NMI: Difference between revisions

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== Operation ==
== Operation ==
Two 1-bit registers inside the PPU control the generation of NMI signals.
Two 1-bit registers inside the PPU control the generation of NMI signals.
[[PPU Frame Timing|Frame timing]] and accesses to the PPU's [[PPU_registers#Controller ($2000) > write|PPUCTRL]] and [[PPU_registers#Status ($2002) < read|PPUSTATUS]] registers change these registers as follows:
[[PPU frame timing|Frame timing]] and accesses to the PPU's [[PPU_registers#Controller ($2000) > write|PPUCTRL]] and [[PPU_registers#Status ($2002) < read|PPUSTATUS]] registers change these registers as follows:
#Start of vertical blanking: Set NMI_occurred in PPU to true.
#Start of vertical blanking: Set NMI_occurred in PPU to true.
#End of vertical blanking, sometime in pre-render scanline: Set NMI_occurred to false.
#End of vertical blanking, sometime in pre-render scanline: Set NMI_occurred to false.

Revision as of 13:56, 11 June 2009

The 2A03 and most other 6502 family CPUs are capable of processing a non-maskable interrupt (NMI). This input is edge-sensitive, meaning that if other circuitry on the board pulls the /NMI pin from high to low voltage, this sets a flip-flop in the CPU. When the CPU checks for interrupts and find that the flip-flop is set, it pushes the processor status register and return address on the stack, reads the NMI handler's address from $FFFA-$FFFB, clears the flip-flop, and jumps to this address.

"Non-maskable" means that no state inside the CPU can prevent NMI from happening. However, most boards that use a 6502 CPU's /NMI line allow the CPU to disable the generation of /NMI signals by writing to a memory-mapped I/O device. In the case of the NES, the /NMI line is connected to the NES PPU and used to detect vertical blanking.

Operation

Two 1-bit registers inside the PPU control the generation of NMI signals. Frame timing and accesses to the PPU's PPUCTRL and PPUSTATUS registers change these registers as follows:

  1. Start of vertical blanking: Set NMI_occurred in PPU to true.
  2. End of vertical blanking, sometime in pre-render scanline: Set NMI_occurred to false.
  3. Read PPUSTATUS: Return old status of NMI_occurred in bit 7, then set NMI_occurred to false.
  4. Write to PPUCTRL: Set NMI_output to bit 7.

The PPU pulls /NMI low if and only if both NMI_occurred and NMI_output are true. By toggling NMI_output (PPUCTRL bit 7) during vertical blank without reading PPUSTATUS, a program can cause /NMI to be pulled low multiple times, causing multiple NMIs to be generated.

Caveats

Old emulators

The earliest emulators, such as NESticle, do not turn off NMI_occurred in line 3. Thus, some defective homebrew programs developed in this era will wait for PPUSTATUS bit 7 to become false and expect this to happen at the end of vblank. (The right way to wait for the end of vblank involves triggering a sprite 0 hit and waiting for that flag to become 0.) Some newer homebrew programs have been known to display a diagnostic message if an emulator incorrectly returns true on two consecutive reads of PPUSTATUS bit 7.

Race condition

If 1 and 3 happen simultaneously, PPUSTATUS bit 7 is read as false, and NMI_occurred is set to false anyway. This means that the following code that waits for vertical blank by spinning on PPUSTATUS bit 7 is likely to miss an occasional frame:

wait_status7:
  bit PPUSTATUS
  bpl wait_status7
  rts

Once the PPU is warmed up and the game is running, the most reliable way to wait for a vertical blank is to turn on NMI_output and then wait for the NMI handler to set a variable:

wait_nmi:
  lda retraces
@notYet:
  cmp retraces
  beq @notYet
  rts

nmi_handler:
  inc retraces
  rti

However, code like wait_status7 should still be used before the PPU has warmed up.

See also