Rendering logic: Difference between revisions

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On the NeoGeo hardware, the GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) a.k.a. VDP, may refer to a chip or a group of different chips used to generate the video signal.
On the NeoGeo hardware, the GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) a.k.a. VDP, may refer to a chip or a group of different chips used to generate the video signal.


* [[LSPC-A0]], [[PRO-B0]] (early)
* [[LSPC-A0]], [[PRO-B0]] (early)T
* [[LSPC2-A2]], [[NEO-B1]] (most common)
* [[LSPC2-A2]], [[NEO-B1]] (most common)
* [[NEO-GRC]], [[NEO-OFC]] (CD systems)
* [[NEO-GRC]], [[NEO-OFC]] (CD systems)
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[[NEO-B1]] is used for double-buffering scanlines. While a buffer is output to the screen, the other one is filled up. They're swapped each new scanline. Each of the two line buffers are actually 2 buffers of even/odd pixels. They will be named (1 & 2), and (3 & 4).
[[NEO-B1]] is used for double-buffering scanlines. While a buffer is output to the screen, the other one is filled up. They're swapped each new scanline. Each of the two line buffers are actually 2 buffers of even/odd pixels. They will be named (1 & 2), and (3 & 4).


*The TMS0 signal from LSPC tells B1 how the pair of buffers are used:
==CSK signals==
**0: Buffers 1&2 are output to the TV. Buffers 3&4 are written to.
CSK1~4 signals are used to clock each buffer (on rising edge ?).
**1: Buffers 1&2 are written to. Buffers 3&4 are output to the TV.


*CSK1~4 signals are used to step to the next pixel (falling edge ?), periodic for video output, VRAM-dependent when filling up. Inactive during H-blank.
During rendering, the pulses usually go by pairs (1+2 and 3+4) to render pixels 2 by 2. Horizontal scaling cause CSK pulses to be skipped.
*WSE1~4 signals are used to indicate if the pixel color from GAD/GBD needs to be written to the buffer, matches CSK for video output (OE signal ?), depends on DOTA/DOTB (opaque pixel signal) when filling up.
*SS1~2 signals ?
*The rising edge of PCK1 and PCK2 stores fix or sprite pixels.
*The X position of the sprite (and something else in a byte ?) is latched by CSK falling edges when LD* is low.
*1H1 is probably used to switch pixels of FIXD between left and right.


It seems that fix data is read 8 pixels in advance (confirms what Charles wrote in mvstech.txt). How is this handled in B1 ?
During output, the pulses are synchronized (1+2 then 3+4 then 1+2...). Pairs of pixels must be splitted by refering to 6MB ?
 
* If the corresponding LD* signal is high, then the buffer pointer is incremented (rendering is always done left to right ?).
* If the corresponding LD* signal is low, then the buffer pointer is loaded from the [[P bus]] (X position of sprite, or 0 to start line output).
 
Inactive during H-blank.
 
==WSE signals==
WSE1~4 signals are used to indicate if the pixel color index on GAD/GBD needs to be written to the buffer.
 
During rendering, the pulses are synchronized to CSK signals.
 
* If the pixel is transparent, there is a CSK pulse but no WSE pulse.
* If the pixel is opaque, there are both pulses at the same time.
* If the pixel is skipped for horizontal reduction, there are no pulses at all.
 
During output, the pulses are also synchronized and always present. This is used to clear to the backdrop color for the next rendering cycle.
 
The buffer's /WE signals seems to be (CSK & WSE).
 
==SS signals==
 
The complementary pair of SS* signals from LSPC tell B1 how the buffers are used:
 
* SS1 low & SS2 high: Buffers 1&2 are written to. Buffers 3&4 are output to the TV.
* SS1 high & SS2 low: Buffers 1&2 are output to the TV. Buffers 3&4 are written to.
 
==Notes==
 
Whatever happens, a single sprite line (16 pixels) always takes 16mclk.
 
It can also be observed that there's always 96 pulses on LD* during rendering, since 1536mclk per line / 16mclk per sprite = 96 sprites max per line.
 
* The rising edge of PCK1 and PCK2 stores fix or sprite pixels.
* 1H1 is probably used to split pixels of FIXD between left and right.
 
Fix data is read 8 pixels in advance (confirms what Charles wrote in mvstech.txt). This seems to be inherited from the [[Alpha68k]] as 3 successive 8bit registers forming a waiting "pipeline".


=Sprite parsing=
=Sprite parsing=

Revision as of 19:20, 10 May 2017

On the NeoGeo hardware, the GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) a.k.a. VDP, may refer to a chip or a group of different chips used to generate the video signal.

See graphics pipeline for an overview of the interconnections between chips and cartridges.

Temporary notes

  • Fix, then sprites (PCK1 then PCK2)
  • Fix and sprite pixels are rendered at the same speed because sprite pixels are also written by pairs (reason for the odd/even buffers)
  • Tile pixel lines are rendered in halves:
  • For the fix (32mclk = 8 pixels corresponds to 6MHz pixel clock):
    • Full address is ...1**** (PCK2 pulse)
    • 2H1 is 0 for 2 pixels (columns 0 & 1), then 1 for 2 pixels (columns 2 & 3)
    • Full address is ...0**** (PCK2 pulse)
    • 2H1 is 0 for 2 pixels (columns 4 & 5), then 1 for 2 pixels (columns 6 & 7)
  • For sprites (32mclk = 16 pixels):
    • Full address is ...1***** (PCK1 pulse)
    • CA4 is 0 for 4 pixels (columns 0~3), then 1 for 4 pixels (columns 4~7)
    • Full address is ...0***** (PCK1 pulse)
    • CA4 is 0 for 4 pixels (columns 8~11), then 1 for 4 pixels (columns 12~15)
  • As fix is rendered in realtime, the fix tile address is set before sprites (on a new line PCK1 pulses before PCK2)
  • X position to B1, just before each PCK2 pulse (SP during 1mclk), for 20 sprites next to each other (X+16px each time):
    • Start of line: 0000,0808,1010,1838,2000,2808,3010,3838,40C0,48E8,50F0,58F8,60C0,68E8,70F0,78F8,8000,8808,9010,9838,0,0,0...

Video generation

See Display timing for the sync signal's timing.

NEO-B1 is used for double-buffering scanlines. While a buffer is output to the screen, the other one is filled up. They're swapped each new scanline. Each of the two line buffers are actually 2 buffers of even/odd pixels. They will be named (1 & 2), and (3 & 4).

CSK signals

CSK1~4 signals are used to clock each buffer (on rising edge ?).

During rendering, the pulses usually go by pairs (1+2 and 3+4) to render pixels 2 by 2. Horizontal scaling cause CSK pulses to be skipped.

During output, the pulses are synchronized (1+2 then 3+4 then 1+2...). Pairs of pixels must be splitted by refering to 6MB ?

  • If the corresponding LD* signal is high, then the buffer pointer is incremented (rendering is always done left to right ?).
  • If the corresponding LD* signal is low, then the buffer pointer is loaded from the P bus (X position of sprite, or 0 to start line output).

Inactive during H-blank.

WSE signals

WSE1~4 signals are used to indicate if the pixel color index on GAD/GBD needs to be written to the buffer.

During rendering, the pulses are synchronized to CSK signals.

  • If the pixel is transparent, there is a CSK pulse but no WSE pulse.
  • If the pixel is opaque, there are both pulses at the same time.
  • If the pixel is skipped for horizontal reduction, there are no pulses at all.

During output, the pulses are also synchronized and always present. This is used to clear to the backdrop color for the next rendering cycle.

The buffer's /WE signals seems to be (CSK & WSE).

SS signals

The complementary pair of SS* signals from LSPC tell B1 how the buffers are used:

  • SS1 low & SS2 high: Buffers 1&2 are written to. Buffers 3&4 are output to the TV.
  • SS1 high & SS2 low: Buffers 1&2 are output to the TV. Buffers 3&4 are written to.

Notes

Whatever happens, a single sprite line (16 pixels) always takes 16mclk.

It can also be observed that there's always 96 pulses on LD* during rendering, since 1536mclk per line / 16mclk per sprite = 96 sprites max per line.

  • The rising edge of PCK1 and PCK2 stores fix or sprite pixels.
  • 1H1 is probably used to split pixels of FIXD between left and right.

Fix data is read 8 pixels in advance (confirms what Charles wrote in mvstech.txt). This seems to be inherited from the Alpha68k as 3 successive 8bit registers forming a waiting "pipeline".

Sprite parsing

This is a draft. The following information shouldn't be considered as exact.

To do: Edit waveforms, FP and SP windows of the P BUS start 0.5mclk earlier (1.5,5,1.5,1.5,5,1.5 = 16).

  • LSPC runs at 24MHz, but generates signals on rising and falling edges ("48MHz")
  • Fast VRAM is 35ns (<1mclk), slow VRAM is 100ns (<2.5mclk, 3 ?)
  • The fast VRAM reads always occur 1mclk (41.6ns) after address is set. Smallest access window is 1.5mclk.

  • FIXT: P23~16 is 0, P15~0 is S ROM address (+ external 2H1)
  • SPRT: P23~0 is C ROM address (+ external CA4)
  • LO: P23~16 is LO ROM data, P15~0 is LO address
  • FP: P19~16 is the fix tile palette, rest is 0
  • SP: P23~16 is the sprite tile palette, P15~8 is X position, P7~0 is ?
  • LSPC always starts filling up active sprite list A ($8600) each new frame

Read sequence:

Timing diagram when no sprites fall in the next scanline (no writes to sprite list):

Parse        ################################                                ################################
Render                                       ##########################                                      ##########################
24M    |'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_
Addr   | 600 |  200  | 201 | 202 | 203 | 204 |  681  | 00E | 20E | 40E | 600 |  205  | 206 | 207 | 208 | 209 |  682  | 00F | 20F | 40F
PCK1   ______|'''|___________________________________________________________|'''|_____________________________________________________
PCK1B  '''''''|____|''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''|___|''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
LOAD   |'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________
12M    __|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|_
2Pixel       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |
Read       ?       !     !     !     !     !       !     !     !     !     ?       !     !     !     !     !       !     !     !     !
What      1      2      2     2     2     2      3      4     5     6     1      2      2     2     2     2      3      4     5     6...
  • 1: Probably CPU acces slot with last address latched ($600)
  • 2: Read sprite Y position from SCB3 ($200+) to see if it's in next scanline
  • 3: Read sprite list ($600+) to get sprite #
  • 4: Read SCB2 zoom values ($000+)
  • 5: Read SCB3 Y/size/chain ($200+)
  • 6: Read SCB4 X ($400+)

10 states in 16 cycles (or 5 in 8 cycles: 4-3-3-3-3).

One scanline contains 1536mclk cycles or 96 sequences of 16mclk cycles.

Half of the mclk cycles are reserved for Sprite parsing, the other half is for sprite rendering and CPU access.

Each half has 96 x 5 = 480 states.

For the parsing :


SCB3 is read (from $200 to $380), each time there is a sprite match, a write state to the sprite list is inserted (apparently 2 states after the corresponding SCB3 read).

Once SCB3 address $380 is reached, only $0000 write states to the sprite list are possible (in order to fill the rest of the sprite list with zeros).

No matter how many sprites are matched in the scanline, we will always have 384 SCB3 read states and 96 sprite list write states.

That explains why sprite #0 cannot be used : this is the value used to terminate the sprite list. It would have been smarter for SNK to use the value 511 instead...

According to Charles MacDonald's document, the GPU always renders 96 sprites : the "filler" sprite #0 can be rendered many times per scanline.

For the rendering :


The state order is :

  • 1: Read sprite list ($600+) to get sprite #
  • 2: Read SCB2 zoom values ($000+)
  • 3: Read SCB3 Y pos/size/sticky ($200+)
  • 4: Read SCB4 X pos ($400+)
  • 5: Read/write from CPU

One remark : it is more logical to have SCB3 read before SCB2 because we need the sticky bit to make the decision of keeping the previous vertical shrink value or not.

Is the sticky bit written to the sprite list along with the sprite number or did SNK waste an additionnal 8-bit temporary register in their design ?

CPU access to High VRAM :


SNK says min. 12 68kclk between writes (so 24mclk). 1 write every 24mclk = 64 per scanline.

Why 12 and not 8 ?

68000 DTACK# logic is apparently only tied to GPU registers access. So CPU access during state #5 occurs asynchronously with the 68000 bus.

My guess on the HW implementation is that during state #5, the GPU always reads the memory content pointed by REG_VRAMADDR and updates the read latch of REG_VRAMRW.

If write latch REG_VRAMRW is written by the 68000, the next state #5 becomes a write access and REG_VRAMADDR is incremented by REG_VRAMMOD value.

Even if a theoretical limit of 16mclk or 8 68kclk is possible, some additionnal cycles are needed for the address and data to propagate through the chip.

Or maybe SNK has given the worst case scenario between slow Low VRAM and fast High VRAM ?

Timing diagram when the sprite list is being filled:

+5/8:

0   5   2   7   4   1   6   3
|       |       |   |       |
  5   2   7   4   1   6   3  0
      |       |   |       |  |
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
|       |     |     |     |    

LLLLLLLLHHHHHHHHLLLLHHHHHHHHLLLL
HHHHHHLLLLLLLLHHHHLLLLLLLLHHHLLL

             0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
             |       |     |     |     |

Parse        ################################                                ################################
Render                                       ##########################                                      ##########################
24M    |'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_|'|_
Addr   | 600 |  20F  | 210 | 211 | 600 | 601 |  684  | 005 | 205 | 405 | 600 |  212  | 213 | 602 | 603 | 214 |  685  | 006 | 206 | 406
PCK1   ______|'''|___________________________________________________________|'''|_____________________________________________________
PCK1B  '''''''|___|'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''|___|''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
LOAD   |'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________|'''''''|_______________________
12M    __|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|___|'''|_
2Pixel       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |       |
/WE    ''''''''''''''''''''''''''|___|'|___|'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''|___|'|___|'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
Read       ?       !     !     !                   !     !     !     !     ?       !     !                 !       !     !     !     !
  • R/W sequences: (2 write buffers ?)
  • 600 RRRWW... 600 RRWWR...
  • 600 WWRRW... 600 WRRWW... 600 RRWWR ... 600 RWWRR
  • Even lines: Write to list A, Read from list B (Start of display)
  • Odd lines: Write to list B, Read from list A
  • In 16clk, 2 sprites SCB3 max. are checked to fill up sprite list , and 1 sprite's attributes are read for output
  • 384px * 4clk/px = 1536clk/line
  • 1536clk / 16clk = 96 sprites max/line
  • Available CPU R/W slots depending on parsing progress, safest is ? cycles

Slow (lower) VRAM

  • Slow VRAM is 100ns (10MHz) and is read at ?
  • 4 slots per render cycle, 1 slot for CPU R/W (1 each 16 68k cycles)