanying written materials.
16 To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law,
17 IN NO EVENT SHALL MOTOROLA BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER
18 (INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS,
19 BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, LOSS OF BUSINESS INFORMATION, OR OTHER PECUNIARY LOSS)
20 ARISING OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE SOFTWARE.
21 Motorola assumes no responsibility for the maintenance and support of the SOFTWARE.
23 You are hereby granted a copyright license to use, modify, and distribute the SOFTWARE
24 so long as this entire notice is retained without alteration in any modified and/or
25 redistributed versions, and that such modified versions are clearly identified as such.
26 No licenses are granted by implication, estoppel or otherwise under any patents
27 or trademarks of Motorola, Inc.
28 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
29 68060 SOFTWARE PACKAGE (Kernel version) SIMPLE TESTS
30 -----------------------------------------------------
32 The files itest.sa and ftest.sa contain simple tests to check
33 the state of the 68060ISP and 68060FPSP once they have been installed.
37 The release files itest.sa and ftest.sa are essentially
38 hexadecimal images of the actual tests. This format is the
39 ONLY format that will be supported. The hex images were created
40 by assembling the source code and then converting the resulting
41 binary output images into ASCII text files. The hexadecimal
42 numbers are listed using the Motorola Assembly syntax assembler
43 directive "dc.l" (define constant longword). The files can be
44 converted to other assembly syntaxes by using any word processor
45 with a global search and replace function.
47 To assist in assembling and linking these modules with other modules,
48 the installer should add symbolic labels to the top of the files.
49 This will allow the calling routines to access the entry points
52 The source code itest.s and ftest.s have been included but only
53 for documentation purposes.
55 Release file structure:
56 -----------------------
60 | | - 128 byte-sized section
61 (1) | Call-Out | - 4 bytes per entry (user fills these in)
64 | | - 8 bytes per entry
65 (2) | Entry Point | - user does "bsr" or "jsr" to this address
74 The first section of this module is the "Call-out" section. This section
75 is NOT INCLUDED in {i,f}test.sa (an example "Call-out" section is provided at
76 the end of this file). The purpose of this section is to allow the test
77 routines to reference external printing functions that must be provided
78 by the host operating system. This section MUST be exactly 128 bytes in
79 size. There are 32 fields, each 4 bytes in size. Each field corresponds
80 to a function required by the test packages (these functions and their
81 location are listed in "68060{ISP,FPSP}-TEST call-outs" below). Each field
82 entry should contain the address of the corresponding function RELATIVE to
83 the starting address of the "call-out" section. The "Call-out" section must
84 sit adjacent to the {i,f}test.sa image in memory. Since itest.sa and ftest.sa
85 are individual tests, they each require their own "Call-out" sections.
87 The second section, the "Entry-point" section, is used by external routines
88 to access the test routines. Since the {i,f}test.sa hex files contain
89 no symbol names, this section contains function entry points that are fixed
90 with respect to the top of the package. The currently defined entry-points
91 are listed in section "68060{ISP,FPSP}-TEST entry points" below. A calling
92 routine would simply execute a "bsr" or "jsr" that jumped to the selected
95 For example, to run the 060ISP test, write a program that includes the
96 itest.sa data and execute something similar to:
98 bsr _060ISP_TEST+128+0
100 (_060ISP_TEST is the starting address of the "Call-out" section; the "Call-out"
101 section is 128 bytes long; and the 68060ISP test entry point is located
102 0 bytes from the top of the "Entry-point" section.)
104 The third section is the code section. After entering through an "Entry-point",
105 the entry code jumps to the appropriate test code within the code section.
107 68060ISP-TEST Call-outs:
108 ------------------------
112 68060FPSP-TEST Call-outs:
113 -------------------------
117 The test packages call _print_string() and _print_number()
118 as subroutines and expect the main program to print a string
119 or a number to a file or to the screen.
120 In "C"-like fashion, the test program calls:
122 print_string("Test passed");
128 For _print_string(), the test programs pass a longword address
129 of the string on the stack. For _print_number(), the test programs pass
130 a longword number to be printed.
132 For debugging purposes, after the main program performs a "print"
133 for a test package, it should flush the output so that it's not
134 buffered. In this way, if the test program crashes, at least the previous
135 statements printed will be seen.
137 68060ISP-TEST Entry-points:
138 ---------------------------
141 68060FPSP-TEST Entry-points:
142 ----------------------------
144 0x08: FP unimplemented test
145 0x10: FP enabled snan/operr/ovfl/unfl/dz/inex
147 The floating-point unit test has 3 entry points which will require
148 3 different calls to the package if each of the three following tests
151 main fp test: tests (1) unimp effective address exception
152 (2) unsupported data type exceptions
153 (3) non-maskable overflow/underflow exceptions
155 FP unimplemented: tests FP unimplemented exception. this one is
156 separate from the previous tests for systems that don't
157 want FP unimplemented instructions.
159 FP enabled: tests enabled snan/operr/ovfl/unfl/dz/inex.
160 basically, it enables each of these exceptions and forces
161 each using an implemented FP instruction. this process
162 exercises _fpsp_{snan,operr,ovfl,unfl,dz,inex}() and
163 _real_{snan,operr,ovfl,unfl,dz,inex}(). the test expects
164 _real_XXXX() to do nothing except clear the exception
165 and "rte". if a system's _real_XXXX() handler creates an
166 alternate result, the test will print "failed" but this
171 Again, itest.sa and ftest.sa are simple tests and do not thoroughly
172 test all 68060SP connections. For example, they do not test connections
173 to _real_access(), _real_trace(), _real_trap(), etc. because these
174 will be system-implemented several different ways and the test packages
175 must remain system independent.
177 Example test package set-up:
178 ----------------------------
180 . # provided by system
184 . # provided by system
189 bsr _060FPSP_TEST+128+0
194 # beginning of "Call-out" section; provided by integrator.
195 # MUST be 128 bytes long.
197 long _print_str - _060FPSP_TEST
198 long _print_num - _060FPSP_TEST
201 # ftest.sa starts here; start of "Entry-point" section.
202 long 0x60ff0000, 0x00002346
203 long 0x60ff0000, 0x00018766
204 long 0x60ff0000, 0x00023338
205 long 0x24377299, 0xab2643ea