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Emulations (running on Linux/Unix/Windows/macOS, utilizing SDL2) of some - mainly - 8 bit machines, including the Commodore LCD, Commodore 65, and the MEGA65 as well.

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X-Emulators ~ "Xemu"

Build Status Gitter Download License: GPL-2.0 Contributors GitHub last commit (dev) GitHub last commit (next) GitHub last commit (master)

Emulators running on Linux/Unix/Windows/OSX of various (mainly 8 bit) machines, including the Commodore LCD and Commodore 65 and MEGA65 as well.

Written by (C)2016-2023 LGB (Gábor Lénárt) lgblgblgb@gmail.com Source repository: https://github.com/lgblgblgb/xemu

Xemu also contains code wasn't written by me (sources I use from others, or direct contributors to this project). Please read file AUTHORS

Xemu is licensed under the terms of GNU/GPL v2, for more information please read file LICENSE. You can find the source on github, see above.

Note: there is no serious logic about the set of emulated machines by the Xemu project. The only reason that I emulate these within a single project, that I can easily re-use some of the components needed, that's all! Also, the list of emulated machines is simply the preference of myself, what I would like to emulate, nothing special about my selection.

This file is only some place holder :) For some sane documentation, please visit the wiki section of the project, here:

https://github.com/lgblgblgb/xemu/wiki

Emulators within the Xemu project

List of emulators which can be useful:

  • MEGA65: Emulation of the modern reincarnation of the Commodore 65 with many-many enhancements and new features: https://mega65.org/
  • Commodore 65: Emulation of Commodore's final, never finished 8 bit machine, quite rare, and expensive to buy.
  • Commodore LCD: Emulation of Commodore's portable LCD based computer, never released, about 4-5 units estimated to exist (much more rare than the Commodore 65, and not possible to get one). I've created the first working emulation of this machine ever. This emulator within Xemu is a refactored version of that emulator of mine.
  • Enterprise 128: Emulation of a not so well known but neat, versatile, Z80 based computer with very unique features among 8 bit systems, both in hardware and software solutions.
  • Videoton TV Computer ("TVC"): Emulation of a Hungarian computer.
  • Primo: Emulation of a simple but neat Hungarian computer.

Not so much useful, unfinished and/or obsoleted but in theory can be compiled and started:

  • Commander X16: The 8-bit guy's "dream" computer, 65C02 based, not compatible with existing micros. This emulator is old, buggy, missing features, and cannot use modern ROMs for the X16 any more. Please note, this emulator is nothing to do with the official X16 emulator, it's just my fun project to emulate X16 by my own, from its documentation only.
  • Commodore VIC20: Somewhat barebone emulation of the VIC20, no sound, no storage medium emulation (tape or disk) ...
  • Commodore GEOS: This was an unfinished experiment of mine. The intent was creating a very rudimentary C64 emulation just enough to run GEOS, and trying to experiment with custom modifications on GEOS this way, or even creating a free GEOS re-implementation later.

Absolutely not working, not useable or even cannot be compiled:

  • Commodore 900: Commodore's never released Z8000 based Coherent UNIX based machine. Currently it does nothing, work-in-progress (on the longer term!).
  • ZX Spectrum + clones: Currently unusable, my intent was to emulate the original Speccy to learn about it more in this way, and add some "advanced clones" kind of features later, like ULAplus, and who knows what else.
  • RC2014: Z80 based generic "SBC" emulation under the name of RC2014 but will include emulation of several simple projects, just I found the name "RC2014" cool enough to use this name for this emulator.
  • reCPM: Another dead project from me (at least in this form): the goal is to create a free CP/M compatible OS with the needed hardware (Z80) emulated as well.

Supported OSes Xemu can run on

"Mainstream" OSes:

  • Linux (including Raspberry Pi OS as well - probably other SBCs as well with Linux as the OS -, though in general, Raspberry Pi can be too slow for certain emulation tasks like emulating MEGA65 at full speed)
  • Windows (there are some problems if Xemu encounters any directory path containing non-US-ascii characters, because of the brainda ... errr ... strange way how Windows handles this compared to other sane OSes)
  • MacOS (Apple silicion shouldn't be a problem)

In general, Xemu should run on other UNIX-like OSes too with no (or minimal) source level modification. At least once tested on (which may or may not reflect the current state of the project):

  • OpenBSD
  • FreeBSD
  • HaikuOS (no native UI, though the then-default OSD UI should work)

Note, the list does not mean the upstream availability of ready-to-use binary builds in general, but the possibility that you can compile Xemu and that "should" work.

Quickest start (Xemu running in your web browser!)

Just visit this page:

http://xemu-dist.lgb.hu/dist/xemu-sample.html

Note: this kind of demonstration is limited (or even broken!), often not in pair with the native client for your OS (a "binary"), which - at the other hand - requires more work: installation, configuration, etc ... Also, currenty there can be problems with some emulators in this form (especially MEGA65).

Quick start (using pre-built binaries)

Download page: https://github.lgb.hu/xemu/

There are binaries on some other sites, which are seriously old. Please, always visit github.lgb.hu/xemu/ for download!

Or, if you'are more an insider-oriented to see various builds from branches, additional information, etc, you can go here (the same as above, but instead of direct links, a more in-depth view of the distribution repository):

https://github.com/lgblgblgb/xemu-binaries/blob/master/README.md

Windows

You can find 32 and 64 bit windows based installers for Windows. No need to say, highly experimental (as I am not a windows user at all ...). You can also use the ZIP'ed versions, which are simply the needed exe + dll files, without any installer. Please carefully read the download page, about these, especially about the NSIS-related problem which causes false positive detections as trojan/virus by many antivirus software, unfortunately. If you don't believe me: https://nsis.sourceforge.io/NSIS_False_Positives

Also, you can find ZIP archives on that page, contains only the executable files and the needed DLL, without any installer. This may also solve the false virus detection ...

Linux

On Linux, you can try the provided DEB pacakge to install, if you run Ubuntu (may work on other DEB based distriutions as well). There is an RPM package provided too, however that is simply a converted version of the DEB pakcage (with alien) so it may or may not work for you.

Work in progress to provide other - less distribution dependent - ways to install Xemu on Linux (other than compiling yourself), maybe in the form for flatpak, AppImage or something like that (though I really don't like Snappy ...) in the future.

MacOS

On MacOS, you want to use the MacOS build, of course. You can download a ZIP file, with a binary and a .dylib, they must be in the same directory!

You can also download DMG, however the maturity of my DMG is considered "low" currently.

Quick start (from source)

For more information: https://github.com/lgblgblgb/xemu/wiki/Source

Install software for compilation

Example for Ubuntu Linux

sudo apt update
sudo apt install git build-essential libsdl2-dev libgtk-3-dev libreadline-dev

Note for Linux compilation (other UNIX'es as well) in general: GTK3 development libraries must be installed, if Xemu's build system cannot detect it, you won't have any menu system support, though compilation will suceeded without that!

Example for MacOS

Assuming Apple development components and homebrew is already installed on your Mac: https://brew.sh/

brew update
brew install sdl2 wget git

Xemu should build with command:

make

Example for FreeBSD

An example to install dependencies with pkg on a FreeBSD system:

pkg install git
pkg install gmake
pkg install bash
pkg install sdl2
pkg install pkgconf
pkg install gtk3
pkg install readline

Some comments:

  • Surely, git is only needed if you want to clone the repository from git
  • bash is used by the Xemu-configuration tool
  • You must use gmake (GNU make) instead of make (BSD make)
  • pkgconf is used by the Xemu-configuration tool to found GTK3 library

OpenBSD

Very similar to FreeBSD (see above), surely you want to use the pkg_add tool instead of pkg install then.

Raspberry Pi

If you use some Linux distributions (probably Raspbian) on your Raspberry Pi, it should behave more or less the same way as a Linux distribution on your PC, so nothing special here.

However. If you plan to run Xemu without X11, you need a special build of SDL2 must be done by yourself first. This is because, SDL2 provides a way to run SDL2 applications on Raspberry without X11 ("RPI" architecture), however the standard Raspbian - as far as I know - provides only SDL2 library with X11 support (though I can be wrong, contant me, if you know more on this topic).

I've - of course - tested this and it worked, however it's hard to provide a binary build this way currently, and needs more "manual work" to compile Xemu, and even SDL2 before.

Bare metal?

I received the idea to be able to run Xemu as a "bare-metal" project on Raspberry Pi for example. "Bare metal" means that it does not run an OS but uses the hardware directly, ie, Xemu needs to be booted instead of an OS. Surely, it's a kind of exciting route for me, but unfortunately I don't have too much time to play with this idea :( One idea, that there're frameworks for these purposes. The other: some of the emulations within the Xemu project (ie MEGA65) is very "pricy" to emulate, and may not run smooth (real-time) even on the newest Raspberry Pi 4 ... However exactly this problem can drive me to have more optimizations :)

Clone source respository

git clone https://github.com/lgblgblgb/xemu.git
cd xemu

Compilation

make

On BSDs you want to use gmake (GNU make) instead of make (BSD make).

Optionally, to create binary DEBian .deb package for Ubuntu/Debian Linux, result will be built in build/bin (which can be installed with dpkg -i, followed by a sudo xemu-download-data which will download the data files as well, you can then execute emulators like xemu-xmega65):

make deb

To compile only (make in the top level directory will compile all of the targets automatically) a given emulator (let's say MEGA65):

cd targets
ls -l
cd mega65
make
cd ../..

Here, command ls -l is only for get a list of available targets (ie. the emulators included in the Xemu project).

Run the binary

ls -l build/bin/

to get a list of compiled binaries, like xmega65.native or xc65.native. You may want to copy those files to /usr/local/bin or such. Surely you can drop the .native ending. I also like to rename (done this way in the DEB package) to have names like xemu-xmega65 and such to avoid "collusion" with other emulators in case of emulators with short names (probably).

Run one of them, like (the Commodore LCD emulator in this case):

build/bin/xclcd.native

Windows

For building binary (exe) for Windows, you still need a UNIX-like environment (in theory WSL - Windows Subsystem for Linux - should be enough) for the compilation, with cross-compiler and SDL2 MinGW cross platform suite installed.

MSYS2 native build on Windows for Windows

Note: this is probably the easier method for a Windows user, however this is not the method we use to build official binaries for Windows.

An easy way to build xemu under Windows is to use the MSYS2 package which includes a full MinGW compiler, associated headers, tools , and a nice package management utility for easy installation of required components: Pacman, popular in Arch Linux based distributions.

The following steps are based on a Windows 10 x64 system.

  • Download the executable installer in https://www.msys2.org for x86-64 architecture.
  • Install on the default location.
  • Execute the MSYS2 MinGW 64bit system prompt at the end of the installation, or via your Start Menu.

At the command prompt, ensure you have the latest repositories by doing:

pacman -Syu

Restart the prompt if needed, and finish installing remaining packages with:

pacman -Su

Now we can install the GCC compiler and required packages to build xemu with one command executed:

pacman -S make mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain mingw-w64-x86_64-SDL2

Build the native Windows executables by issuing:

make

You can find the executables, with .native extension, in the build/bin directory. Surely, you can (and maybe you want) rename files to have extension .exe instead.

Alternative method, cross-compilation on Linux for Windows

Note: this is the official method we use to build official binaries for Windows.

For Ubuntu (and probably other DEB based distros, this also includes of course WSL if Ubuntu is used as the guest) you can install mingw by:

apt-get install binutils-mingw-w64-i686 binutils-mingw-w64-x86-64 gcc-mingw-w64-i686 gcc-mingw-w64-x86-64

Then, you need to install mingw-specific SDL2 development suite, download, modify its Makefile probably, install it, create compatibility symlinks for Xemu ... If you trust into the version Xemu uses, probably it's better to do the task with a single command. It needs you to be at the top directory of the downloaded or cloned Xemu repository. You may want to run this as root, or at least you need to have sudo capabilities. The command:

build/install-cross-win-mingw-sdl-on-linux.sh /usr/local/bin

This command will install stuffs in /usr/local/cross-tools (regardless of the parameter!) and create symlinks in /usr/local/bin. If it's not in your PATH by default, you may need to put it, or use different argument than /usr/local/bin.

Then you can say the following for 32 bit or 64 bit build process (in general, 32 bit version should be avoided on any OS - for performance reasons as well):

make ARCH=win32
make ARCH=win64

In build/bin you'll find files like *.win32 and *.win64, they are exe files for real, you can rename and copy them to a Windows box to be able to run them using Windows only (you also need the specific SDL2.dll though - those can be found at the same directory where the given - 32 or 64 bit - sdl2-config script is from the development SDL2 stuff you've installed).

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