[comp.sys.mac] Sad Mac codes

magorian@brillig.umd.edu (Dan Magorian) (10/20/88)

Can someone tell me what the sad mac codes for the SE mean.  In particular,
what is 0E000000
        00008000

-thank you

consp22@bingvaxu.cc.binghamton.edu (Mac Hack) (10/18/89)

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The following is exerpted from an article that originally appeared in "Apple
Direct" magazine.

> On the old ROMS:
   When you hit the interrupt button on the side of your Macintosh during the
boot process, you should get a sad Mac icon with 0F 000D and some dots cycling
under the icon to indicate that the Macintosh is performing a memory test.
This numeric code is in two parts: The first 2 characters are the "class code"
and the next four are the "subclass code".  The class code tells what part of
the diagnostic program found the error, and the subclass code tells what the
error is.  In the case of a bad RAM chip, the subclass identifies the bad 
chip.

> On the new ROMs:  The sad Mac error codes are changed to incorporate
additional power for testing and to support a 32-bit world.  Generally, the
same codes are used...but they are displayed differently.
The traditional Mac error codes are dislayed as follows:
0F0003
Where "F" indicates an exception occurred, and "3" indicates an illegal
instruction occurred.  On the SE and II family, the display would appear:
0000000F
00000003
The new power-on error codes have the following format:
XXXXYYYY
ZZZZZZZZ
Where XXXX is the internal test manager state information (ignore this), YYYY
contains codes that indicate either an exception code or the test number for a
power-on test failure.  The ZZZZZZZZ code contains additional failure info to
help track down the problem.

YYYY error codes:
$0001: ROM checksum test failed.  Ignore Z field.
$0002: First small chunk of RAM tested failed.  Z field indicates which RAM
   bit(s) failed.  This chunk of RAM is always in bank B.
   Example: $AABBCCDD
   AA=8-bit mask for bits 31-24
   BB=8-bit mask for bits 23-16
   CC=8-bit mask for bits 15-8
   DD=8-bit mask for bits 7-0
$0003: RAM test failed while testing bank B, after passing the chunk tested 
for
   $0002.  Z field indicates which bits failed, as in code $0002.
$0004: RAM test failed while testing bank A. Z field same as for $0002.
$0005: RAM external addressing test failed.  Z field indicates the failed
   address line.
$0006: Unable to properly address the VIA1 chip.  Ignore Z field.
$0007: Unable to properly address the VIA2 chip (Mac II only).  Ignore Z field.
$0008: Unable to properly address the Front Desk Bus.  Ignore Z field.
$0009: Unable to properly address the MMU.  Ignore Z field.
$000A: Unable to properly address NuBus.  Ignore Z field.
$000B: Unable to properly address SCSI chip.  Ignore Z field.
$000C: Unable to properly address the IWM chip.  Ignore Z field.
$000D: Unable to properly address the SCC chip.  Ignore Z field.
$000E: Failed Data Bus test.  Z field indicates bad bit(s) as a 32-bit mask for
   bits 0-31.  This error may indicate a bad SIMM or data bus failure.
$000F: Reserved for Macintosh compatibility.
$FFxx: A 680__ exception occurred during power-on testing.  The xx indicates
   the exception:
   $01 Bus error
   $02 Address error
   $03 Illegal instruction error
   $04 Zero Divide
   $05 Check Instruction
   $06 cpTrapCC, Trap CC, Trap V
   $07 Privelege Violation
   $08 Trace
   $09 Line A\
   $0A Line F (the backslash on the previous line is a typo)
   $0B Unassigned
   $0C CP protocol violation
   $0D Format exception
   $0E Spurious interrupt
   $0F Trap 0-15 exception
   $10 Interrupt Level 1
   $11 Interrupt level 2
   $12 Interrupt level 3
   $13 Interrupt level 4
   $14 Interrupt level 5
   $15 Interrupt level 6
   $16 Interrupt level 7
   $17 FPCP BRA orSET on unordered condition
   $18 FPCP inexact result
   $19 FPCP divide by zero
   $1A FPCP underflow
   $1B FPCP operand error
   $1C FPCP overflow
   $1D FPCP signalling NAN
   $1E PMMU configuration
   $1F PMMU illegal operation
   $20 PMMU access level violation

There you have it folks:  Everything you always wanted to know about sad Mac
error codes, but didn't want to be bored to death reading about.  I hope this
is helpful.

Chris Iverson
F&M Tech Support
 
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I snagged this off of sumex at Stanford. I hope it helps:

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|  Consp22@Bingsuns.pod.binghamton.edu  |  SUNY-B Computer Consultants -      |
|                                       |  Trying to keep the world safe from |
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|  System Consultant - World Computers  |-------------------------------------|
|  Computer Cons. - SUNY Binghamton     |     Darren `Mac Hack' Handler       |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
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	    Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker! - Willy Wonka

kenney@hsi.UUCP (Brian Kenney) (04/09/90)

  Is there a list of the sad mac codes and what they mean?  Perhaps
archived somewhere?   If not, can someone email me the list?

   Thanks in advance...

--bri

-- 
 Brian Kenney                                             ...!uunet!hsi!kenney 
 Health Systems International                                  kenney@hsi.com