/* scp_help.h: hierarchical help definitions | |
Copyright (c) 2013, Timothe Litt | |
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a | |
copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), | |
to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation | |
the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, | |
and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the | |
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: | |
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in | |
all copies or substantial portions of the Software. | |
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR | |
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, | |
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL | |
THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER | |
IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN | |
CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | |
Except as contained in this notice, the name of the author shall not be | |
used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or other dealings | |
in this Software without prior written authorization from the author. | |
*/ | |
#ifndef SCP_HELP_H_ | |
#define SCP_HELP_H_ 0 | |
/* The SCP structured help uses help text that defines a hierarchy of information | |
* organized into topics and subtopics. This is modelled on the VMS help command. | |
* | |
* This arrangement allows the long help messages being used in many devices to be | |
* organized to be easier to approach and navigate. | |
* | |
* The helpx utility (a Perl script) will read a device source file | |
* that conforms to the previous conventions, and produce a template and | |
* initial translation into the format described here. | |
* | |
* The structure of the help text is: | |
* | |
* Lines beginning with whitespace are displayed as part of the current topic, except: | |
* * The leading white space is replaced by a standard indentation of 4 spaces. | |
* Additional indentation, where appropriate, can be obtained with '+', 4 spaces each. | |
* | |
* * The following % escapes are recognized: | |
* * %D - Inserts the name of the device (e.g. "DTA"). | |
* * %U - Inserts the name of the unit (e.g. "DTA0"). | |
* * %S - Inserts the current simulator name (e.g. "PDP-10") | |
* * %#s - Inserts the string suppled in the "#"th optional argument to the help | |
* routine. # starts with 1. Any embedded newlines will cause following | |
* text to be indented. | |
* * %#H - Appends the #th optional argument to the help text. Use to add common | |
* help to device specific help. The text is placed AFTER the current help | |
* string, and after any previous %H inclusions. Parameter numbers restart | |
* with the new string, following the last parameter used by the previous tree. | |
* * %% - Inserts a literal %. | |
* * %+ - Inserts a literal +. | |
* - Any other escape is reserved and will cause an exception. However, the goal | |
* is to provide help, not a general formatting facility. Use sprintf to a | |
* local buffer, and pass that as a string if more general formatting is required. | |
* | |
* Lines beginning with a number introduce a subtopic of the device. The number indicates | |
* the subtopic's place in the help hierarchy. Topics offered as Additional Information | |
* under the device's main topic are at level 1. Their sub-topics are at level 2, and | |
* so on. Following the number is a string that names the sub-topic. This is displayed, | |
* and what the user types to access the information. Whitespace in the topic name is | |
* typed as an underscore (_). Topic names beginning with '$' invoke other kinds of help, | |
* These are: | |
* $Registers - Displays the device register help | |
* $Set commands - Displays the standard SET command help. | |
* $Show commands - Displays the standard SHOW command help. | |
* | |
* For these special topics, any text that you provide will be added after | |
* the output from the system routines. This allows you to add more information, or | |
* an introduction to subtopics with more detail. | |
* | |
* Topic names that begin with '?' are conditional topics. | |
* Some devices adopt radically different personalities at runtime, | |
* e.g. when attached to a processor with different bus. | |
* In rare cases, it's better not to include help that doesn't apply. | |
* For these cases, ?#, where # is a 1-based parameter number, can be used | |
* to selectively include a topic. If the specified parameter is TRUE | |
* (a string with the value "T", "t" or '1'), the topic will be visible. | |
* If the parameter is FALSE (NULL, or a string with any other value), | |
* the topic will not be visible. | |
* | |
* If it can be determined at compile time whether the topic in question | |
* is needed, #ifdef around those lines of the help is a better choice. | |
* | |
* If both $ and ? are used, ? comes first. | |
* | |
* Guidelines: | |
* Help should be concise and easy to understand. | |
* | |
* The main topic should be short - less than a sceenful when presented with the | |
* subtopic list. | |
* | |
* Keep line lengths to 76 columns or less. | |
* | |
* Follow the subtopic naming conventions (under development) for a consistent style: | |
* | |
* At the top level, the device should be summarized in a few sentences. | |
* The subtopics for detail should be: | |
* Hardware Description - The details of the hardware. Feeds & speeds are OK here. | |
* Models - If the device was offered in distinct models, a subtopic for each. | |
* Registers - Register descriptions | |
* | |
* Configuration - How to configure the device under SimH. SET commands. | |
* Operating System - If the device needs special configuration for a particular | |
* OS, a subtopic for each such OS goes here. | |
* Files - If the device uses external files (tapes, cards, disks, configuration) | |
* A subtopic for each here. | |
* Examples - Provide usable examples for configuring complex devices. | |
* | |
* Operation - How to operate the device under SimH. Attach, runtime events | |
* (e.g. how to load cards or mount a tape) | |
* | |
* Monitoring - How to obtain status (SHOW commands) | |
* | |
* Restrictions - If some aspects of the device aren't emulated, list them here. | |
* | |
* Debugging - Debugging information | |
* | |
* Related Devices - If devices are configured or used together, list the other devices here. | |
* E.G. The DEC KMC/DUP are two hardware devices that are closely related; | |
* The KMC controlls the DUP on behalf of the OS. | |
* | |
* This text can be created by any convenient means. It can be mechanically extracted from the device | |
* source, read from a file, or simply entered as a string in the help routine. To facilitate the latter, | |
* this file defines two convenience macros: | |
* | |
* L(text) - provides a string with a leading space and a trailing \n. Enter a line of topic text. | |
* T(n, NAME) - provides a string with the topic level n and the topic name NAME, and a trailing \n. | |
* | |
* These are concatenated normally, e.g. | |
const char *const help = | |
L (The %D device is interesting) | |
L (It has lots of help options) | |
T (1, TOPIC 1) | |
L (And this is topic 1) | |
; | |
* | |
* API: | |
* To make use of this type of help in your device, create (or replace) a help routine with one that | |
* calls scp_help. Most of the arguments are the same as those of the device help routine. | |
* | |
* t_stat scp_help (FILE *st, struct sim_device *dptr, | |
* struct sim_unit *uptr, int flag, const char *help, char *cptr, ...) | |
* | |
* If you need to pass the variable argument list from another routine, use: | |
* | |
* t_stat scp_vhelp (FILE *st, struct sim_device *dptr, | |
* struct sim_unit *uptr, int flag, const char *help, char *cptr, va_list ap) | |
* | |
* To obtain the help from an external file (Note this reads the entire file into memory): | |
* t_stat scp_helpFromFile (FILE *st, struct sim_device *dptr, | |
* struct sim_unit *uptr, int flag, const char *helpfile, char *cptr, ...) | |
* and for va_list: | |
* t_stat scp_vhelpFromFile (FILE *st, struct sim_device *dptr, | |
* struct sim_unit *uptr, int flag, const char *helpfile, char *cptr, va_list ap) { | |
* | |
* dptr and uptr are only used if the %D and/or %U escapes are encountered. | |
* help is the help text; helpfile is the help file name. | |
* | |
* flag is usually the flag from the help command dispatch. SCP_HELP_FLAT is set in non-interactive | |
* environments. When this flag, or DEV_FLATHELP in DEVICE.flags is set, the entire help text | |
* will be flattened and displayed in outline form. | |
* | |
* Help files are easier to edit, but can become separated from the SimH executable. Finding them | |
* at runtime can also be a challenge. SimH tries...but the project standard is to embed help | |
* as strings in the device. (It may be easier to develop help as a file before converting it | |
* to a string.) | |
* | |
* Lines beginning with ';' will be ignored. | |
* | |
* Here is a worked-out example: | |
* | |
;**************************************************************************** | |
The Whizbang 100 is a DMA line printer controller used on the Whizbang 1000 | |
and Gurgle 1200 processor familes of the Obsolete Hardware Corporation. | |
1 Hardware Description | |
The Whizbang 100 is specified to operate "any printer you and a friend can | |
lift", and speeds up to 0.5 C. | |
The controller requires a refrigerator-sized box, consumes 5.5KW, and is | |
liquid cooled. It uses GBL (Granite Baked Logic). | |
Painted a cool blue, it consistently won industrial design awards, even | |
as mechanically, it was less than perfect. Plumbers had full employment. | |
2 Models | |
The Whizbang 100 model G was commissioned by a government agency, which | |
insisted on dull gray paint, and speeds limited to 11 MPH. | |
The Whizbang 100 Model X is powered by the improbability drive, and is | |
rarely seen once installed. | |
2 $Registers | |
The two main registers are the Print Control register and the Print Data | |
register. The Print Maintenance register is usually broken. | |
3 Print Control register | |
Bit 0 turns the attached printer on when set, off when clear. | |
Bit 1 ejects the current page | |
Bit 2 ejects the operator | |
Bit 3 enables interrupts | |
3 Print data register | |
The print data register is thiry-seven bits wide, and accepts data in | |
elephantcode, the precursor to Unicode. Paper advance is accomplished | |
with the Rocket Return and Page Trampoline characters. | |
1 Configuration | |
The Whizbang 100 requires 4 address slots on the LooneyBus. | |
+ SET WHIZBANG LUNA 11 | |
will assign the controller to its default bus address. | |
2 $Set commands | |
The output codeset can be ASCII or elephantcode | |
+ SET WHIZBANG CODESET ASCII | |
+ SET WHIZBANG CODESET ELEPHANTCODE | |
The VFU (carriage control tape) is specifed with | |
+ SET WHIZBANG TAPE vfufile | |
2 WOS | |
Under WOS, the device will only work at LooneyBus slot 9 | |
2 RTG | |
The RTG driver has been lost. It is not known if the | |
Whizbang will operate correctly. | |
2 Files | |
The VFU is programmed with an ASCII text file. Each line of the | |
file corresponds to a line of the form. Enter the channel numbers | |
as base 33 roman numerals. | |
2 Examples | |
TBS | |
1 Operation | |
Specify the host file to receive output using the | |
+ATTACH WHIZBANG filespec | |
command. | |
1 Monitoring | |
The Whizbang has no lights or switches. The model X may be located | |
with the | |
+SHOW WHIZBANG LOCATION | |
simulator command. | |
2 $Show commands | |
1 Restrictions | |
The emulator is limited to a single Whizbang controller. | |
1 Debugging | |
The only implemented debugging command is | |
+ SET WHIZBANG DEBUG=PRAY | |
To stop: | |
+ SET WHIZBANG NODEBUG=PRAY | |
1 Related Devices | |
See also the Whizbang paper shredder (SHRED). | |
* | |
*/ | |
#define T(level, text) #level " " #text "\n" | |
#define L(text) " " #text "\n" | |
#endif |