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Filesystem Driver Infrastructure for MSX-DOS 2

aka

NestorFilesystem

Motivation

Some people in the MSX scene has developed awesome harwdare extensions that in some cases have mass storage capabilities - think SD card readers or network cards with built-in commands to access HTTP and FTP servers. Many of these come with the Nextor kernel built-in, as its support for custom device drivers allows it to be easily adapted to custom hardware.

However this approach has an important limitation: Nextor custom drivers are device drivers, i.e. they basically expose just "read/write sectors" functions. The filesystem level is still managed by Nextor, which poses some problems:

  • Only FAT12 and FAT16 is supported, so it is not possible to use devices larger than 4GB unless they are partitioned accordingly.
  • Some of these gadgets have microcontrollers that can handle filesystems by themselves, with a big performance gain compared to letting MSX-DOS doing all the work; but these "hardware accelerations" can't be used unless specific file handling applications are developed.
  • Files in non-block devices (e.g. optical disks, network servers) can't be used directly, dedicated applications are needed no matter what.

One of the planned features for a future version of Nextor is the support for custom filesystem drivers, but that would be a ton of work, so instead of (or before, I'm not sure yet) doing that, I have started to develop a "simpler" solution: a template for filesystem drivers that install in mapped RAM (and it works in MSX-DOS 2, Nextor not required).

How does it work?

Every time that an application performs a MSX-DOS 2 function call, the kernel code does some work and before actually executing the function it invokes a hook named H_BDOS, located at address 0F252h. Of course the existence of this hook and the state of the system when it is invoked are completely undocumented, but who needs documentation having the source code of MSX-DOS 2 (which is the foundation of Nextor)?

A NestorFilesystem driver is a MSX-DOS 2 executable that allocates a RAM segment, copies the main driver code on it and puts a small piece of code in page 3. Then it hooks H_BDOS to point to this page 3 code, which (if it's a file access related function) calls an entry point in the driver code, which in turns executes the custom implementation of the function call. These custom implementations do the actual file access for the targetted hardware and return the appropriate values in the appropriate registers.

The template contains the installer and the driver scaffolding code that preprocesses the input to the function calls before passing it to the custom function implementations. Your job as a driver developer, should you accept it, is to implement these custom versions of the function calls according to the specification (which at this point is just a handful of comments in the source code).

Note that this project is in a very early stage. For now the only patched function calls are those for setting/getting the current directory and for searching files (aka CD and DIR). Expect breaking changes between 0.x versions, but of course I will try to minimize them and will appropriately document all ot them.

How to build a custom filesystem driver

Open NFS.ASM, search for TODO comments, and do whatever you are told to. At this point that's all the "spec" that exists. You may want to take a look at the official MSX-DOS 2 programming guide for reference as well.

The source is intended for the Compass MSX assembler, you can assemble it from a PC by using Sjasm 0.39h: sjasm -c NFS.asm NFS.COM (the compile.bat script does exactly that).

To install it just run NFS.COM without parameters from within MSX-DOS 2 or Nextor (you need one free RAM segment in the primary mapper). The driver will be attached to drive G: (future versions will allow you to choose the drive letter). Uninstall with NFS U.

You can check whether the driver is installed (and where) by calling extended BIOS (0FFCAh) with DE=2204h. If it is installed, you will get 22h in A, the slot number in B and the segment number in C. You can use this if you need to configure the driver with a custom tool (just switch the segment to any page and change whatever you need on it). Note that it is not possible to install more than one driver at the same time.

Testing with NestorMSX

To ease testing the driver scaffolding code I have developed a plugin for NestorMSX that provides integration with the host filesystem - that is, it allows you to access the filesystem of the machine running the emulator directly from the emulated MSX. If you want to give it a try:

  1. Build the plugin with Visual Studio and copy it to the plugins directory of your NestorMSX install. Or alternatively, use the already compiled version from the Releases version.

  2. Modify the machine.config file of the machine configuration you will use (a good one would be MSX2 with Nextor) and add the following to the plugins section, modifying the values appropriately:

    "Filesystem integration": { 
        "integratedDirectory": "$MyDocuments$/NestorMSX/FileSystem",
        "volumeLabel": "NestorMSX"
    }
  1. Build NFS.COM and copy it to a disk image file that you will mount in the emulator by using the MSX-DOS plugin. The build.bat script does exactly that by using ImDisk to mount the disk image file in the host machine, but you can use any other similar tool. You may need to tweak the mount.bat script as it contains the location of the image file in your machine - the default NextorAndMsxDos.dsk file is supplied with NestorMSX.

  2. Copy some files (and directories!) to the integrated directory in the host machine. Note that these must have 8.3, ASCII-only names; otherwise the plugin will not find them.

  3. Boot NestorMSX, and in the MSX-DOS 2 prompt run NFS. Then do DIR G: and... magic!

Oh, and one more thing...

Take a look at my home page for contact details and other fun/obsolete stuff I have made, and drop a couple of €s if you think that I deserve it. Enjoy!

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A template for developing filesystem drivers for MSX-DOS 2 and Nextor

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