km@emory.UUCP (Ken Mandelberg) (05/05/85)
I am looking for portable software than runs on Unix that allows simulation of some of the more modern microprocessors. By portable, I mean something quite weak here. I mean software that does not depend on the native processor (or a compatibiltity mode) for the simulation. Intel used to provide a fortran based simulator (INTERP80) for the 8085 that worked reasonably well. They seem to have discontinued this as the 8085 aged, and are not providing a substitutue for more recent processors. For the educational applications I have in mind, the speed of the simulation is not much of an issue. Of course a complimentary cross assembler (or compiler) is also needed to make use of a simulator. However, I have seen enough of these around to feel that the hard part is producing the simulators. ( For example, AT&T sells a 68K SGS, MIT has both 8086 and 68K cross-compilers, Unipress/Amsterdam has a cross-compiler kit for many processors). -- Ken Mandelberg Emory University Dept of Math and CS Atlanta, Ga 30322 {akgua,sb1,gatech,decvax}!emory!km USENET km@emory CSNET km.emory@csnet-relay ARPANET
mark@tove.UUCP (Mark Weiser) (05/12/85)
Maryland has a Z-80 simulator thats pretty good (runs cp/m, etc., with the BIOS we supply with it). It includes a debugger. Mail to bane@maryland (or replace the name `mark' with `bane' in any of the address permutations below) for more info. -mark -- Spoken: Mark Weiser ARPA: mark@maryland Phone: +1-301-454-7817 CSNet: mark@umcp-cs UUCP: {seismo,allegra}!umcp-cs!mark USPS: Computer Science Dept., University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742