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Revision: 1.7
Committed: 1999-10-21T18:29:04Z (25 years ago) by cebix
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: snapshot-21101999, snapshot-22121999, release-0_8-1, snapshot-02111999
Changes since 1.6: +35 -9 lines
Log Message:
- bumped version number to 0.8
- updated docs for fbdev and extfs

File Contents

# Content
1
2 Basilisk II, Version 0.8
3 A free, portable Mac II emulator
4
5 Copyright (C) 1997-1999 Christian Bauer et al.
6 Freely distributable
7
8
9 License
10 -------
11
12 Basilisk II is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
13 See the file "COPYING" that is included in the distribution for details.
14
15
16 Overview
17 --------
18
19 Basilisk II is a free, portable, Open Source 68k Mac emulator. It requires
20 a copy of a Mac ROM and a copy of MacOS to run. Basilisk II is freeware and
21 distributed under the GNU General Public License.
22
23 Basilisk II has currently been ported to the following systems:
24 - BeOS R4 (PowerPC and x86)
25 - Unix (tested under Linux, Solaris 2.5, FreeBSD 3.x and IRIX 6.5)
26 - AmigaOS 3.x
27 - Windows NT 4.0 (mostly works under Windows 95/98, too)
28
29 Some features of Basilisk II:
30 - Emulates either a Mac Classic (which runs MacOS 0.x thru 7.5)
31 or a Mac II series machine (which runs MacOS 7.x, 8.0 and 8.1),
32 depending on the ROM being used
33 - Color video display
34 - CD quality sound output
35 - Floppy disk driver (only 1.44MB disks supported)
36 - Driver for HFS partitions and hardfiles
37 - CD-ROM driver with basic audio functions
38 - Easy file exchange with the host OS via a "Host Directory Tree" icon
39 on the Mac desktop
40 - Ethernet driver
41 - Serial drivers
42 - SCSI Manager (old-style) emulation
43 - Emulates extended ADB keyboard and 3-button mouse
44 - Uses UAE 68k emulation or (under AmigaOS) real 68k processor
45
46 The emulator is not yet complete. See the file "TODO" for a list of
47 unimplemented stuff.
48
49
50 Requirements and Installation
51 -----------------------------
52
53 Please consult the file "INSTALL" for a list of system requirements and
54 installation instructions.
55
56
57 Configuration
58 -------------
59
60 Basilisk II is configured via the preferences editor that appears on startup.
61 If you have a version without preferences editor (e.g. because of missing GTK+
62 under Unix), you have to edit the preferences file manually.
63
64 The settings are stored in a text file:
65
66 BeOS:
67 /boot/home/config/settings/BasiliskII_prefs
68
69 Unix:
70 ~/.basilisk_ii_prefs
71
72 AmigaOS:
73 ENV:BasiliskII_prefs
74
75 Windows:
76 BasiliskII_prefs (in the same directory as the executable)
77
78 If no preferences file is present, Basilisk II will create one with the
79 default settings upon startup.
80
81
82 Preferences File Format
83 -----------------------
84
85 The preferences file is a text file editable with any text editor.
86 Each line in this file has the format "keyword value" and describes
87 one preferences item. For each keyword, the meaning of the "value"
88 string may vary across platforms. The following keywords exist:
89
90 disk <volume description>
91
92 This item describes one MacOS volume to be mounted by Basilisk II.
93 There can be multiple "disk" lines in the preferences file. Basilisk II
94 can handle hardfiles (byte-per-byte images of HFS volumes in a file on
95 the host system) as well as HFS partitions on hard disks etc. (but Basilisk
96 II doesn't know about MacOS partition tables; it relies on the host OS to
97 handle this). The "volume description" is either the pathname of a hardfile
98 or a platform-dependant description of an HFS partition or drive. If the
99 volume description starts with an asterisk ("*"), the volume is write
100 protected for MacOS (and the "*" is discarded).
101
102 BeOS:
103 To specify an HFS partition, simply specify its path (e.g.
104 "/dev/disk/scsi/0/1/0/0_3"). If you don't specify any volume, Basilisk II
105 will search for and use all available HFS partitions.
106
107 Unix:
108 To specify an HFS partition, simply specify its path (e.g.
109 "/dev/sda5").
110
111 AmigaOS:
112 Partitions/drives are specified in the following format:
113 /dev/<device name>/<unit>/<open flags>/<start block>/<size>/<block size>
114 "start block" and "size" are given in blocks, "block size" is given in
115 bytes.
116
117 Windows:
118 To define a logical volume (Windows NT only), specify its path (e.g. "c:\").
119 To define a physical volume (NT and 9x), additionally give the "physical"
120 keyword (E.g. "physical c:\"). For safety reasons, volumes are mounted as
121 read-only. This is due to the bugs in PC Exchange. If you don't specify
122 any volume, the files *.hfv and *.dsk are searched from the current
123 directory. Note that in this case, Basilisk II tries to boot from the first
124 volume file found, which is random and may not be what you want.
125
126 floppy <floppy drive description>
127
128 This item describes one floppy drive to be used by Basilisk II. There
129 can be multiple "floppy" lines in the preferences file. If no "floppy"
130 line is given, Basilisk II will try to automatically detect and use
131 installed floppy drives. The format of the "floppy drive description"
132 is the same as that of "disk" lines.
133
134 cdrom <CD-ROM drive description>
135
136 This item describes one CD-ROM drive to be used by Basilisk II. There
137 can be multiple "cdrom" lines in the preferences file. If no "cdrom"
138 line is given, Basilisk II will try to automatically detect and use
139 installed CD-ROM drives. The format of the "CD-ROM drive description"
140 is the same as that of "disk" lines.
141
142 extfs <direcory path>
143
144 This item specifies the root directory for the "Host Directory Tree"
145 file system (the "Unix/BeOS/Amiga/..." icon on the Finder desktop).
146 All objects contained in that directory are accessible by Mac applications.
147 This feature is only available when File System Manager V1.2 or later
148 is installed on the Mac side. FSM 1.2 is built-in beginning with MacOS 7.6
149 and can be installed as a system extension (downloadable from Apple, look
150 for the FSM SDK in the developer section) for earlier MacOS versions.
151
152 scsi0 <SCSI target> ... scsi6 <SCSI target>
153
154 These items describe the SCSI target to be used for a given Mac SCSI
155 ID by Basilisk II. Basilisk II emulates the old SCSI Manager and allows
156 to assign a different SCSI target (they don't even have to be on the
157 same SCSI bus) for each SCSI ID (0..6) as seen by the MacOS. "scsi0"
158 describes the target for ID 0, "scsi1" the target for ID 1 etc.
159 The format of the "SCSI target" is platform specific.
160
161 BeOS:
162 The "SCSI target" has the format "<bus>/<unit>" (e.g. "0/2").
163 Due to a bug in BeOS, using SCSI with Basilisk II may cause the
164 SCSI bus to hang. Use with caution.
165
166 Linux:
167 The "SCSI target" has to be the name of a device that complies to
168 the Generic SCSI driver API. On a standard Linux installation, these
169 devices are "/dev/sg0", "/dev/sg1" etc. Note that you must have
170 appropriate access rights to these devices and that Generic SCSI
171 support has to be compiled into the kernel.
172
173 FreeBSD:
174 The "SCSI target" has the format "<id>/<lun>" (e.g. "2/0").
175
176 AmigaOS:
177 The "SCSI target" has the format "<device name>/<unit>" (e.g.
178 "scsi.device/2").
179
180 Windows:
181 The "SCSI target" has the format <"Vendor"> <"Model"> (e.g.
182 scsi0 "HP" "CD-Writer+ 7100"). Note the use of quotes.
183
184 screen <video mode>
185
186 This item describes the type of video display to be used by Basilisk II.
187 If you are using a Mac Classic ROM, the display is always 1-bit 512x342
188 and this item is ignored. The format of the "video mode" is platform
189 specific.
190
191 BeOS:
192 The "video mode" is one of the following:
193 win/<width>/<height>
194 8-bit color display in a window of the given size. This is the
195 default.
196 scr/<mode>
197 Full-screen display in BWindowScreen. <mode> is the bit number of
198 the video mode to use (see headers/be/interface/GraphicsDefs.h).
199 E.g. 0 = 640x480x8, 1 = 800x600x8 etc., 10 = 640x480x24,
200 11 = 800x600x24 etc., 18 = 640x480x15, 19 = 800x600x15 etc.
201 15 bit modes are preferable to 16 bit modes (which may show false
202 colors on PowerPC machines).
203 When you run in full-screen mode and switch to another Workspace,
204 Basilisk II is put in "suspend" mode (i.e. MacOS will be frozen).
205
206 Unix:
207 The "video mode" is one of the following:
208 win/<width>/<height>
209 Color display in an X11 window of the given size. The color depth
210 (8/15/24 bit) depends on the depth of the underlying X11 screen.
211 This is the default.
212 dga/<width>/<height>
213 [if Basilisk II was configured with --enable-xf86-dga]
214 Full-screen display using the XFree86 DGA extension. The color depth
215 (8/15/24 bit) depends on the depth of the underlying X11 screen.
216 "width" and "height" specify the maximum width/height to use.
217 Saying "dga/0/0" means "complete screen".
218 dga/<frame buffer name>
219 [if Basilisk II was configured with --enable-fbdev-dga]
220 Full-screen display using the frame buffer device /dev/fb. The color
221 depth (8/15/24 bit) depends on the depth of the underlying X11 screen.
222 The "frame buffer name" is looked up in the "fbdevices" file (whose
223 path can be specified with the "fbdevicefile" prefs item) to determine
224 certain characteristics of the device (doing a "ls -l /dev/fb" should
225 tell you what your frame buffer name is).
226
227 AmigaOS:
228 The "video mode" is one of the following:
229 win/<width>/<height>
230 Black-and-white display in a window of the given size on the
231 Workbench screen. This is the default and will also be used when
232 one of the other options (PIP/screen) fails to open.
233 pip/<width>/<height>
234 15-bit truecolor display in a Picasso96 PIP. This requires
235 Picasso96 as well as a PIP-capable graphics card (e.g. Picasso IV).
236 scr/<hexadecimal mode ID>
237 8/15/24-bit fullscreen display on a Picasso96 screen with the given
238 mode ID. This requires Picasso96. For 15 and 24 bit, the frame buffer
239 format must be QuickDraw-compatible (big-endian, xRGB 1:5:5:5 or
240 xRGB 8:8:8:8). The screen size will be the default size for that
241 mode ID.
242
243 Windows:
244 The "video mode" is one of the following:
245 win/<width>/<height>/<bits per pixel>
246 A refreshed screen mode that uses Windows GDI calls to write to the
247 screen. You may have other windows on top of Basilisk II.
248 dx/<width>/<height>/<bits per pixel>
249 A refreshed DirectX mode (minimum version 5.0). There are ways to
250 install DirectX 5 on NT 4. Some new display adapters work fine even
251 with DirectX 3.
252 fb/<width>/<height>/<bits per pixel>
253 A non-refreshed video mode that works only on NT. It accesses the
254 linear frame buffer directly (best performance of all three modes).
255 Use the hotkey Control-Shift-F12 to switch between Windows and Mac
256 displays. Fast task switch (Alt-Tab) and Explorer start menu
257 (Control-Esc) are disabled, Control-Alt-Del is enabled.
258 <width> and <height> can be either zeroes (uses current screen values),
259 or something else. "win" mode can use almost anything, for other modes
260 there must be a corresponding DirectX mode.
261 <bits> is ignored for mode "win" (uses current screen values).
262 If the mode is "win" and the dimensions are different than the desktop
263 dimensions, windowed mode is used. The window can be moved around by
264 dragging with the right mouse button. This mode remembers window positions
265 separately for different dimensions.
266 The supported values are 8,15,16,24,32. It is possible that some of them
267 do not work for you. In particular, it may be that only one of the
268 two modes, 15 and 16, is suitable for your card. You need to find out
269 the best solution by experimenting.
270 Basilisk II checks what display mode you are currently running and uses
271 that mode. The screen is always full screen. When you switch to another
272 application via Alt-Tab, Basilisk II is put in "snooze" mode (i.e. MacOS
273 is frozen).
274
275 seriala <serial port description>
276
277 This item describes the serial port to be used as Port A (Modem Port)
278 by Basilisk II. If no "seriala" line is given, Basilisk II will try to
279 automatically detect and use installed serial ports. The "serial port
280 description" is a platform-dependant description of a serial port.
281
282 BeOS:
283 Either specify the name of a serial port (e.g. "serial1") or one of
284 "parallel1", "parallel2" or "parallel3". See below for more information
285 about parallel ports.
286
287 Unix:
288 Specify the device name of a serial port (e.g. "/dev/ttyS0") or a
289 parallel "lp" port (e.g. "/dev/lp1"; this only works under Linux and
290 FreeBSD). See below for more information about parallel ports.
291
292 AmigaOS:
293 You have to specify the name of the serial device and the device unit
294 as "<device name>/<unit>" (e.g. "serial.device/0"). If the given device
295 is not compatible to serial.device, Basilisk II will crash. If the
296 device name starts with an asterisk (e.g. "*parallel.device/0"), the
297 device is treated as a parallel.device compatible device. See below for
298 more information about parallel ports.
299
300 Windows:
301 Specify "COM1" or "COM2" for com port 1 or 2, respectively.
302
303 Parallel ports: If you select a parallel port it will look like a serial
304 port to MacOS but Basilisk II will only allow data output and ignore baud
305 rate settings etc. You should be able to get some printers to work with
306 this method (provided that you have the right printer driver, like
307 "Power Print" (see www.gdt.com)).
308
309 serialb <serial port description>
310
311 This item describes the serial port to be used as Port B (Printer Port)
312 by Basilisk II. If no "serialb" line is given, Basilisk II will try to
313 automatically detect and use installed serial ports. The format of the
314 "serial port description" is the same as that of the "seriala" option.
315
316 ether <ethernet card description>
317
318 This item describes the Ethernet card to be used for Ethernet networking
319 by Basilisk II. If no "ether" line is given, Ethernet networking is disabled
320 (although the Ethernet driver of Basilisk II will behave like a "dummy"
321 Ethernet card in this case). If you are using a Mac Classic ROM, Ethernet
322 is not available and this setting is ignored. The "ethernet card description"
323 is a platform-dependant description of an ethernet card.
324
325 BeOS:
326 It doesn't matter what you give as "ethernet card description", Basilisk II
327 will always use the first Ethernet card it finds as long an an "ether"
328 line exists (e.g. say "ether yes"). As Basilisk II requires the sheep_net
329 net server add-on from SheepShaver, you can only use Ethernet on PowerPC
330 machines.
331
332 Linux:
333 The "ethernet card description" is the name of an Ethernet interface.
334 There are two approaches to networking with Basilisk II:
335 1. Direct access to an Ethernet card via the "sheep_net" driver.
336 In this case, the "ethernet card description" must be the name
337 of a real Ethernet card, e.g. "eth0". It also requires the "sheep_net"
338 driver to be installed and accessible. This approach will allow you
339 to run all networking protocols under MacOS (TCP/IP, AppleTalk, IPX
340 etc.) but there is no connection between Linux networking and MacOS
341 networking. MacOS will only be able to talk to other machines on
342 the Ethernet, but not to other networks that your Linux box routes
343 (e.g. a second Ethernet or a PPP connection to the Internet).
344 2. Putting Basilisk II on a virtual Ethernet via the "ethertap" device.
345 In this case, the "ethernet card description" must be the name
346 of an ethertap interface, e.g. "tap0". It also requires that you
347 configure your kernel to enable routing and the ethertap device:
348 under "Networking options", enable "Kernel/User netlink socket" and
349 "Netlink device emulation", under "Network device support", activate
350 "Ethertap network tap". Next, see /usr/src/linux/Documentation/
351 networking/ethertap.txt for information on how to set up /dev/tap*
352 device nodes and activate the ethertap interface. Under MacOS,
353 select an IP address that is on the virtual network and set the
354 default gateway to the IP address of the ethertap interface. This
355 approach will let you access all networks that your Linux box has
356 access to (especially, if your Linux box has a dial-up Internet
357 connection and is configured for IP masquerading, you can access
358 the Internet from MacOS). The drawback is that you can only use
359 network protocols that Linux can route, so you have to install and
360 configure netatalk if you want to use AppleTalk.
361
362 AmigaOS:
363 You have to specify the name of the SANA-II Ethernet device and the device
364 unit as "<device name>/<unit>" (e.g. "ariadne.device/0"). If the given
365 device is not a SANA-II device, Basilisk II will crash. If the device is
366 not an Ethernet device, Basilisk II will display a warning message and
367 disable Ethernet networking.
368
369 rom <ROM file path>
370
371 This item specifies the file name of the Mac ROM file to be used by
372 Basilisk II. If no "rom" line is given, the ROM file has to be named
373 "ROM" and put in the same directory as the Basilisk II executable.
374
375 bootdrive <drive number>
376
377 Specify MacOS drive number of boot volume. "0" (the default) means
378 "boot from first bootable volume".
379
380 bootdriver <driver number>
381
382 Specify MacOS driver number of boot volume. "0" (the default) means
383 "boot from first bootable volume". Use "-62" to boot from CD-ROM.
384
385 ramsize <bytes>
386
387 Allocate "bytes" bytes of RAM for MacOS system and application memory.
388 The value given will be rounded down to the nearest multiple of 1MB.
389 If you are using a Mac Classic ROM, the maximum available value is 4MB
390 and higher values will be ignored. The default is 8MB.
391
392 frameskip <frames to skip>
393
394 For refreshed graphics modes (usually window modes), this specifies
395 how many frames to skip after drawing one frame. Higher values make
396 the video display more responsive but require more processing power.
397 The default is "8".
398
399 modelid <MacOS model ID>
400
401 Specifies the Model ID that Basilisk II should report to MacOS.
402 The default is "5" which corresponds to a Mac IIci. If you want to
403 run MacOS 8, you have to set this to "14" (Quadra 900). Other values
404 are not officially supported and may result in crashes. MacOS versions
405 earlier than 7.5 may only run with the Model ID set to "5". If you are
406 using a Mac Classic ROM, the model is always "Mac Classic" and this
407 setting is ignored.
408
409 nosound <"true" or "false">
410
411 Set this to "true" to disable all sound output. This is useful if the
412 sound takes too much CPU time on your machine or to get rid of warning
413 messages if Basilisk II can't use your audio hardware.
414
415 nocdrom <"true" or "false">
416
417 Set this to "true" to disable Basilisk's built-in CD-ROM driver.
418 The only reason to do this is if you want to use a third-party CD-ROM
419 driver that uses the SCSI Manager. The default is "false".
420
421 nogui <"true" or "false">
422
423 Set this to "true" to disable the GUI preferences editor and GUI
424 error alerts. All errors will then be reported to stdout. The default
425 is "false".
426
427 For additional information, consult the source.
428
429
430 System-specific configuration
431 -----------------------------
432
433 Unix:
434
435 keycodes <"true" or "false">
436 keycodefile <keycodes file path>
437
438 By default, the X11 event handler in Basilisk II uses KeySyms to
439 translate keyboard event to Mac keycodes. While this method is very
440 compatible and ought to work with all X servers, it only works well
441 if your keyboard has a US layout. If you set "keycodes" to "true",
442 Basilisk II will use raw keycodes instead of KeySyms. The keycode
443 depends only on the physical location of a key on the keyboard and
444 not on the selected keymap. Unfortunately it depends on the X server
445 being used and possibly also on the type of keyboard attached. So
446 Basilisk II needs a table to translate X keycodes to Mac keycodes.
447 This table is read by default from /usr/local/share/BasiliskII/keycodes
448 unless you specify a different file with the "keycodefile" item.
449 A sample keycode file is included with Basilisk II.
450
451 fbdevicefile <fbdevices file path>
452
453 This option specifies the file that contains frame buffer device
454 specifications for the fbdev-DGA video mode (when Basilisk II was
455 configured with --enable-fbdev-dga). The default location of the file
456 is /usr/local/share/BasiliskII/fbdevices. A sample file is included
457 with Basilisk II.
458
459 AmigaOS:
460
461 sound <sound output description>
462
463 This item specifies what method to use for sound output. The only choice
464 is currently AHI, but you can specify the AHI mode ID to be used. The
465 "sound output description" looks like this:
466
467 ahi/<hexadecimal mode ID>
468
469 Windows:
470
471 noscsi <"true" or "false">
472
473 Completely disables SCSI Manager support when set to "true".
474 Note that currently all SCSI operations are executed synchronously,
475 even if Mac application has requested asynchronous operation. What this
476 means is that the control is not returned to the application until the
477 command is completely finished. Normally this is not an issue, but when a
478 CDR/CDRW is closed or erased the burner program typically wants to wait in
479 some progress dialog The result may be that the application reports a
480 time-out error, but the operation completes all right anyway.
481
482 nofloppyboot <"true" or "false">
483
484 Set this to "true" to disable booting from a floppy.
485
486 replacescsi <"Vendor1"> <"Model1"> <"Vendor2"> <"Model2">
487
488 This command tricks the Mac to believe that you have a SCSI device Model2
489 from vendor Vendor2, although your real hardware is Model1 from Vendor1.
490 This is very useful since many devices have almost identical ATAPI and SCSI
491 versions of their hardware, and MacOS applications usually support the SCSI
492 version only. The example below is typical:
493
494 replacescsi "HP" "CD-Writer+ 7100" "PHILIPS" "CDD3600"
495
496 Note the use of quotes.
497
498 rightmouse <0/1>
499
500 Defines what the right mouse button is used for. The default values of 0
501 means that it is used to move windowed mode BasiliskII screen.
502 Value 1 sends a combination Control and mouse click to the MacOS.
503 This may be useful under OS versions 8 and above.
504
505 keyboardfile <path>
506
507 Defines the path of the customized keyboard code file.
508
509 pollmedia <"true" or "false">
510
511 If true (default), tries to automatically detect new media.
512 Applies to all "floppy", "cd" or "disk" removable media except
513 1.44 MB floppies. May cause modest slow down. If unchecked,
514 use Ctrl-Shift-F11 to manually mount new media.
515 If you have auto-insert notification (AIN) enabled, you may turn this
516 option off. Note that some CD related software require AIN,
517 and some other need it to be turned off. Consult the documentation
518 of your CD software to learn which one is optimal for you.
519
520 framesleepticks <milliseconds>
521
522 The amount of time between video frames.
523
524 showfps <true/false>
525
526 If true, the real frame rate is displayed.
527
528 stickymenu <true/false>
529
530 If true, the main menu bar is kept open even after the mouse button is released,
531 under all OS versions (OS 8 has this feature already). There are extensions to do
532 the same thing, but it's faster to handle this in native code.
533 Default is "true".
534
535 ntdx5hack <"true" or "false">
536
537 You may need this on NT if your display adapter driver has a bug in DirectX
538 palette support. Black and white are reversed. It fixes the palette issue
539 by using GDI palette instead of D3D palette. Default is false.
540
541
542 Usage
543 -----
544
545 Quitting:
546 The right way to quit Basilisk II is to select the "Shut Down" menu item
547 from the Finder's "Special" menu. You should not kill it from the shell
548 unless it hangs. Under Unix, pressing "Esc" while holding the Ctrl key will
549 also quit Basilisk II (in case you are using it in DGA mode and it crashed).
550 Under Windows, try Alt-F4 (or Control-Alt-Del to log off and back on again
551 if it crashes really badly).
552
553 Suspending:
554 The Unix version of Basilisk II can be suspended while running in DGA mode
555 by pressing "Tab" while holding the Ctrl key. Pressing "Space" in the
556 "suspended" window will resume the emulation. Under BeOS, switching to
557 a different Workspace when BasiliskII is in full-screen mode will also
558 suspend the emulation.
559
560 Keyboard:
561 On PC-style keyboards, "Alt" is the Mac "Command" key, while the "Windows"
562 key is the Mac "Option" key.
563
564 Floppy:
565 Basilisk II can only handle 1.44MB MFM floppies. Depending on your platform,
566 flopyy disk changes might not be detected automatically. Under Linux, press
567 Ctrl-F1 to mount a floppy. Under BeOS, select the appropriate "Mount" menu
568 item or press Ctrl-F1 to mount a floppy. Under Windows, press Ctrl-Shift-F11.
569
570 HFS partitions:
571 Having HFS partitions mounted for read-write access under Basilisk II while
572 they are also mounted on the host OS will most likely result in volume
573 corruption and data losses. Unmount your HFS volumes before starting
574 Basilisk II.
575
576 ZIP drives:
577 Iomega ZIP disks can be mounted either with the "disk" prefs item or (on
578 platforms that support the SCSI Manager emulation of Basilisk II) by
579 installing the IomegaWare on the Mac side. Do not use both ways
580 simultaneously!
581
582 Hardfiles:
583 In addition to plain images of HFS volumes, Basilisk II can also handle
584 some types of Mac "disk image" files, as long as they are uncompressed
585 and unencoded.
586
587 Mac Classic emulation:
588 Sound output and Ethernet are not supported if you are using a Mac Classic
589 ROM. Also, the video display is fixed to 512x342 in monochrome. The AmigaOS
590 and BeOS/PPC versions of Basilisk II cannot do Mac Classic emulation.
591
592 Sound output:
593 Sound output under Basilisk II requires Sound Manager 3.0 or later. This
594 is included starting with MacOS 7.5 and available as a system extension
595 for earlier MacOS versions. Sample rate, bit resolution and mono/stereo
596 can be selected in the Sound control panel (section "Sound Out").
597
598 Ethernet:
599 Basilisk II supports all Ethernet protocols. Running a protocol under
600 Basilisk II that already runs within the host operating system on the same
601 network card (e.g. running MacTCP under Basilisk II on a BeOS machine) may
602 or may not work (generally, it should work, but some specific things like
603 "ping" may not). If you have problems with FTP, try setting your FTP client
604 to passive mode.
605
606 LocalTalk:
607 LocalTalk is not supported by Basilisk II. There is no way of getting
608 LocalTalk to work with the serial drivers of Basilisk II. Any attempt to
609 activate LocalTalk will either result in a crash or revert to Ethernet.
610
611 Serial:
612 You can use the serial ports in Basilisk II to connect to the Internet
613 with a modem and "MacPPP".
614
615
616 Technical Documentation
617 -----------------------
618
619 Please see the included file "TECH" for a technical overview of the emulator.
620
621
622 Acknowledgements
623 ----------------
624
625 Contributions by:
626 - Bernd Schmidt <crux@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de>: UAE 68k emulation
627 - Marc Hellwig <Marc.Hellwig@uni-mainz.de>: audio output, BeOS video code
628 and networking
629 - Lauri Pesonen <lpesonen@nic.fi>: Windows NT port
630 - Orlando Bassotto <future@powercube.mediabit.net>: FreeBSD support
631 - Brian J. Johnson <bjohnson@sgi.com>: IRIX support
632 - Marc Chabanas <Marc.Chabanas@france.sun.com>: Solaris sound support
633 - Bill Huey <billh@mag.ucsd.edu>: 15/16 bit DGA and 15/16/32 bit X11
634 window support
635 - David Lawrence <davidl@jlab.org>: incremental window refresh code
636 - Gwenole Beauchesne <gb@dial.oleane.com>: SPARC assembly optimizations and
637 fbdev video code
638 - and others...
639
640 Special thanks to:
641 - Bernd Schmidt for letting me use his UAE 68k emulation
642 - Daniel Bobbert who printed dozens of pages from the THINK Reference for
643 me years ago
644 - All ShapeShifter and SheepShaver users and beta testers
645 - Apple Computer Inc., who made writing a Macintosh emulator a child's play
646
647
648 Bug reports
649 -----------
650
651 You found a bug? Well, use the source, fix it and send the fix to
652 <Christian.Bauer@uni-mainz.de>
653 for inclusion in the next release of Basilisk II.
654
655
656 Author
657 ------
658
659 You can contact me at <Christian.Bauer@uni-mainz.de>. Don't send bug
660 reports, send fixes. Ports to other platforms are also very welcome.
661 Please contact me before you intend to make major changes to the source.
662 You might be working on something that I have already done or I may have
663 different ideas about the Right Way to do it.
664
665 Questions about ROM files will not be answered. There is also no point in
666 sending me questions etc. that are specific to the Windows port of
667 Basilisk II. I don't have Windows and can't say anything about that.
668 Ask Lauri Pesonen instead.
669
670
671 Support
672 -------
673
674 The official Basilisk II home page is at
675 http://www.uni-mainz.de/~bauec002/B2Main.html
676
677 There is no user-level support for Basilisk II at the moment.
678
679
680 History
681 -------
682
683 Please consult the file "ChangeLog" for the release history.
684
685
686 Christian Bauer
687 <Christian.Bauer@uni-mainz.de>