# cbm This is a Rust library for working with formats found in Commodore Business Machines (CBM) products from the 1980's, including the legendary Commodore 64 home computer. Most of the provided functionality currently centers around disk images. Features: * Perform operations on 1541 (D64), 1571 (D71), and 1581 (D81) disk images. * Format disk images. * Iterate directory entries. (Including those in the GEOS border sector.) * Read, write, delete, and rename files. * Validate the consistency of disk images. * Provide access to Relative (REL), GEOS Sequential, and GEOS VLIR files. (Currently read-only.) * Emulate the 1541/1571/1581 CBM DOS's "next available track and sector" algorithm as closely as possible when writing files. * Interpret GEOS info blocks. * A sample `cdisk` program for operating on D64/D71/D81 disk images. * Convert between Petscii and Unicode. * Render sprite graphics (including GEOS icons) into text using Unicode block elements. Current shortcomings: * 1581 partitions are not supported. * Error tables embedded in disk images are accommodated, but not used for anything useful. * Relative, GEOS Sequential, and GEOS VLIR files are currently read-only. Ideas for future improvements might include: * Conversion of Commodore BASIC's binary tokenized format (e.g. petcat functionality). * Conversion of VIC-II native bitmap framebuffers. * Format a disk image with GEOS disk headers. * Access hard disk images. The potential scope of this library includes Commodore 8-bit computers ranging from the Commodore PET through the Commodore 128, as there are elements of commonality across all these machines. The scope includes hardware and software components that were produced by Commodore or third-party components that were tightly associated with Commodore computers (e.g. GEOS) or whose inner workings are necessary to interpret certain disk formats (e.g. PrologicDOS). Parsing of application data (e.g. Word Writer or geoPaint) would be best handled in a separate crate. ## Example The following example opens a disk image, reads the directory, and prints a list of directory entries belonging to GEOS applications, along with their text description from the GEOS info block: ```rust use std::io; use cbm::disk; use cbm::disk::directory::Extra; use cbm::disk::geos::GEOSFileType; // Open the disk image read-only let disk = disk::open(disk_image_filename, false)?; // Print directory entries for GEOS applications disk.directory()? .iter() .filter_map(|entry| { // Only regard directory entries with extra GEOS metadata match entry.extra { Extra::GEOS(ref geos_extra) => Some((entry, geos_extra)), _ => None, } }) .filter(|(_, geos_extra)| { // Only regard applications geos_extra.geos_file_type == GEOSFileType::Application }) .map(|(entry, geos_extra)| { // Read the info block and obtain the description string let description = match disk .open_file_from_entry(entry) .and_then(|f| f.geos_info()) { Ok(Some(info)) => info.description.to_escaped_string(), Ok(None) => "No info block".to_string(), Err(e) => format!("error: {}", e), }; (entry, description) }) .for_each(|(entry, description)| { println!("{} {}", entry, description); }); ``` On a particular 1581 GEOS disk image, the following output is generated: ``` 18 "paint drivers" usr Creates drivers that print to geoPaint files, a file for each PAGE, or OVERLAID. 141 "geowrite" usr geoWrite (64 version) is a WYSIWYG word processor. 152 "geopaint" usr geoPaint is a full-featured graphics editor. 67 "text grabber" usr Converts files created by other word processors into data files for geoWrite. 60 "geolaser" usr GEOLASER prints geoWrite files on the LaserWriter printer. 67 "geomerge" usr Use geoMerge to print- merge your geoWrite files. 111 "geospell" usr Use geoSpell to correct your spelling in geoWrite documents. 20 "convert" usr This version allows you to select multiple files! ``` For more examples, see the accompanying `cdisk` program, which allows various operations to be performed on disk images from the command line. For example, expanded directory listings: ``` cdisk GEOS64.D81 dir -vv ... 13 "ALARM CLOCK" usr GEOS(Sequential, Desk Accessory, 1986-09-03-12:00) GEOS info block: ▛▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▜ Type: Desk Accessory (Sequential) ▌ ▄▀▖▛▜▗▀▄ ▐ Program addresses: load=0x5400 end=0x5fd8 start=0x5400 ▌▗▘▟▞▀▀▚▙▝▖▐ Class: Alarm clock V1.0 ▌▝▟▘▗ ▌▗▝▙▘▐ Author: David Durran ▌ ▞▗ ▐ ▖▚ ▐ Application: Mgr V1.0 ▌ ▌▄ ▐▄▄▄▐ ▐ Description: Set the alarm clock to keep yourself time-conscious. ▌ ▌▗ ▖▐ ▐ ▌ ▐ ▗ ▖▗ ▌ ▐ ▌ ▐▙▖▝ ▗▟▌ ▐ ▌ ▀▘▝▀▀▘▝▀ ▐ ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ... ``` ## Design of disk image access Support for disk images was built using a layered scheme: 1. `Image` provides access to the underlying storage containing the disk image -- either a disk image file or an in-memory array. 2. `BlockDevice` divides the image into tracks and sectors according to a `Geometry`. 3. `DiskFormat` describes how a particular disk format uses the tracks and sectors to store and retrieve common CBM DOS structures such as the disk header, Block Availability Map (BAM), and directories. 4. The `Disk` trait exposes high-level functionality such as opening files, formatting the disk, validating, etc. 5. Opening a file yields a `File` object which is accessed in varying ways according to the scheme used to implement its underlying structure (linear files, relative files, GEOS VLIR, etc.) ## Design shortcomings CBM DOS tracks start at 1 instead of 0, which causes no end of implementation confusion. The API provided by this crate reflects this 1-based indexing, but it's not used consistently throughout the internals. In particular, `Geometry.track_layouts` uses 1-based track indexing (with the zeroth track unused), while arrays of BAM entries use 0-based indexing. In the interest of providing a simple and flexible API to callers, many components store their own `Rc>` reference to the disk's block storage. This allows multiple `File` objects, readers, and writers to be in use at the same time, and reduces the lifetime puzzling that callers might otherwise need to do. However, this means that a disk image may remain open after its `Disk` implementation is dropped (e.g. if a `File` is still present), and it's possible that some combinations of steps may result in corrupted or inconsistent disk images. (For example, what happens if you start writing to a file, then format the disk, then continue writing to the file?) Better runtime checks may help with this. A purely read-only implementation could be built in such a way that slice references to the mapped disk image could be passed all the way to the user layer with no (or minimal) additional copying. However, supporting write access and multiple active readers/writers requires accessing the mapped sectors through a `Rc>` , which limits our ability to return references. Thus, copies are made when reading sector chains. (Perhaps some sort of exotic data access scheme could be concocted to avoid this, but I'm reluctant to go to a lot of trouble to avoid copying 256 bytes.) ## License Cbm is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details. License: MIT/Apache-2.0